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Whisper

#byefelicia
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Harold Henthorn and Toni Henthorn​
Local and federal authorities are investigating the deaths of a Highlands Ranch man’s two wives which took place 18 years apart from each other.
The deaths that were initially reported as freak accidents but have now drawn intense interest from investigators with the FBI, National Park Service and Douglas County Sheriff’s Office.
[...]
“I want to cooperate with you,” said Harold Henthorn, 57. “But I know you spoke with my attorney and ask you to speak to him.”
His lawyer, Craig Truman
[...]
“I’m sure when all the facts are known in this difficult and complicated case that justice will be done.”
Truman declined to discuss the ongoing probes of the untimely deaths of Henthorn’s wives. Henthorn has told friends, neighbors and associates he is innocent and has done nothing wrong. He has not been charged with a crime.
Law enforcement interest in Henthorn began in September 2012 after his second wife, Toni, fell off a cliff in Rocky Mountain National Park while hiking with her husband, the only witness to her death.
The couple, who have an 8-year-old daughter together, were hiking in the Deer Mountain area of the national park, although they had left the trail and were in a rocky area. It was their anniversary weekend and they would have marked 13 years of marriage the next day.
Harold Henthorn told investigators his wife was preparing to take a picture when she fell about 50 feet to her death. He told investigators he was looking at his cellphone and did not see precisely what happened. The Sept. 29, 2012, incident was initially labeled an unfortunate accident.
[...]
the autopsy report for Toni Henthorn which raised numerous questions about her death. In his autopsy report three months after the incident, forensic pathologist Dr. James Wilkerson of the Larimer County Coroner’s office wrote:
Toni Henthorn, a 50 year old white female, died as a result of multiple blunt force injuries when she fell or was pushed down a cliff while hiking in Rocky Mountain National Park. The manner of death is undetermined. The circumstances of death are under investigation at the time of this report. Homicide cannot be excluded.
Ellis Armistead, a Denver-based private investigator who served as a homicide investigator with the Lakewood police department and was Chief Investigator with the 14th judicial district, reviewed the autopsy report
[...]
“I’ve never seen a conclusion like that, and I’ve reviewed hundreds of autopsy reports,” he said. “I find that an unusual conclusion to an autopsy report.”
The FBI has confirmed it is actively investigating Toni Henthorn’s death.
“It’s ongoing,” said FBI spokesman Dave Joly. “We’re hoping to bring it to a conclusion sooner rather than later. It’s something we’re taking a look at very carefully.”
While Harold Henthorn refused to discuss his wife’s death
[...]
he has continually proclaimed his innocence to friends, neighbors and acquaintances. Many spoke
[...]
but asked their names not be used.
[...]
Henthorn has complained of the ongoing FBI investigation, saying it has caused stress for him and his daughter. He has told those he knows that he loved his wife and would never harm her.
Steve Reynolds, a friend of Harold and Toni Henthorn for the last seven years, described them as a loving, caring couple.
[...]
“The FBI does not have one shred of evidence,” said Reynolds, who said Harold Henthorn is an “innocent person.”
“They do not deserve this. It was a horrible, horrible, terrible accident,” said Reynolds, who said the FBI has “harrassed” Harold Henthorn for the better part of a year.
Toni Henthorn was a well liked opthamologist, described by those who knew her as quiet and shy and a strong Christian, active in her Cherry Hills church. At one point, she served as team opthamologist for the Colorado Avalanche hockey team.
[..]
Also not commenting is the family of Sandra Lynn Henthorn, Harold Henthorn’s first wife who died in a tragic, freak accident in Douglas County. The 37-year-old woman, whose maiden name is Rishell, died in 1995.
In that case, the married couple was returning late at night from a mountain outing when Henthorn told investigators he believed one of the tires on his Jeep Cherokee felt “mushy” and may have been going flat on Highway 67 about 8.5 miles west of Deckers. It’s unclear if the tire was actually flat.
Henthorn explained to investigators that as he was changing the tire his wife somehow ended up under the car, possibly looking for a lug nut, when Henthorn said the jack slipped and the car fell on her.
Henthorn told investigators he was placing something in the trunk when the jack slipped, so he didn’t see exactly what happened. Sandra Lynn Henthorn was pronounced dead the next day on May 7, 1995.
Sources familiar with that case say that Henthorn was the beneficiary of at least $300,000 from an insurance policy he had taken out on his wife.
In the case, the coroner ruled “that the cause of death is due to mechanical asphyxiation secondary to a vehicle slipping off the jack and falling on top of the decedent.”
The Douglas County Sheriff’s Department investigated the incident and after seven days, concluded Sandra Lynn Henthorn’s death was accidental. However, Douglas County Sheriff’s investigators have now confirmed
[...]
they have reopened their 18-year-old investigation into her death.
“It warrants taking another look at,” said Douglas County Sheriff’s spokesman Sgt. Ron Hanavan. “We reopened it based on extraordinary circumstances.”
He declined to provide additional details and his office refused to release the 18-year-old case file,
[...]
Members of Sandra Lynn Henthorn’s family did not respond to CBS4 inquiries. She had been married to him for 13 years when she died. The two had known each other since they were undergraduates at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia.
[...]
Harold Henthorn has maintained a relatively low profile since moving to Colorado. While his educational background was as a geologist, friends and neighbors say in recent years Harold Henthorn had mostly been a stay-at-home father, working from his home and trying to raise money for charity organizations and nonprofits.
[...]
Neighbors describe him as deeply religious, outgoing, and extremely controlling. One neighbor described him as a devoted father to his 8-year-old daughter. But the same neighbor also said there was something about Henthorn that always left them uneasy and suspicious.
One source familiar with the case says that Harold Henthorn was the beneficiary of “significant” life insurance policies, taken out on his opthamologist wife. But with Toni Henthorn’s manner of death still undetermined and a criminal investigation underway, standard insurance procedure would dictate that those policies would not be paid out.
[...]
Toni Henthorn’s Mississippi family is prominent in the oil business, and one source says Harold Henthorn stood to inherit a large amount of money upon his wife’s death.
Former homicide investigator Armistead called it “proper and warranted” that investigators were closely scrutinizing the deaths of Harold Henthorn’s wives.
“Bad luck can happen to somebody, there’s no getting around that. But it always caused me when I see cases like this to be suspicious.”
http://denver.cbslocal.com/2013/10/...ion-harold-henthorn-toni-henthorn/?hpt=ju_bn6
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Harold Henthorn and Toni Henthorn
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I know a guy like this... 3 wives 3 mysterious deaths. He's a retired fire chief no one looks close enough at his behavior. Just being in the same room with him I get the willies.
 
I can't put myself in the place of his second wife because I am scared of heights and would have never gotten close enough tot he edge of a cliff to be pushed over, but I can put myself in the first wife place and unless she is very much different from me there is no damned way I would be crawling around searching under a car for a fucking lugnut, he lost it and he can find it. I don't think either one of his wives put themselves in danger, wasn't it just a coincidence that both times he was busy elsewhere and didn't see what happened but he was the only other one there?
 
In both cases he claimed he "did not see exactly what happened"...highly suspicious. Once maybe... but twice? And you were there for both accidents, but didn't see what happened? Pretty sure this guy killed both of his wives.
 
Harold Henthorn Indicted For Allegedly Killing Wife Years After Death During Hike
[...]
Colorado man who was the only witness to his wife's death during a hike
[....]
two years ago was arrested Thursday on charges that he killed her.
[...]
investigation that led to the federal indictment of Harold Henthorn on Wednesday pushed authorities to re-examine the premature death of his first wife in 1995. In that case, Henthorn was also the sole witness to her death, which occurred on a rural road late at night.

While authorities review Henthorn's first wife's death, prosecutors in Denver contend that Henthorn, 58, "willfully, deliberately, maliciously, and with premeditation and malice aforethought did unlawfully kill his wife, Toni Henthorn" in Rocky Mountain National Park in 2012,
[....]
The couple was hiking to celebrate their 12th anniversary. Henthorn has said that his 50-year-old wife fell 50 feet while trying to take a picture.
[....]
a coroner could not rule out foul play, prompting the FBI, the National Park Service and Douglas County Sheriff's Office to probe more deeply.

There were three life insurance policies on Henthorn's wife totaling $4.5 million,
[....]
Within two days of her death, an unspecified person sought to collect on one of them
[...]
If convicted of first-degree murder, Henthorn faces life imprisonment without the chance of parole, Reuters reported.

"I'm sure when all the facts are known in this difficult and complex case, justice will be done," Henthorn's attorney, Craig Truman, told
[...]
Authorities in Douglas County are also investigating the death of Henthorn's first wife, Sandra Henthorn.
[...]
Sandra Henthorn died in 1995, allegedly when the jack propping up the couple's Jeep Cherokee failed and dropped the car on her
[...]
Authorities ruled it an accident at the time, but are taking another look following Toni Henthorn's death.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/06/harold-henthorn-wife-death_n_6118576.html?utm_hp_ref=crime
 
Despite Claims, Government Says Henthorn Had No Job
[....]
charged with the 2012 death of his second wife, Dr. Toni Henthorn, had no job and no real income according to a government auditor who testified at a court hearing Wednesday afternoon.
The arraignment and detention hearing for Henthorn, 58, comes one week after a federal grand jury indicted the Highlands Ranch man
[...]
Henthorn, facing one count of first-degree murder, said his wife, Dr. Toni Henthorn, was taking a picture when she slipped and fell but that he did not see what happened as he was looking at his phone.

Dana Chamberlin, an economic crime auditor for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Denver, testified that despite Henthorn’s claims to friends and family that he was a fund raiser for charities and non profits,
[...]
her investigation revealed Henthorn had no steady income and did not appear to be employed. She said she found some earnings for Henthorn in 1993, 1999 and 2000, but that was all.
[....]
maintained for years that he was a fund raiser for various non-profits but Chamberlin’s testimony in federal court suggested that was not true.

Chamberlin testified that Henthorn stands to gain $4.5 million from three life insurance policies on his wife, money that has not been paid otu.
[...]
Chamberlin also confirmed on the stand
[...]
that on the first business day after Toni Henthorn’s death, a claim was made on one of the three, $1.5 million policies. She testified the claim was made by an associate of Henthorn’s insurance agent, Neil Cresswell.

While those policies have not paid out, Chamberlin testified that Henthorn collected $496,000 in insurance proceeds following the unusual 1995 death of his first wife, Sandra Lynn Henthorn. She died on a rural Douglas County road at night after Harold Henthorn said one of his tires felt “spongy” and he pulled over to change it. He said somehow his wife ended up under the car, possibly looking for a lug nut, when a jack failed and the car fell on her
[...]
After a one week investigation, The Douglas County Sheriff ruled it an accident. But the agency has now reopened that case.
[...]
government auditor also testified that in January and February of this year, Harold Henthorn transferred a total of $500,000 to his brother, Robert Henthorn.

“He wanted to invest in his brothers business,” said Chamberlin saying that Henthorn said it was “doing well” and would provide returns in the range of five to seven percent.
[....]
under questioning by a government prosecutor, Chamberlin said the $500,000 money transfer “was not typical” for Henthorn.

She said Harold Henthorn’s net worth appears to be about $1.5 million.

Federal Magistrate Judge Kathleen Tafoya said she wanted to receive a pre-trial report Wednesday afternoon before making a decision on whether Henthorn should be released on bond. Prosecutors want Henthorn to remain in jail without bond while his attorney is expected to argue
[...]
Craig Truman, Henthorn’s attorney, said in court Henthorn was pleading not guilty to the single murder charge he is facing.

Henthorn, clad in a tan jail issued jumpsuit, was handcuffed and shackled in court but took notes on the afternoon proceedings.
http://denver.cbslocal.com/2014/11/12/despite-claims-government-says-henthorn-had-no-job/
 
Colorado man charged with second wife’s murder held without bond as judge calls her 2012 fatal fall ‘glaringly’ similar to freak death of his first wife
A judge denied Harold Henthorn bond Wednesday, fearing he’d flee with his late wife’s assets. Prosecutors claim he pushed her off a Rocky Mountain trail in 2012 ― 17 years after his first wife died in a freak car mishap. The only other stain on the Colorado man’s criminal record is a bizarre 1994 theft of $47 worth of underwear from a JC Penny.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/cri...ife-similar-death-1st-judge-article-1.2009319
 
He so killed them both. He's only worked 3 years out of his life and his net worth is 1.5mil? Definitely cashing in every 13 years...
 
Husband charged in wife’s fatal fall off Colorado cliff marked spot of tumble on map with an ‘X’
Harold Henthorn, 58, took Toni Henthorn, for a surprise hike to celebrate their anniversary in September 2012. But a witness said he'd scoped out the trail previously and was looking at his cellphone when his wife plummeted 140 feet to her death.
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Harold Henthorn is accused of murdering his wife of 12 years, Toni Henthorn, shown here in happier times with their daughter.​
[...]
man accused of pushing his wife off a cliff to her death in a Colorado national park — 17 years after his first wife died in a freak accident — marked the spot of her spill with an X on a trail map, just a year after he may have tried to kill her in a different “accident,” prosecutors outlined in a series of search warrants.
[....]
court documents paint Harold Henthorn, 58, as a controlling, unemployed husband who lived off Toni Henthorn’s investments and salary, even studying his wife’s finances before marrying her.
[...]
September 2012 death of Toni Henthorn, 50,
[...]
Park came under intense scrutiny by investigators after they received an anonymous letter from someone who noticed the glaring similarities between the freak accident and that suffered by Harold Henthorn’s first wife, who died in 1995.

Sandra Lynn Henthorn, 37, was crushed to death when a car slipped off a jack while she and her husband were changing a flat tire. Harold collected a $500,000 life insurance policy
[...]
Harold Henthorn was the only witness to both bizarre deaths of his two wives. He was indicted on first-degree murder charges earlier this month in the second death and officials believe he is responsible for the first,
[...]
but have not charged him.
The day after Toni died following a 140-foot fall from a cliff near the Deer Mountain Trail, authorities discovered a map in his car with an X where she fell beside the word “hike,” a search warrant describes.

When asked about the map, Harold “appeared at a loss for words” and “could not explain why there was an ‘X’ on the map near the site of the fall,” according to the court documents obtained
[...]
He claimed she tumbled from a cliff where the two went for “romantic time” as he looked down at a text message. But authorities found that the text was not delivered until after he claimed it had,
[...]
About a year before Toni’s death, Harold, who stood to cash in $4.5 million in life insurance policies if his wife died, dropped a 20 foot beam of wood onto his wife’s shoulders at the couple’s Grand Lake cabin, Toni’s mother told
[...]
Harold called his wife outside late one night and she bent over to pick something up before the beam fell on her shoulders, breaking her back.

“She told her mother if she hadn’t bent over when she did the beam would have killed her,”
[...]
“The only witness to the accident was Henthorn.”

An EMT, Andrew Sullivan, who responded to the injury call told [...]
“it was dark outside and (Sullivan) recalled thinking it was a strange time to be working under the deck.”

“When Sullivan treated the patient she was in pain and seemed annoyed,” the affidavit says.
After the fatal fall, a longtime friend, Mike Whitener, told investigators Harold Henthorn appeared more concerned about the police investigation into his involvement than about mourning his dead wife.

“It troubled him (Whitener) Henthorn didn’t say anything about losing his wife or show remorse over her death,”
[....]
“He didn’t cry or seem to be in mourning.”
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/cri...tal-cliff-fall-x-court-docs-article-1.2017726
 
How are the two deaths "glaringly" similar? That makes no fucking sense whatsoever. The first sounds like a definite freak accident. The 2nd is iffy, but it seems the main cause for suspicion is that this guy was unemployed. Stay at home dads get the the publics disdain again.
 
How are the two deaths "glaringly" similar? That makes no fucking sense whatsoever. The first sounds like a definite freak accident. The 2nd is iffy, but it seems the main cause for suspicion is that this guy was unemployed. Stay at home dads get the the publics disdain again.
I wouldn't call the deaths similar, but the fact that his sole income is from death benefits is a bit suspicious. Also the x on the trail map, and the call on his cell phone that actually came after she fell. No proof, but suspect elements are there.
 
My first two wives died and I'm not guilty of anything. It can happen.

In this case, though, I'm thinking he helped things along somehow...
 
I know I said this before but I very sincerely doubt you're going to get too many women to crawl around on the ground, after dark, under a car looking for lugnuts when she has a perfectly capable husband standing there that lost it in the first place. I can't speak for the cliff, I'm afraid of heights, so he wouldn't have gotten me up there in the first place, especially if there was no guard rail. But I can guarantee you, I wouldn't be crawling around on the ground, we'd just have to sit there or travel on less than the full complement of lugnuts til we got to the first auto parts store and bought some more.
 
I know I said this before but I very sincerely doubt you're going to get too many women to crawl around on the ground, after dark, under a car looking for lugnuts when she has a perfectly capable husband standing there that lost it in the first place. I can't speak for the cliff, I'm afraid of heights, so he wouldn't have gotten me up there in the first place, especially if there was no guard rail. But I can guarantee you, I wouldn't be crawling around on the ground, we'd just have to sit there or travel on less than the full complement of lugnuts til we got to the first auto parts store and bought some more.

So you think he killed her some other way and then threw her under the car and it somehow masked the actual, original death causing injuries? Or that he forced her under there and then kicked the jack out? Seems far more preposterous.
 
A man charged with pushing his wife to her death off a cliff as they hiked in Colorado's Rocky Mountain National Park struggled to explain to investigators why he had a park map with an "X'' drawn at the spot where she fell.

Harold Henthorn, 59, had been mostly calm in describing the deadly Sept. 29, 2012, hike until he was asked about the map, park Ranger Mark Faherty testified as Henthorn's federal trial opened Tuesday. A grand jury indicted Henthorn on a first-degree murder charge in the death of his second wife, Toni Henthorn, 50, who plummeted about 130 feet off a cliff in a remote, rocky area. Investigators later found the map in his Jeep Grand Cherokee.

"He seemed at a loss for words," Faherty said. "He hemmed and hawed before he finally gave me an explanation."

He denied using the map during the deadly hike and said he was not sure why it was marked with an "X," Faherty said.

Prosecutors say Henthorn carefully planned the killing, scouting the trail nine times before taking his wife with him as a surprise for their 12th wedding anniversary. As they wandered off the trail to capture the view of autumn colors and snowy peaks, Toni paused to take a photo, Henthorn told investigators. She tumbled face-first over the ledge, suffering massive head wounds, Assistant U.S. Attorney Suneeta Hazra said.

Henthorn's defense attorney, Craig L. Truman, told jurors that Toni's death was a tragic accident, and Henthorn raced to help her, climbing down steep terrain.

But a dispatcher who spoke with Henthorn, Julie Sullivan, testified that she didn't believe he was actually performing CPR, because he did not sound out of breath.

Prosecutors said her fatal fall was reminiscent of the death of Henthorn's first wife, Sandra Lynn Henthorn, who was crushed when a car slipped off a jack while they changed a flat tire in 1995 — several months after their 12th wedding anniversary. Henthorn has not been charged in that case, but police reopened the investigation after Toni Henthorn's fatal fall.

"These deaths were not accidents," Hazra said, arguing Henthorn staged both to look like freak accidents, to which he was the only witness. In each case, Hazra said, Henthorn stood to benefit from his wife's life insurance policies. Toni Henthorn, a wealthy ophthalmologist from Mississippi, was covered by several policies totaling $4.7 million, which her relatives only learned of after she had died.

Henthorn purported to be a successful fundraiser, but prosecutors found no evidence he earned income.
http://news.yahoo.com/ranger-man-could-not-explain-x-map-where-071048374.html
 
Update 9-21-2015
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...cliff-on-anniversary_56007beae4b00310edf8428b

A federal jury on Monday convicted a Colorado man of murdering his wife by shoving her from a cliff while they hiked in Rocky Mountain National Park on their 12th wedding anniversary.

Harold Henthorn, 59, had claimed that his wife fell 130 feet to her death while pausing to take a picture on Sept. 29, 2012. But after 10 hours of deliberations, the jury in Denver convicted him of first-degree murder. A life sentence is mandatory when he is formally sentenced in December.

Prosecutors said Henthorn killed Toni Henthorn, 50, to cash in on $4.7 million in life insurance policies she didn’t know existed. She was a successful ophthalmologist with a stake in her family’s oil business.

One of the most incriminating pieces of evidence was a map in Henthorn's possession that had been marked with an "X" on the area where his wife fell. Investigators said he was at a loss for words when they questioned him about it.

Prosecutors also said he scouted the remote area of the park nine times before bringing Toni with him.

"Today a jury in federal court has spoken – finding Harold Henthorn guilty of the First Degree Murder of his wife, Toni Henthorn. Henthorn, who has been in custody since his arrest, will not again experience life outside a prison cell," said U.S. Attorney John Walsh in a statement.

Foul play was not initially suspected in Toni’s death, but the prosecution wrote court documents alleging that Henthorn gave conflicting statements about what happened on the ledge before she fell. In one version, he said Toni wandered too close to the edge while checking text messages. In another, she slipped while taking a picture.

[...]

Toni's mother said she forgave her former son-in-law, according to The Associated Press.

"Believe it or not, I forgive him for doing it. I feel for him and his family," said Yvonne Bertolet, who was in court.

Toni was Henthorn's second wife to die under suspicious circumstances. In 1995, his first wife, Sandra Henthorn, died when the jack propping up the couple’s Jeep Cherokee allegedly failed, crushing her beneath the car. She had been changing a flat tire on the side of the road. Henthorn was also the only witness to the incident that took Sandra’s life.

In opening statements two weeks ago, prosecutors alleged that Henthorn staged his first wife’s death, though he hasn’t been charged with a crime. Police reopened an investigation into her death after Henthorn was indicted for Toni’s death.

[...]
 
So you think he killed her some other way and then threw her under the car and it somehow masked the actual, original death causing injuries? Or that he forced her under there and then kicked the jack out? Seems far more preposterous.
I'd guess it was more like;

"Hey honey, my fingers are too big to get to the *insert random engine part here* can you try?"

Or something along those lines.

ETA: He has NO upper lip and it's creeping me the fuck out.
 
Stay at home dads get the the publics disdain again.

Hi jackburton. $4.7 million in life insurance policies on a wife who met her end in a freak accident? AND, incidentally, his 2nd wife to die with a hefty life insurance payout. You seem to be a very cynical, skeptical person.
Doesn't that raise a red flag with you? It sure does with me.
 
I remember reading about this unscrupulous lothario, deceiver and seducer that saw himself as the be all to end all as far as his prowess with the ladies was concerned. Cocky and arrogant to think he could pull off bed, wed, dead and collect your payday routine for a second time. I guess Harold better start to develop and take his prowess in a whole new direction as he heads off to serve life in prison. It's a mans world is going to take on an entirely different connotation for him. :wideyed:
 
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