Attorney Keith Greer and Zahau’s family will discuss the family’s petition to change the cause of death on Zahau's death certificate to homicide or undetermined
Legal fight continues on 10-year anniversary of Rebecca Zahau s death 10news.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 10news.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
New York Times best-selling author Caitlin Rother who lives in San Diego decided to take a deeper dive into the case. Rother just released a book about the case called “Death on Ocean Boulevard: Inside the Coronado Mansion Case.
It was a death impossible to ignore: 32-year old Zahou the beautiful girlfriend of a pharmaceutical industry millionaire discovered dead, bound and hanging from a balcony at Coronado s beachfront Spreckles Mansion, with a cryptic message painted on a nearby door.
NBC 7 SAN DIEGO
“You know, when you find a naked woman hanging, bound and gagged, with her ankles tied, and her hands tied behind her back, with a gag in her mouth, how can you not be intrigued by that?” Rother asked NBC 7. “What happened? And then, you know, she has a rich boyfriend, Jonah Shacknai, who s a wealthy, you know, industrial pharmaceutical tycoon, you know, who s very successful, very smart, very accomplished…”
Judge agrees to hear Zahau family s bid to force case information from Sheriff s Department sandiegouniontribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sandiegouniontribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
San Francisco s bizarre history of (literally) moving houses
FacebookTwitterEmail
A Victorian home being moved on Steiner Street via horse power, 1908, San Francisco.Archival / Unknown
Mark Twain didn t actually complain about the weather in San Francisco (the person who coined, The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco has never claimed the quote), but he did have another gripe with the city. An old house got loose from her moorings last night and drifted down Sutter Street towards Montgomery, the famed humorist wrote in the Daily Morning Call in 1886. For several days the vagrant two-story frame house has been wondering listlessly about Commercial Street, above this office, and she has finally stopped in the middle of the thoroughfare, and is staring dejectedly toward Montgomery street, as if she would like to go down there, but really do not feel equal to the exertion.