California Attorney General Kamala Harris has decided that she won't review the San Diego County Sheriff Department's findings that the bizarre death of Rebecca Zahau, the girlfriend of Scottsdale-based Medicis CEO Jonah Shacknai, was a suicide.
Earlier this week, Shacknai wrote Harris a letter asking her to review the case -- not because he didn't agree that the death was a suicide, but to "further enhance the public's confidence in the integrity of the
law-enforcement process and finally bring closure to these terrible
tragedies."
In Harris' reply to Shacknai's letter -- provided to New Times by the California Department of Justice -- Harris says the AG's Office only reviews cases handled by local law enforcement "under very narrow circumstances."
See the full letter below:
Dear Mr. Shacknai:
Thank you for your September 19 letter to Attorney General Kamala Harris, who sends her condolences for your profound loss. On behalf of both the Attorney General and her staff, we offer our sympathy for the tragedy that is the reason for your correspondence. Your letter requests an inquiry into the investigation that was conducted by the San Diego County Sheriff's Office. The California Department of Justice would review a local investigation under very narrow circumstances. Some of the factors that are considered before committing the state's scarce resources include whether a clear conflict of interest exists, whether a local law enforcement agency has requested assistance, whether local investigative resources have been exhausted, and whether there are allegations of gross malfeasance by the investigative agency. Based on a review of your request, we must decline your invitation to review this investigation at this time.
Please accept our sincerest condolences for your tragic loss, and feel free to contact me if you have any questions.
Sincerely,
Dane R. Gillette
For Kamala D. Harris.
Earlier this
month, the SDCSD ruled the death was a suicide, despite the bizarre
factors of her death -- for example, when she was found, Zahau was naked
and had her hands and feet bound behind her back, and there was a
cryptic message written on the door to the room where her body was found.
Zahau's body was found by Shacknai's brother just days after the CEO's son, Max,
was rushed to a hospital in critical condition after falling down a
flight of stairs in the mansion. Zahau was caring for the boy at the time of the fall.
Max Shacknai later died from his injuries.
"Were these deaths the result of criminal conduct? Was Max's death a
homicide? The answer is no," San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said at a
press conference earlier this month. "It was a tragic accident. Was Rebecca's
death a homicide? Again the answer is no. It was a suicide ... These
deaths were not the result of any criminal acts."
Despite the ruling, Zahau's apparent suicide remains controversial for a lot of reasons.
Aside from being found bound behind her back, naked, and hanging from a
balcony, Zahau's autopsy
revealed several unexplained head injuries a renowned forensic
pathologist says don't necessarily support the theory that Zahau hung
herself.
Pathologist Cyril Wecht reviewed Zahua's entire autopsy report. He finds the following:
"She has subgaleal hemorrhages; those are hemorrhages on the
undersurface of the scalp. I see no reason why she should have those. You get those when your head strikes something or is
struck by something."
Brain hemorrhaging could have
happened when Zahau was cut down from the balcony -- she may have hit
her head -- but it wouldn't have happened in four different places in
the brain, Wecht concludes.
"Even if (her) scalp hit bushes, that kind of impact would not produce
subgaleal hemorrhage," Wecht continues. "We're talking about contusions on
the top of the head. So, even as the body is falling down - let's say
there are branches - how do you get bruises on the top of the head as
the body is falling vertically downward?"
Another tidbit the San Diego County Sheriff's Department left out during its
press conference announcing its findings that Zahau's death was a
suicide is a message left in black paint on a door near the room
where Zahau was found hanging.
The SDCSD mentioned a message during the press conference, but wouldn't tell reporters what it said.
That message, the autopsy reveals, was the following: "She saved him can you save her?"
The message could possibly be referencing Max Shacknai. However, it seems if Zahau were the person who'd written the message, it would say "can you save me," not "can you save her."