If a dead woman was found naked, with her hands  tied behind her back and her feet bound hanging from a balcony, most  people would think it would become a criminal investigation from the  outset.
When the home in which the woman is discovered belongs to the Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Scottsdale, Arizona based Medicis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, this is not the case.
Medicis Pharmaceuticals Corporation is a healthcare and biotechnology company which Shacknai founded in January of 1988 after a career in government capacities and the corporate world. He also just happens to be a multi-millionaire.
Adam Shacknai, brother of Jonah Shacknai, discovered the corpse of Jonah’s girlfriend Rebecca Nalepa on Wednesday morning.
Interestingly, Shacknai’s six-year-old son was hospitalized after an “apparent accident” on Monday according to CBS Los Angeles.
Sheriff’s Captain Tim Curran of San Diego County told CBS Los Angeles  that, “Because of the unique and bizarre circumstances of this  incident, it has yet to be determined if this will become a criminal  matter or remain as a death investigation.”
I was astonished by this statement, to say the least. How would a murdered, bound woman hanging from a balcony in her birthday suit  be anything other than a criminal matter? I guess when you’re a  powerful CEO of a major pharmaceutical corporation, the police give you the benefit of the doubt.
In an age where police justify SWAT teams liquefying veterans, children are executed by police officers for schoolyard scuffles, people filming police officers from their own property are arrested for no reason or brutally beaten, and Americans are arrested for gardening, why would this be treated as anything other than a criminal manner?
If this isn’t a clear case of selective enforcement and unequal treatment, I have no clue what is.
According to reports, Jonah Shacknai’s six-year-old son is now in a coma after falling down a staircase. Jonah’s girlfriend, the now deceased 32-year-old Nalepa, was allegedly the only person home when the accident occurred.
According to investigators, when Adam, Jonah’s brother, discovered  the bound and murdered Nalepa he was the only other person present in  Jonah’s mansion.
The officers investigating the case conjecture that the boy’s fall  and subsequent coma and the murder of Nalepa are isolated and unrelated  incidents.
Apparently, it is quite common for a child to fall down a set of stairs and enter a coma while only a girlfriend  is present, then just two days later the woman happens to be found  bound and killed. I’m not quite sure how any sane investigator would see  these two events as unrelated.
Jonah Shacknai was apparently at the hospital when his brother discovered the body of Jonah’s girlfriend.
An autopsy on Nalepa has been completed but the results are being withheld until further tests are performed by the county medical examiner.
According to ABC News,  the victim had recently returned to her maiden name of Zahau two months  before her death. Her sister, Mary Zahau-Loehner reported that they  spoke on the telephone hours before Rebecca’s death.
According to Zahau-Loehner, her sister sounded completely normal the night before she was killed.
According to a San Diego Kennel owner who spoke with the victim less  than 24 hours before her death, Rebecca was “shaken by recent events in  her home.” What exactly these events are along with most details of the  case are still being withheld by the Sheriff’s department.
Autopsy records, requests for copies of search warrants, and  recordings of Adam Shacknai’s 911 call will all be ignored during the  investigation according to investigators.
The family of the victim has not made any comments regarding the  death, but apparently most of the investigation’s focus is being placed  on her boyfriend, Shacknai.
The quote published by CBS Los Angeles gives a completely different  impression, making it appear that the investigators have not yet decided  that this even qualifies as a criminal investigation.
The IB Times makes a point which is conspicuously absent from other media reports,
“There has been no explanation yet from the medical examiner’s office  about how Nalepa might have hung herself while her wrists and ankles  were bound.”
If the county’s medical examiner can come up with a scenario in which  someone can bind their wrists and ankles with an electrical cord and  hang themselves naked from a balcony, someone should look in to giving  them a Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
Does Shacknai’s history have anything to do with his strangely preferential treatment?
This seems quite reasonable given Shacknai was chief aide to the  United States House of Representatives’ committee for health policy from  the years of 1977 to 1982 and his position on the Commission on the  Federal Drug Approval Process along with the National Council on Drugs.
If Shacknai was treated like any average American he would have been  shot on sight dozens of times or at least beaten to a pulp. Yet, when  you have government connections, millions in liquid wealth and split  your time between Arizona and California, you are treated with the  utmost respect.
Even if Shacknai is completely innocent and the incident with his son and his girlfriend are unrelated, why should he not be treated like a subhuman piece of filth as any other American would be?
By Madison Ruppert taken from http://endthelie.com/2011/07/15/nude-bound-woman-found-dead-in-big-pharma-ceo%E2%80%99s-home-not-yet-a-criminal-investigation/#axzz1SRhNecXZ
 
 
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