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Merrill Apparently Shot Himself On the Bay
Washington Post ^ | 6-21-06 | Eric Rich

Posted on 06/21/2006 5:06:02 AM PDT by Renfield

Philip Merrill, the prominent publisher and former diplomat whose body was found floating in the Chesapeake Bay on Monday, suffered from a heart condition and apparently took his own life, his family said last night.

Merrill, 72, was found with a shotgun wound to the head and a small anchor tied around one or both ankles, according to a source familiar with the investigation.

~~~~snip~~~~

In 1996, former CIA director William E. Colby died from drowning and exposure after falling from a canoe off Charles County.

~~~~snip~~~~~

In 1978, another former high-level CIA employee, John A. Paisley, disappeared while sailing across the Chesapeake Bay. His body was found a week later near Solomons Island with a fatal gunshot wound in an apparent suicide.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Maryland
KEYWORDS: anothervictim; chesapeakebay; death; made2looklikesuicide; maryland; merrill; murder; philipmerrill; suicide
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To: TruthSetsUFree
When I hear things like this I wonder what effect his cocktail of drugs had on his mental state.

Heart surgery also causes depression in many cases. It's not always the drugs especially if his doctor was still observing him.

101 posted on 06/21/2006 1:38:48 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: coconutt2000
What could possibly be depressing enough to bring him to suicide?

He was ill. How seriously? We don't know but what you or I might regard as a small thing might have been big to him.

I know a woman who has flatly stated that she would kill herself if she had to be confined to a wheelchair and she means it.

Me? I would pout and then adjust. Hey, I can still kick butt on FR. :)

But I am not a super successful always healthy person either. I have to deal with the fact that I am less then perfect on a daily basis. Someone who has not had to deal with that can crumble under a hit that you or I would shrug off.

But I doubt that we will ever know. Unless it proves to be murder.

102 posted on 06/21/2006 1:44:04 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (The bottom 60% does 40% of the work, the top 40% does 60% of the work. Just who are the "workers"?)
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To: blau993
The evidence seems to point to a suicide. Why wouldn't they accept it?

What evidence? I don't know about you, but if a member of my family had shotgun wounds to the head and was tied to an anchor, I'd not be so quick to accept the "legacy the ignominy" of suicide. I don't care how depressed they had been.

103 posted on 06/21/2006 2:06:24 PM PDT by DejaJude (Admiral Clark said, "Our mantra today is life, liberty and the pursuit of those who threaten it!")
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To: DejaJude
Interesting perspective, but I don't see the evidence pointing to anything other than suicide. I happen to live in Annapolis, where of course this has been a huge story. One article early on (long before suicide was mentioned) contained a quote from Merrill about the things he most enjoyed in life. The first three he mentioned were "sailing skiing and sex." If his heart condition had caused him to deteriorate to the point where any or all of those activities were threatened, the notion of suicide wouldn't sound at all implausible to me. Lots of hard charging Type A guys -- and Merrill certainly was one of them -- have trouble coping with the limitations that aging imposes on them.

I see lots of speculation on this thread that it was murder, not suicide, but I see no evidence to support the speculation, and I have yet to hear anyone suggest a motive for such a murder.

104 posted on 06/21/2006 2:22:19 PM PDT by blau993
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To: blau993
Interesting perspective, but I don't see the evidence pointing to anything other than suicide.

The only "evidence" I've heard is that you have a dead body that was shot and in the water with a weight attached. How does one make the assumption that it was suicide? Simply because the family says he was being treated for depression?

I see lots of speculation on this thread that it was murder, not suicide, but I see no evidence to support the speculation, and I have yet to hear anyone suggest a motive for such a murder.

There is one other speculation. It's not him at all.

105 posted on 06/21/2006 2:37:19 PM PDT by DejaJude (Admiral Clark said, "Our mantra today is life, liberty and the pursuit of those who threaten it!")
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To: DejaJude
There is one other speculation. It's not him at all

Somebody's been reading too much Agatha Christie. The old "mutilate the face and fake your own death" scenario was a nifty fictional device pre-DNA, but it's a little tough to see how you'd to pull it off these days.

106 posted on 06/21/2006 3:35:21 PM PDT by blau993
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To: Ditter

You're right, it's possible it happened that way. But the question still remains of WHY? It would seem to me that a person committing suicide would WANT their body found, so why make it more difficult.


107 posted on 06/21/2006 3:52:08 PM PDT by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: wagglebee
"Lost at sea" is a lot more desirable and honorable that "he off himself".

Lost at sea is down right romantic and maybe the insurance wouldn't pay off for suicide.
108 posted on 06/21/2006 4:04:47 PM PDT by Ditter
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To: blau993
Somebody's been reading too much Agatha Christie. The old "mutilate the face and fake your own death" scenario was a nifty fictional device pre-DNA, but it's a little tough to see how you'd to pull it off these days.

Was a DNA test done?

109 posted on 06/21/2006 4:17:32 PM PDT by DejaJude (Admiral Clark said, "Our mantra today is life, liberty and the pursuit of those who threaten it!")
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To: wagglebee
But the question still remains of WHY? It would seem to me that a person committing suicide would WANT their body found, so why make it more difficult.

Why jump though so many hoops to kill yourself? You could set out to sail on a beautiful day, take a lethal overdose and die peacefully doing what you love best. Your relatives are not wondering for days what happened to you, and are not presented with a bloated corpse.

110 posted on 06/21/2006 4:24:57 PM PDT by DejaJude (Admiral Clark said, "Our mantra today is life, liberty and the pursuit of those who threaten it!")
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To: DejaJude; All

I agree, the circumstances are VERY strange, to say the least.
But remember that we dont have, and will never have, all the information. Did the poor guy just find out from his MD that he had inoperable cancer? Had he been started on a new med(s) that changed his outlook?
Did he know something that was not to come out?
That being said, the method of death was odd.......I am sure that it could be done alone, but why????


111 posted on 06/21/2006 4:37:10 PM PDT by carmenbmw (My cats name is Mean. He earned it.)
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To: carmenbmw
I agree, the circumstances are VERY strange, to say the least. But remember that we don't have, and will never have, all the information. Did the poor guy just find out from his MD that he had inoperable cancer? Had he been started on a new med(s) that changed his outlook? Did he know something that was not to come out? That being said, the method of death was odd.......I am sure that it could be done alone, but why????

Exactly, why would the family be so willing to accept a suicide and not demand an investigation? We have only the family's word that he set out alone. Maybe he did. But did he pick up a passenger along the way (willingly or not)? I just find it highly unlikely that the family would just accept this suicide theory without an objection. There are just too many "why would he" to this story.

112 posted on 06/21/2006 6:21:48 PM PDT by DejaJude (Admiral Clark said, "Our mantra today is life, liberty and the pursuit of those who threaten it!")
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To: RDTF
this really doesn't make a lot of sense

I agree. Unless they found a suicide note that was utterly convincing to his family, with details that couldn't have been coerced by a killer, I think the press is premature in labeling this a suicide. Given all the international and big-time organizations he was into, do the police think that his wallet not being stolen is conclusive evidence that he did it himself? God help us.

113 posted on 06/21/2006 6:55:03 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Got freedom? Thank a veteran)
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To: GAD
Think of all the time and money spent on trying to find this louse.


The guy was one of the most generous public benefactors in Maryland and DC. He was hardly a louse, and had certainly made up for whatever was spent in his family's behalf looking for him.


Phillip Merrill of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation

Phillip Merrill Center at the Chesapeake Bay Foundation

Philip Merrill (neo-con)
Center for Security Policy: Adviser
U.S. Export-Import Bank: President
Capital Gazette Communications: Chairman

Phillip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland

Washington Post editorial June 14 about Merrill

Phillip Merrill sworn in as President of the Import-Export Bank of the United States (EX-IM)

Phillip Merrill, owner of the Annapolis, MD newspaper Capital Gazette (he was also owner of the DC paper Washingtonian)

Statement of Cornell University on loss of alumnus Phillip Merrill

Phillip Merrill, benefactor of the Nitze School of Advanced International Studies of the Johns Hopkins University, located in Washington, DC

Phillip Merrill Fellowship, the American Academy of Diplomacy

114 posted on 06/21/2006 7:08:42 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Got freedom? Thank a veteran)
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To: IamConservative
Perhaps we can conclude he was very indecisive..??..

No freaking way, Jose. Ping to post 114

115 posted on 06/21/2006 7:11:13 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Got freedom? Thank a veteran)
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To: RetiredArmy
Chesapeake Bay sounds like another place I don't care to visit unless I am heavily armed.

What a ludicrously stupid thing to say. It is a huge bay extending over a hundred miles, larger than states like Connecticut and Rhode Island, lined with dozens of rivers, streams and creeks, dotted with dozens of islands, and providing gorgeous estuaries full of fish, shellfish, the Maryland Blue Crab, water fowl, and lush water vegetation. The United States Naval Academy is at Annapolis, the captial city of Maryland, on the mouth of a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay. Millions of boaters enjoy the Bay each year. It is one of the most precious resources on the East Coast, and in many places is lined with huge shore mansions, in others with fishing villages. Real estate values along the Bay have been soaring for years, especially the parts in driving distance of Washington, DC. Look at a map.

116 posted on 06/21/2006 7:20:42 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Got freedom? Thank a veteran)
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To: DejaJude

I doubt it, LOL. The real world is not quite so paranoid as Free Republic, WADR.


117 posted on 06/21/2006 7:22:21 PM PDT by blau993
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To: Roccus

Bobby Baker? Didn't a small plane blow up above the Chesapeake that was carrying a witness in that case?


118 posted on 06/21/2006 7:30:41 PM PDT by Calvin Locke
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To: Calvin Locke

His bookkeeper in an Ocean City Hotel that he owned (on the Atlantic coast, not the Bay) crashed a small plane into the ocean. http://www.maryland.com/articles/print.php?a_id=1


119 posted on 06/21/2006 7:36:48 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Got freedom? Thank a veteran)
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To: Albion Wilde


...And here's some more about Bobby Baker for all you JFK assassination conspiracy junkies out there...


http://home.earthlink.net/~sixthfloor/brennen.htm


120 posted on 06/21/2006 7:42:47 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Got freedom? Thank a veteran)
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