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To: American Preservative
He is very dangerous to them, as he is the only living witness to the truth.

Prayer bump for Ted Maher's protection.

2,230 posted on 12/03/2002 12:02:53 AM PST by nicmarlo
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To: nicmarlo
Below is an article that was in a Paris Paper. The trial was a farce and we expected the outcome. It still hurts and that hurt will continue. Another Christmas for the children where their wish was "We want Daddy for Christmas". The local paper even called the nursing license bureau and now they are looking into taking Ted's nursing license away from him.

Most of the media is writing exactly what Monaco wants them to write. There is no mention of the conspiracy theories surrounding the deaths. As Serdet states "There is no mystery here, Maher was exclusively responsible for the deaths." "The only mystery which remains is what was going on in head and what were his true motives." Also the scientific evidence presented at the trial. Serdet again said "There was no way of telling when, and in what circumstances, these came to be present, they should be ignored."

Thank you freepers for supporting the Maher family. We all wish that it was a better ending but all of us knew that Monaco would make Monaco look good to the world. Heidi is still in Monaco and will be allowed to see Ted today for one hour. Manasse probably went out to celebrate his victory. It went as he planned.

Nurse is jailed for causing death of millionaire banker

By John Lichfield in Paris

03 December 2002

An American male nurse accidentally caused the death by asphyxiation of the millionaire banker Edmond Safra when a hare-brained attempt to impress his boss went tragically wrong, a court in Monaco decided yesterday.

Ted Maher, 44, was sentenced to 10 years in prison after admitting he started the fire which killed his employer and another nurse three years ago in a muddled plot to make himself look like a hero.

After a 10-day trial, the Monaco criminal court rejected suggestions that the confused and slow reaction of the Monaco police and fire brigade contributed to the death of the 67-year-old banker and his nurse, Vivien Torrente, 52.

Maher set fire to a waste paper bin in M. Safra's apartment and stabbed himself in his stomach and thigh after telling his employer that he was being attacked by a criminal "commando" unit. He bundled the banker and his nurse into a bathroom and raised the alarm, intending to claim the credit for fighting off the attackers.

The fire spread rapidly through the apartment, while police and firemen struggled with security doors and waited for reinforcements to tackle a criminal gang, which did not exist. At one point, the police arrested and handcuffed M. Safra's chief bodyguard, thinking that he was an attacker.

A policeman spoke to M. Safra on a mobile telephone but was unable to persuade him to leave his sanctuary, the court heard. The Monaco chief prosecutor, Daniel Serdet, rejected suggestions from lawyers representing Maher, and the families of the victims, that the principality's emergency services were partly responsible for the deaths.

He also dismissed, without referring to them specifically, the many conspiracy theories surrounding the deaths. "There is no mystery here," M. Serdet said. "Maher was exclusively responsible for the deaths.The only mystery which remains is what was going on in head and what were his true motives".

Scientific evidence presented to the trial did, however, raise some facts which could not easily fit into the version of events broadly accepted by the defence and prosecution. The court was told that DNA traces from an unknown man were found under M. Safra's fingernails and that spots of the banker's blood were found on the bra and knickers of the dead nurse. Since there was no way of telling when, and in what circumstances, these came to be present, they should be ignored, the prosecutor said.

Maher, who was found guilty of "causing deaths by arson in an inhabited place", told the court he concocted a "stupid" plot to make himself appear a hero to his boss. M. Safra's family's lawyers suggested that he expected to be given a large sum of money for his heroism.

Elisabeth de Franceschi, a psychiatrist, told the court that Maher, a former US paratrooper, was an immature, ambitious man, who came to hero-worship M. Safra and could not bear the thought that others shared his affection. "He had an insatiable hunger for recognition ... He was driven by jealousy and competetiveness," she said.

M. Safra's security chief, Samuel Cohen, told the court he would have been able to save his boss but his route was barred by the Monaco police for a crucial 30 minutes.

2,239 posted on 12/03/2002 7:52:46 AM PST by jahw
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