NYC suicide attempt collapse (AP) Updated: 2006-07-11 15:20
A four-story building on Manhattan's Upper East Side collapsed into a pile of
rubble Monday after a thunderous explosion that hurled fireballs skyward and
left an upscale block littered with bricks, broken glass and splintered wood.
A man, identified by
local media reports as Dr. Nicholas Bartha, is brought out of a collapsed
building in New York July 10, 2006. Bartha, who lived alone in the
building, was pulled from the center of the rubble and hospitalized with
severe burns. [Reuters]
| Authorities said the
blast was caused by gas, and they were investigating whether it was the result
of a suicide attempt by the building's owner, a doctor who was going through a
bitter divorce. The doctor, Nicholas Bartha, 66, and a passer-by were severely
hurt; at least 13 others had minor injuries.
Shortly before the blast, Bartha sent out a rambling e-mail to his wife in
which he contemplated suicide, a police official told The Associated Press on
condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.
"When you read this ... your life will change forever," the e-mail read in
part. "You deserve it. You will be transformed from gold digger to ash and
rubbish digger. You always wanted me to sell the house. I always told you I will
leave the house only if I am dead."
The injured included five civilians and 10 firefighters. Bartha was pulled
from the rubble after yelling up to rescuers while buried in the wreckage, fire
officials said.
Bartha recently lost a US$4 million judgment in the divorce case, and court
records chronicle a nasty dispute that spanned five years. The building was
worth nearly $5 million based on a 2004 assessment, and was to be sold at
auction to pay the judgment.
According to a 2005 appellate court opinion, the doctor had "intentionally
traumatized" his Jewish wife, who was born in Nazi-occupied Holland, by posting
"swastika-adorned articles and notes" around their home. The opinion also said
Bartha had "ignored her need for support and assistance while she was undergoing
surgery and treatment for breast cancer."
In a petition filed this year, Cordula Bartha asked that deputies remove
Nicholas Bartha from the residence. "I have no doubt that (he) will ensconce
himself in the marital residence and refuse to leave it after the auction is
held. He has said many times that he intends to 'die in my house.'"
An attorney who represented Bartha in his divorce said his former client
considered the house "his pride and joy."
"Faced with possibly losing it, he couldn't handle the pressure," Ira Garr
said on Fox News Channel's "On the Record with Greta Van Susteren." Garr said he
stopped representing Bartha after the doctor seemed to lose interest in pushing
further with the appeal of his divorce judgment.
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