Insured for Murder

$35.99
by Robin Yocum

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All the ingredients of a first-rate thriller stand out in this investigative report by Robin Yocum and Catherine Candisky, who reveal a sinister and deadly con game that was three years in the making: a murder, an insurance scam with a multi-million dollar payoff, a playboy businessman, a sinister stun-gun-toting neurologist, false identities, and an international manhunt.On the morning of April 16, 1988, the emergency squad was called to the office of Dr. Richard P. Boggs, a respected neurologist in Glendale, California. On the floor of the examining room was the body of Melvin E. Hanson, the vice president of the Just Sweats athletic clothing store chain, based in Columbus, Ohio. Apparently, he had collapsed and died of heart failure during a routine examination. Early next morning, Hanson's business partner and the company president, John B. Hawkins, arrived from Columbus and had the body unceremoniously cremated. The coroner ruled that Hanson died of natural causes, so there was nothing to be investigated, and the Glendale police did not pursue the case further.But this wasn't just another unfortunate death. There was something very, very wrong here. The body lying on the floor was not Hanson's. The corpse was an anonymous double who had been murdered in a scheme to fraudulently collect on Hanson's life insurance policy. A routine tip about an ``interesting lawsuit'' leads two Ohio reporters to a multimillion-dollar insurance scam: a pulsing tale of murder, false identities, drugs, and sex. When Melvin Hanson, 46, allegedly collapsed and died at his doctor's office in Glendale, California, in April 1988, it entitled John Hawkins, his partner in the Just Sweats clothing stores, to a $1-million payoff. The Farmers Insurance Co. paid the young Columbus, Ohio, businessman but later filed suit, claiming that it wasn't Hanson who'd died in Richard Boggs's office. Columbus Dispatch reporters Yocum and Candisky tenaciously followed their leads from Las Vegas to New York to California despite a lack of interest by the Glendale police, who considered the death from ``natural causes'' a closed case. The high-rolling Hawkins--a former ``male prostitute,'' according to his mother--disappeared after getting the insurance check, leaving a company awash in rumors of embezzlement by both partners. As the reporters learned, Hanson had variously claimed to be dying of AIDS or a heart condition when he left for California. He allegedly took $2 million from the 22-store chain when he departed in January--but he also changed his will to make Hawkins his beneficiary. When the coroner's report suggested that Boggs ``may have sexually assaulted...the decedent,'' Yocum and Candisky knew the story would go beyond simple embezzlement and insurance fraud. It also helped spur official interest, leading to the discovery that the dead man was actually an alcoholic drifter whom Boggs had met at a nightclub. Boggs was convicted of murder and is now serving life, while Hanson, who turned up alive, and Hawkins, who was extradited from Italy, are awaiting trail on murder charges. The third-person narration is a little self-conscious at times, but it lends this wild story an urgency that serves it well: a good prospect for true-crime fans. (Photo insert--not seen) -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. "A remarkable story." - Publishers Weekly “A good prospect for true-crime fans." - Kirkus Reviews “Twists and turns, false identities, stun guns and two undaunted reporters determined to expose the truth make this book worth reading." - Oklahoman “Anyone who likes a good mystery, with all the classic elements of fraud, sex, and murder, will find this book worthwhile." - Toledo Blade Insured for Murder has all the ingredients of a first-rate thriller: a murder, an insurance scam with a multimillion-dollar payoff, a playboy businessman, a sinister neurologist wielding a stun gun, false identities, and an international manhunt. Robin Yocum and Catherine Candisky, two reporters with The Columbus Dispatch, describe how they unravelled a con game that was three years in the making. On the morning of April 16, 1988, the emergency squad was called to the office of Dr. Richard P. Boggs, a respected neurologist in Glendale, California. On the floor of the examining room was the alleged body of Melvin E. Hanson, the vice president of the Just Sweats athletic clothing store chain, based in Columbus, Ohio. Apparently, he had collapsed and died of heart failure during a routine examination. Early next morning, Hanson's business partner and the company president, John B. Hawkins, arrived from Columbus and had the body unceremoniously cremated. The coroner ruled that Hanson had died of natural causes, so there was nothing to be investigated, and the Glendale police did not pursue the case further. Behind the facade of just another mortality statistic, however, was the yet-undiscovered fact that the body lying on the floor was not Ha

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