Claus von Bülow

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Claus von Bülow
File:Claus von Bülow on After Dark on 13 September 1997.jpg
Appearing on After Dark in 1997
Born Claus Cecil Borberg
(1926-08-11)11 August 1926
Copenhagen, Denmark
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London, England
Alma mater Trinity College, Cambridge
Occupation Lawyer, socialite, critic
Spouse(s) Sunny Crawford (m. 1966; div. 1987)
Children Cosima von Bülow Pavoncelli

Claus von Bülow (born Claus Cecil Borberg; 11 August 1926 – 25 May 2019) was a Danish-British socialite.[1] He was convicted for the attempted murder of his wife Sunny von Bülow (born Martha Sharp Crawford, 1932–2008) in 1979, which had left her in a coma from which she never recovered,[2] but that conviction in the first trial was reversed and he was found not guilty at his second trial.[3] In the same trial he was also convicted for the attempted murder of his wife by administering an insulin overdose in 1980 which left her in a persistent vegetative state for the rest of her life, but that conviction in the first trial was also reversed and he was found not guilty at his second trial.[4]

Background

Beginning life as Claus Cecil Borberg, Bülow was the son of Danish playwright Svend Borberg (1888–1947), who was regarded as a Nazi collaborator for his activities during the Second World War in the German occupation of Denmark.[5] After graduating from university with a degree in law and going on to become an apprentice in the legal profession, Claus chose to be known by his maternal surname, Bülow, instead of his father's surname, Borberg.[6] His mother, Jonna von Bülow af Plüskow (1900–1959), was daughter of Frits Bülow af Plüskow,[7] Danish Minister of Justice from 1910 to 1913 and President of the upper Chamber of the Danish Parliament from 1920 to 1922, a member of the old Danish-German noble Bülow family, originally from Mecklenburg.

File:Newport, Rhode Island (4887984218).jpg
Clarendon Court, Yznaga Street and Bellevue Avenue, Newport, Rhode Island

Bülow graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge, and practised law in London in the 1950s before working as a personal assistant to J. Paul Getty.[8] While he had a variety of duties for Getty, Bülow became very familiar with the economics of the oil industry. Getty wrote that Bülow showed "remarkable forbearance and good nature" as his occasional whipping boy, and Bülow remained with Getty until 1968.[9] On 6 June 1966, Bülow married Sunny, the American ex-wife of Prince Alfred of Auersperg.[10] He worked on and off as a consultant to oil companies. Sunny already had a son and a daughter from her first marriage; together, she and Bülow had a daughter, Cosima von Bülow, born on 15 April 1967 in New York City.[11][12][13] Cosima married the Italian Count Riccardo Pavoncelli in 1996.[14]

Murder trials

In 1982, Bülow was arrested and tried for the attempted murders of Sunny on two occasions on two consecutive years.[2][15] The main medical and scientific evidence against him was that Sunny had low blood sugar, common in many conditions, but a blood test showed a high insulin level.[16] The test was not repeated.[17] A needle was used as evidence against Bülow in court,[18] with the prosecution alleging that he had used it and a vial of insulin to try to kill his wife.[19] The discovery of these items became the focal point of Bülow's appeal.[20]

At the trial in Newport, Bülow was found guilty and sentenced to 30 years in prison;[15][21] he appealed, hiring Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz to represent him.[22] Dershowitz served as a consultant to the defense team led by Thomas Puccio, a former federal prosecutor.[23] Dershowitz's campaign to acquit Bülow was assisted by Jim Cramer and future New York Attorney General and Governor Eliot Spitzer who were then Harvard Law School students.[24] Dershowitz and his team focused on the discovery of the bag containing the syringes and insulin.[25] Sunny's family had hired a private investigator to look into her coma.[26] The private investigator, Edwin Lambert (an associate of the Bülows' lawyer Richard Kuh), was told by several family members and a maid that Claus had recently been seen locking a closet in the Newport home that previously was always kept open.[27] The family hired a locksmith to drive to the mansion, with the intention of picking the closet lock to find what the closet contained.[28] They had lied to the locksmith and told him that one of them owned the house.[9] When the three arrived, the locksmith insisted they try again to find the key, and after some searching, Kuh found a key in Claus von Bülow's desk that unlocked the closet.[29] At this point, according to the three men in the original interviews, the locksmith was paid for the trip and left before the closet was actually opened, although the men would later recant that version and insist that the locksmith was present when they entered the closet.[29] It was in the closet that the main evidence against Claus von Bülow was found.[29] In 1984, the two convictions from the first trial were reversed by the Rhode Island Supreme Court.[30][31][32] In 1985, after a second trial, Bülow was found not guilty on all charges.[33]

At the second trial, the defense called eight medical experts, all university professors, who testified that Sunny's two comas had not been caused by insulin, but by a combination of ingested (not injected) drugs, alcohol, and chronic health conditions. The experts were John Caronna (chairman of neurology, Cornell);[9] Leo Dal Cortivo (former president, U.S. Toxicology Association);[34] Ralph DeFronzo (medicine, Yale University);[9] Kurt Dubowski (forensic pathology, University of Oklahoma); Daniel Foster (medicine, University of Texas at Austin); Daniel Furst (medicine, University of Iowa); Harold Lebovitz (director of clinical research, State University of New York);[35] Vincent Marks (clinical biochemistry, Surrey, vice-president Royal College of Pathologists and president, Association of Clinical Biochemistry);[9] and Arthur Rubinstein (medicine, University of Chicago).[36]

Cortivo testified that the hypodermic needle tainted with insulin on the outside (but not inside) would have been dipped in insulin but not injected; injecting it through flesh would have wiped it clean.[37] Evidence also showed that Sunny's hospital admission three weeks before her final coma showed she had ingested at least 73 aspirin tablets, a quantity that could only have been self-administered, and which indicated her state of mind.[38][39]

Alan Dershowitz, in his book Taking the Stand, writes about Claus von Bülow's dinner party after he was found not guilty at his trial. Dershowitz replied to the invitation that he would not attend if it was a "victory party", and Bülow assured him it was only a dinner for "several interesting friends." Norman Mailer also attended the dinner where, among other things, Dershowitz explained why the evidence pointed to Bulow not having murdered his wife. As Dershowitz recounted, Mailer grabbed his wife, Norris Church Mailer's, arm and said: "Let's get out of here. I think this guy is innocent. I thought we were going to be having dinner with a man who actually tried to kill his wife. This is boring."[40]

Death

Von Bülow died on 25 May 2019 at his home in London.[41]

In popular culture

References

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  4. State von Bülow, 475 A.2d 995 (R.I. 1984).
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  24. Masters, Brooke A. "Spoiling for a Fight: The Rise of Eliot Spitzer" New York: Henry Holt & Co. (2006) p. 30
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  30. State Von Bulow, 475 A.2d 995, 1001-1003, 1010-1018 (1984) (1. Defendant's right to materials used by prosecution's investigators. 2. Prosecution's conducting scientific tests on medicines and materials in a black bag of defendant's, without a search warrant.)
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  39. Trial transcripts, June 1984
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External links