Sunday, November 6, 2011

BILLIONAIRE MURDERED-S&M STYLE

OKAY WHTS NEXT WHT DO WE HAVE HERER I GUESS THERES MANY DIFFERNENT WAYS 2 DIE HUH C SOME TIMES WE LET OUR FLESH AN WHT FEELS GOOD 2 OUR FLESH LED US DWN A ROAD OF DESTRUCTION NOT KNOWING WE R BEING SET UP BY DEMON SPIRITS WICKED ONES WHOM HAVE ATTACH THEMSELVES 2 US BECAUSE OF OUR DESIRES WATCH OUT FOR THE TRAPPPP


Colleagues became concerned when Edouard Stern (above), one of France's richest men, did not show up for a business appointment. The next day, fearing that he might have suffered a heart attack when he still did not answer his phone, they contacted his cleaning service and gained entry to his apartment. Inside, they found Edouard's hooded body on the floor of his bedroom, clad in a latex bodysuit and harness and lying in a mess of drying blood. The autopsy report would later reveal that Edouard had been shot four times in the head and body at point-blank range.

Edouard's ultra-luxe apartment complex was located in one of the most exclusive neighborhoods in Geneva. With nearby snow-capped mountains and Lake Geneva--Lake LĂ©man in the French spoken in that part of Switzerland--dotted with luxury yachts, Geneva is one of Europe's most pristine major cities, a city where vast fortunes can be discreetly handled by the many banks whose account holders' privacy and identities are jealously guarded. Bank officials there and throughout Switzerland pride themselves on the prudent delicacy they offer their clients from around the world.

Geneva is a remarkably safe city compared to major metropolitan areas in the rest of the world, a place where millionaires can freely walk the streets or drive around in a Rolls-Royce or a Bentley--Edouard himself had owned one at the time of his death.

At the crime scene: Cops found Stern dressed head to toe in a latex rubber suit with a dildo inserted into his rectum. He was known to be interested in heterosexual sado-masochistic sex as well as being a homosexual. His killer was his long-term lover and notorious S&M prostitute, Cecile Brossard who was also called "Alice." She lived a double life and was allegedly married to a medical professional.

His death was unmourned by his many and various enemies both in Europe and in the US. Despite the initial rumors that he had been assassinated by one of the many people he had double crossed in business during the course of his previous years alive, the truth was less prosaic and he was killed by his mistress. Brossard has not yet faced trial, but it is believed that the case will be finally heard during 2009.


MORE HOW IT HAPPENED
By all accounts, her good looks were not her greatest asset. Julia Lemigova, a former Soviet model and beauty queen, also had an exceptional ear for languages, a good nose for business and an ability to make friends in all the right places.

Last week, however, that scenario was challenged by Lemigova. She claimed to have been Stern’s mistress long before and suspected that Brossard (his accused killer) might have been using blackmail to get at his money.

Lemigova was the last Miss Soviet Union before its collapse and her beauty evoked comparisons with Julia Roberts, the American actress. In addition to Russian, this strong-willed Red Army colonel’s daughter also speaks flawless Italian, English and French and has counted among her friends such titans of finance as the late Sir James Goldsmith.

She met Stern, who was born into one of Europe’s oldest banking families, at a dinner in 1997 and the financier was immediately smitten. There followed a weekend at Stern’s chateau in Burgundy and trysts in hotels all over the world.

Mad about big game hunting and guns, Stern took Lemigova on shooting courses in Geneva, where they learnt to fire a Kalashnikov rifle. In a possible sign of how seriously he took the relationship, he even asked her to meet his psychoanalyst.

After completing a course in business administration in Paris, Lemigova got a job at a bank in Geneva in 1998 as head of Russian investments, just as Stern was making his first deals in Russia. By then he had divorced his wife Beatrice, an art historian by whom he had three children and whose father headed Lazard, the investment bank.

In 1999 Lemigova told Stern that she was pregnant but he was apparently never fully convinced that the child was his. Lemigova believes that Stern, who through often brilliant transactions had amassed a fortune of £540m, put her under surveillance. Her son Maximilien was born in New York in October that year.

Stern continued visiting Lemigova when she set up home in a chic part of Paris.

In early 2000, when the boy was five months old, she placed an advertisement on a church notice board for a nanny. A Bulgarian woman appeared on her doorstep asking for work. A few days later Maximilien fell seriously ill. He died in hospital on March 10.

Doctors found internal injuries which suggested that he could have been shaken. Lemigova, the nanny and Stern, who had spent an hour in Lemigova’s flat on the day the baby was taken to hospital, were questioned by an examining magistrate. The nanny subsequently disappeared.

Lemigova wonders now whether the baby’s death was accidental or if the nanny was paid to murder him. In 2002 the magistrate closed the file for lack of evidence. Swiss investigators are expected to ask the French to reopen it.

Lemigova continued to see Stern occasionally but the relationship was never the same. Last year she told the Nouvel Observateur magazine in Paris that he had tried to revive their affair even though he was involved with Brossard. She had turned him down, saying: “You have made me suffer too much.”

Then came a telephone call from Brossard, who was reported to have worked as a luxury call girl, asking for a meeting in a Paris restaurant. Lemigova claims that Brossard pumped her for information about her relationship with Stern, including details of their sex life. At one point, claims Lemigova, Brossard offered to tell her “the truth about the death of your son”.

Lemigova thinks that Brossard, an artist who met Stern at a dinner party in 2001, used her information about the child’s death to blackmail Stern.

Earlier this year Stern transferred £700,000 into a Credit Suisse bank account in Brossard’s name. A few days before his murder, however, he froze the money with a restraining order.

Lawyers representing his family describe the money as a down payment on eight Chagall paintings that Brossard had acquired for him. Brossard’s lawyer disputes this, saying the money was seen by her as a gift intended to give her financial independence. “I don’t know why he took it back,” Brossard allegedly told her lawyer.

She said that he had also gone back on promises of marriage and portrays herself as a victim of abusive behavior by an aggressive man who famously sacked his father after taking control of the Stern family’s bank in 1977 when he was 22.

She said she was invited to Stern’s flat on February 28 and they argued about the money. Stern changed the subject and they had sex. Stern’s unusual attire on the night of the murder was linked to the couple’s penchant for sado-masochism, according to her lawyer.

Another argument broke out. Brossard lost control and, in a moment of fury, grabbed a gun that he kept in a drawer. Stern, who was convinced that his life was in danger and had a permit to carry a concealed weapon, possessed a number of guns and Brossard knew where they were hidden because he would often ask her to handle them.

Later she threw the weapon into Lake Leman, where police found it. Forensic tests have proved that the four bullets retrieved from Stern’s body were fired from this weapon.

If convicted of a “crime of passion”, Brossard could be jailed for one to 10 years. Premeditated murder would carry a much heavier sentence.

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