Gene Hackman died of cardiovascular disease about a week after his wife died of hantavirus, according to the New Mexico medical examiner.
Gene Hackman, who suffered from Alzheimer's, lived in the house with his dead wife for a week before he died.
Of the three dogs living in the house, one died because it was locked in a carrier and therefore probably starved to death.
The two free-living dogs were the only ones to survive.
I read in another article that the dog that died had recently come back from a medical procedure at the vet, and was being kept in a crate. The two that survived had access to a dog door so presumably were able to get food/water outside.
This is a whole lot of messed up. Honestly didn't know the situation with Gene as he had faded from popularity and was obviously getting on in age. Just thinking of that situation though, absolutely horrible. The only thing I can hope is that Gene was far enough gone he didn't realize his wife was dead, but even then. Just alone and scared for a week.
Let this be a lesson for everyone, no matter how young one is, always have a backup plan for the care of people that's important to you, and for yourself.
My mum's next door neighbour is a 70 something man. His wife was 50 something. They had talked about how he would be the first to go and planned accordingly. She then died suddenly. Life takes unexpected turns.
To add a note, they're famously private people, hence living out there in the first place. It's not that unusual to go unnoticed when you live on a gated compound and don't like socializing with your neighbors. From what I could tell they didn't even know who those two were.
This is why I find it sad that people have ceased to be so communal and supportive anymore. People become siloed and individualistic, and there's nobody to check up on them, and their neighbor doesn't even know who they are. :(
This is why I detest the idea of keeping someone alive at any cost that's currently the law, euthanasia should be legalized and available to everyone, at some point we all have to die, I don't understand why make people suffer into old age, we put pets down when they get too old and sick because we know that's mercy, then why is the same mercy not shown to human beings.
Edit: I am talking about auto euthanasia, aka an individuals right to chose his own end, not others making that choice for old / sick people
because people can't misuse laws for pet euthanasia in order to get an early inheritance, or to get their toe in before a will changes.
in many scenarios, euthanasia does make sense but there is ample opportunity for greedy people to misuse such laws. it would be hazardous to enact such a law unless adequate protection is provided.
I was referring to auto euthanasia, where the person choses it of his own will, of course lots and lots of saftey and security checks need to still be added to make sure no one is being coerced into it
Well, so provide adequate protection... Like with universal healthcare, many countries have figured it out, it's not really trailblazing territory anymore.
Sorry, are you saying other people should be allowed to "put down" someone whenever they decide it's mercy?
Are you applying your example about putting down pets directly to humans?
You know who had a big euthanasia program? The Nazis. They murdered people who were unworthy to live. They killed (among many groups of people) people born with disabilities and justified it as "mercy".
I think you meam something else so please be careful what you are writing. It's easily misunderstood.
You have no idea what you're talking about, and frankly, people like you are the reason that so many people are forced to suffer through an undignified, painful and traumatic death, despite the existence of better alternatives.
Damn, that's terrible... Did they not have family or someone to check in on them regularly? I guess if she was 65, they thought he was in good hands...
I don't know how easy it is to contact hantavirus. Does it take one rat or a lot?
Actually the most common way is through aerosolized particles, meaning there is a ton of rat shit and piss somewhere in your living space (like an attic or crawlspace) and it gets into your air supply. Far less commonly but still possibly it can be through direct exposure to feces and urine, or even more rarely through a scratch/bite
Despite this it’s astoundingly rare. 20-50 cases annually for the entirety of the USA and less than 1000 from 1993-2022
Reminds me of that case in the UK where a dad suffered a heart attack and his 2 year old child died from dehydration. As a dad that one made a tear come to my eye.
Then how were neither of them discovered until remarkable time afterward? His wife may have died before him, but nobody noticed gene well after he was dead. All of us still seems extreme less suspicious.
But...you can't imagine a case where a notoriously private couple might not get visitors for a week? Visitors who wouldn't just leave when no one answered the door, assuming they weren't home or in the shower or something?
Yeah, I don't think I have anybody that comes by my house outside of the people I live with. I don't think it's weird at all that somebody could be dead for a week before being noticed.
OK, if she died, literally, days before he did, why was nobody found a dead in the house until many days later?
Did he sit by her side, while she was dead, for days before his heart finally gave up? Did he only come home right before finding her and then dying too?
While this report answered a lot of questions, it certainly raises many others that have not yet been addressed..