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Saturday, November 15, 2003
A resident of Norwalk, Conn., has been charged with second-degree
manslaughter after his wife committed suicide using his .32-caliber
handgun.
Steven Bartush pleaded not guilty to second-degree manslaughter
Friday in State Superior Court in Stamford, reports the New York
Times.
According to the arrest warrant, 32-year-old Joan Bartush shot
herself in October 2001 with one of her husband's licensed handguns.
So why is Steven Bartush, father of a 3-year-old daughter, being
prosecuted for his wife's suicide?
According to the Times, he is charged with contributing to his
wife's suicide by leaving the gun – which was in a dresser drawer –
too accessible to his wife two days after she arrived home from
Silver Hill, a New Canaan psychiatric hospital. Police claim he had
assured hospital personnel that his wife wouldn't have access to the
gun.
The arrest warrant affidavit claims Steven Bartush ignored
warnings from hospital staff and family members to remove guns from
his apartment, and that he knew about his wife's depression and a
failed suicide attempt, reports the Associated Press.
"She made the ultimate decision, tragic as it was, to take her
own life," Neal Rogan, Bartush's attorney, told WTNH-TV. "At the
time Joan Bartush was released from that hospital, she was not
suicidal according to the diagnosis."
The affidavit also said Steven Bartush told authorities the
couple's relationship was good, and that she seemed better after her
treatment, reported AP.
Bartush was arrested Oct. 7, and is currently free on bond.
To view this item online, visit
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35635
Man charged for wife's suicide
using his gun
Prosecutors say firearm in
dresser drawer too accessible to troubled spouse
Posted: November 15, 2003
8:19 p.m.
Eastern
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com
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