Police arrested a high-priced call girl from Georgia, who allegedly overdosed the exec with heroin on a 50-foot yacht in Santa Cruz.
http://www.cnet.com/news/prostitute-accused-in-google-execs-death/
Police have arrested a high-end escort for suspicion of murder in the death of a Google executive, according to a police statement and the Santa Cruz Sentinel.
The executive, 51-year-old Forrest Timothy Hayes, is said to have overdosed on heroin last November on a yacht in Santa Cruz, Calif., after allegedly being injected by Alix Catherine Tichelman. Tichelman is a 26-year-old call girl from Georgia who police said Hayes had an ongoing relationship with.
After Hayes lost consciousness, Tichelman allegedly fled the scene, and police said a surveillance video shows that she stepped over his body several times to gather her belongings, and even took the time to finish a glass of wine before she left. Tichelman was booked into Santa Cruz County Jail for second-degree murder, destruction of evidence, and transporting and providing narcotics, according to the police statement.
"She showed no regard for him," Santa Cruz Deputy Police Chief Steve Clark told the Sentinel. "She was just trying to cover her tracks."
http://www.cnet.com/news/prostitute-accused-in-google-execs-death/
Police have arrested a high-end escort for suspicion of murder in the death of a Google executive, according to a police statement and the Santa Cruz Sentinel.
The executive, 51-year-old Forrest Timothy Hayes, is said to have overdosed on heroin last November on a yacht in Santa Cruz, Calif., after allegedly being injected by Alix Catherine Tichelman. Tichelman is a 26-year-old call girl from Georgia who police said Hayes had an ongoing relationship with.
After Hayes lost consciousness, Tichelman allegedly fled the scene, and police said a surveillance video shows that she stepped over his body several times to gather her belongings, and even took the time to finish a glass of wine before she left. Tichelman was booked into Santa Cruz County Jail for second-degree murder, destruction of evidence, and transporting and providing narcotics, according to the police statement.
"She showed no regard for him," Santa Cruz Deputy Police Chief Steve Clark told the Sentinel. "She was just trying to cover her tracks."