PARIS, April 13, 2004

Murder Fugitive Kills Self In Jail

Days After Learning That His Parents Committed Suicide

  • A court in Grenoble ruled that Goldman, shown in this file photo, could be extradited to Pennsylvania to face first-degree murder charges.

    A court in Grenoble ruled that Goldman, shown in this file photo, could be extradited to Pennsylvania to face first-degree murder charges.  (AP)

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(AP)  French prison authorities, defending themselves after a U.S. murder suspect hanged himself in jail while on suicide watch, said Tuesday they could not have kept him under 24-hour surveillance.

Paul Eduardovich Goldman, 39, a naturalized U.S. citizen, killed himself Sunday in a prison in the suburbs of Grenoble in the French Alps, said his lawyer, Arnaud Levy-Soussan.

The New Jersey resident was captured Jan. 20 in France, where he fled after allegedly killing his lover in the United States.

A spokeswoman for the Penitentiary Administration Department declined to provide information about the case but said that guards could not watch prisoners at all times.

"We can't take on or allow for surveillance 24 hours a day, every second," said the spokeswoman, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Goldman's lawyer said his client had already attempted to kill himself in January.

"I don't understand," Levy-Soussan told The Associated Press. "He was not meant to be left alone and (was supposed) to be under constant surveillance."

"But that wasn't the case. I think French authorities made a big mistake. That is clear," the lawyer said.

A court in Grenoble ruled Friday that Goldman could be extradited to Pennsylvania to face first-degree murder charges in the fatal stabbing of Faina "Fay" Zonis, 42, a Philadelphia mortgage processor found dead in her office on Dec. 29.

A postcard found at Goldman's Mount Laurel, N.J., town house ultimately led investigators to a residence in Grenoble, a city in southeastern France where he was caught and where his extradition hearing took place.

He also faced U.S. federal charges of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.

Levy-Soussan said Goldman learned just last week of the January deaths of his parents — news that likely contributed to his distress.

Edward Goldman, 66, and his wife, Inessa Lemashova, 63, committed suicide by slitting their wrists. The couple left a note saying they were disgraced by their son's conduct and didn't want to live. Police found their bodies on Jan. 13.

The lawyer said he learned of the deaths in late March through a news report and then told his client.

"I contacted the prison director to say, 'Be careful. Mr. Goldman must be watched because he's not doing well and, on top of that, this type of news is not likely to make him feel better,"' Levy-Soussan said in a telephone interview.

"I was told that measures were taken, but clearly those measures were insufficient," he added.

The person with whom Goldman shared a cell in the Varces prison was out exercising when Goldman hanged himself with his bedsheet from a drainage pipe, the lawyer said.

France has the third-highest prison suicide rate in Europe, with one death every three days, said Francois Carlier of the France-based International Observatory of Prisons.

Last year, France's justice ministry announced a prevention program to cut the number of prison suicides by 20 percent over five years. The plan focuses on improving treatment of depression and psychological problems.

Levy-Soussan said Goldman, who was born in Uzbekistan, denied the murder but feared he would be sentenced to prison back in the United States.

Diane Gibbons, district attorney in suburban Philadelphia's Bucks County, said Goldman's suicide would not change plans to prosecute his wife but might be a mixed blessing for the victim's family.

Goldman's wife, Irina Sapiro, 42, is out on bail on charges she hindered the prosecution of her husband by helping him flee to Europe. Sapiro's lawyers have said she feared her husband.


©MMIV, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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