Samira wrote:
It's being investigated as a suspicious death. There's no indication that he was involved in wrongdoing, but he may have been in a position to help investigators.
Could be just the law of averages. Lots of people and corporations have crap all over them from Enron. (By the way, lots of people could have blown the whistle on Enron.) Lots of them are questioned. The investigation drags on for years - one of the array of suspects die. Anyone know an estimate of how many have been questioned? (Actually, at a minimum their ages would be needed to make any stab at an estimate of how many should pass away; gender and nationality would help).
I doubt it is more suspicious then, say, Paul Wellstone's death.