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THE TRAGIC DEATHS OF GENE HACKMAN AND BETSY ARAKAWA

On February 26, 2025, the decomposing bodies of legendary Hollywood actor Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa were found inside their cloistered estate at Santa Fe, New Mexico. The medical investigator ruled both died of natural causes approximately five days apart—Arakawa passing on February 12, and Hackman being deceased on February 17. There was no evidence of foul play or accident, but there is a sad and compelling story behind the tragic deaths of Gene Hackman and Betsy Arakawa.

The bodies were discovered by maintenance workers who became suspicious as neither Arakawa nor Hackman had been seen in some time. They peered through a window and saw a body on the floor. Police immediately attended as did death scene examiners from the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator.

Autopsy and investigation information was released to the public on March 7. “It is unprecedented for the Office of the Medical Investigator to make public statements about sudden death investigations so soon in the process. However, the circumstances surrounding these two deaths require accurate dissemination of important information,” the New Mexico Chief Medical Investigator Dr. Heather Jarrell said at a press conference.

This was a prudent move given the high-profile nature of the Hackman-Arakawa case. In the nine days between the body discoveries and the conference, the media—especially social media—was alive with rumours and false assumptions. It’s to be expected with someone as well known as Gene Hackman and the strange circumstances of this death case.

Although the autopsy reports and scene imagery were quickly sealed by a judge acting on a petition from the Hackman-Arakawa estates, the medical investigator did offer a clear account of the death causes and the circumstances leading up to their tragic demise. Here’s what’s publicly known.

Betsy Arakawa, age 64, was last seen alive between 3:30 and 5:00 pm on February 11. She was filmed on surveillance cameras at Sprouts Farmers Market, CVS Pharmacy, and a pet food store in downtown Santa Fe. Her car entered the couple’s gated community at 5:15 pm using the remote control assigned to her. Cell phone records and inquiries established she’d called a private medical clinic on the morning of February 12 and made an afternoon appointment with a doctor. She never showed up.

Arakawa’s body was positioned on the floor of one of their home’s bathrooms. An open vial and scattered pills were near her, but the medical examiner determined they were a routine prescription for a thyroid condition and had nothing to do with her death. It seemed she’d suddenly collapsed, became unconscious, and shortly died.

Her autopsy showed a serious lung condition, and she suffered from an escalating case of hantavirus infection. Without question, this proved fatal and Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) clearly was the cause of her death. Hantavirus primarily infects rodents and is highly transferable to humans. The death scene property outbuildings showed evidence of deer mouse infestation which results in airborne particles from droppings or discharges being human-inhaled. HPS can manifest in the body for weeks before sharply increasing in respiratory difficulties and then sudden death.

Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome is rare, but the State of New Mexico Health Department recorded 136 infections over the last 50 years. Nearly half of the cases were fatal. HPS is treatable if caught in the early stages, but the autopsy conclusions found Betsy Arakawa was in an advanced, chronic condition. Likely, the rapidly escalating symptoms is why she made the doctor appointment and why she expired so quickly.

Gene Hackman was already aged and frail. He was 95 when he died, and his autopsy showed he was in an advanced stage of dementia—confirmed in the brain dissection and MRIs as Alzheimer’s Disease. Hackman also suffered from significant atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (plaque-clogged heart arteries) as well as renal disease (failing kidneys).

The medical investigator ruled Gene Hackman’s cause of death was due to complications from heart failure, dementia, and his kidneys shutting down. This is also known as Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS) and is a common end-of-life condition for the very elderly. Basically, the body progressively quits.

There was strong evidence for Hackman’s death date of February 17. That was the day his pacemaker stopped which is proof of death. Although there’s no doubt about where, when, and how Hackman died, the disturbing and unanswered question is what he knew—what he was aware of—while his wife—his sole caregiver and life support system—lay deceased and decomposing on the bathroom floor. This is truly tragic. Just awful to think of that helpless and alone old man.

Additionally tragic is that one of the couple’s dogs also died during the time Hackman and Arakawa went undiscovered. The animal was recovering from a veterinary procedure and was kept caged. The poor pet probably succumbed to dehydration.

In the time after the body discoveries on February 26 and the official information release on March 7, a lot of media speculation went on about the states of the Arakawa and Hackman corpses, specifically around the reports/rumors of mummification. This has been clearly addressed by forensic pathologist Dr. Judy Melinek in her article on MedPageToday.

Long-term followers of DyingWords.net may remember Judy when she guest posted on this site corresponding to the release of her first book Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner which documented her World Trade Center bombing experience.

Here’s Dr. Melinek’s piece titled Gene Hackman’s Death: How the Mystery Unfolded — Determining time of death can help inform the cause of death.

When actor Gene Hackman and his wife, pianist Betsy Arakawa, were found dead and decomposed in their Santa Fe, New Mexico home on February 26, much of the media fixated on a phrase in the police report describing “mummification” of their hands and feet. People who hear that phrase tend to immediately think of embalmed cadavers from ancient Egypt, as seen in bad movies.

The medical term, however, describes a natural process of postmortem change. Mummification of the extremities occurs as a process of desiccation: the skin dries out, turns brown, wrinkles up. We usually find it in a warm, dry environment, and though it can happen over the course of weeks, it might also set in as quickly as a matter of days.

Given that these two decedents were found indoors in arid Santa Fe, and that there was a space heater in the bathroom near Arakawa’s body, the finding of mummification is not surprising. Subsequent interrogation of Hackman’s pacemaker indicated that the last cardiac activity was on February 17 — 9 days before the bodies were found — and that workers had last been to the residence approximately 2 weeks prior. Meanwhile, Arakawa was last seen on the gated community CCTV and was communicating via e-mail on February 11.

It’s these circumstantial bits of information from the scene that are often the most helpful clues in narrowing down the time of death in the early phases of a death investigation. Let’s dive deeper into the role of a forensic pathologist and other key players in a mysterious case like Hackman and Arakawa’s.

Narrowing Down Time of Death

Time of death estimation is a complex process that depends on multiple factors both intrinsic to the body and found in the immediate environment around it. These variables can include the body’s weight and clothing, the ambient temperature, whether the death occurred indoors in a controlled environment or outdoors where temperatures fluctuate, the health status of the individual just prior to death, and the presence or absence of animals (including insects) that can feed on the body.

Experienced forensic pathologists carry around a mental library of cases that inform us over the course of a career of what a decomposing human body will look like after 24 hours, 48 hours, weeks, and months — and in all different ambient conditions. Death scene investigators can also take a measurement of the core body temperature at the scene that we can compare to published data to help narrow down a tighter death interval using nomograms opens in a new tab or window.

Post-mortem interval estimation isn’t perfectly empirical, but its reliability increases with each bit of information gleaned about a case, the forensic expertise of the person doing the assessment, and the thoroughness of the police investigation. It’s often our role early on to help the police focus their investigation on a reasonable time frame by providing a ballpark estimate of when the person died, and to help them dismiss incompatible testimony or unlikely suspects.

The Cause of Death

What about the cause of death? You have to be concerned about an environmental toxin like carbon monoxide or natural gas when two people and a pet are dead in the same enclosed residence. So, hazardous-materials crews would need to assess such a scene prior to arrival of medical first responders, who might otherwise be putting their own lives at risk. Environmental testing was performed at the residence of Hackman and Arakawa, and additional carbon monoxide testing was also performed on the human remains. All these tests were negative.

The deaths remained a mystery until Friday, March 7, when the medical examiner held a news conference to report that Arakawa had died from hantavirus, a rare pathogen that can be transmitted from rodent droppings, and that Hackman, who had been suffering from Alzheimer’s and cardiovascular disease and had relied on his wife’s care, likely died of heart disease opens in a new tab or window in the same house a week later. It’s not clear if Hackman knew his wife was dead.

This is a heartbreaking conclusion. It came after extraordinarily intensive and quick work by New Mexico’s state Office of the Medical Investigator (OMI) and underscores their dedication and professionalism. The New Mexico OMI has extensive experience with infectious diseases and is one of the select death-investigation facilities in the U.S. with a BSL-3 biosafety level morgue where they can handle infectious agents that spread through airborne transmission.

I suspect that there might have been signs at autopsy that pointed to a lung infection, and that hantavirus was then detected by identifying its genetic signature through polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing of a nasopharyngeal or lung tissue swab. The Hackman-Arakawa property was in a remote area of Santa Fe, and there was evidence of rodent activity there. The couple had three dogs, and sometimes pets can come in contact with wild rodents and bring them into the house. The necropsy on the dead dog is still pending and may answer more questions about the source of viral exposure.

The Risk of Isolation

I know a lot of gut-wrenching death stories, and the worst ones always involve either the feeling that death may have been preventable, or that the decedent suffered. Everyone who’s been following this shocking and complex public mystery should be grateful to the New Mexico OMI for giving us — and the Hackman-Arakawa family — a speedy and decisive resolution.

If you have people in your lives who are the sole caregivers to a medically fragile patient, please reach out frequently to give them as much help and support as you can. Balancing their need for privacy with your own concerns for their wellbeing is never simple, but maybe these public deaths will open conversations with them about a less isolated environment for their end-of-life care.

Judy Melinek, MD, is an American forensic pathologist currently working as a contract forensic pathologist in Wellington, New Zealand. She is the co-author with her husband, writer T.J. Mitchell, of the memoir Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner, and the forensic-detective novels First Cut and Aftershock. You can follow her on BlueSky @drjudymelinek and Facebook/DrJudyMelinekMD.

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Tragic is an appropriate word to describe the Hackman/Arakawa death case. Here was once an A-List, Oscar-winning movie star and now a very wealthy man living a recluse life with his also-accomplished wife of 30 years. They have no contact with the outside for two weeks, and no one in the family or friend sphere thinks to check on them. An old, frail, and demented man and his increasingly ill younger wife die alone, days apart, and rot on the floor of their multi million-dollar mansion.

The magazine Architectural Digest once ran a feature on the Hackman/Arakawa Santa Fe home. Here’s some pictures of it. It makes one think.

SOLVING THE 5,000-YEAR-OLD MURDER OF “OTZI THE ICEMAN”

A7In 1991, the mummified body of a 5,000-year-old murder victim was discovered in melting ice at a rock-gully crime scene high in the Italian Otzal Alps. Nicknamed “Otzi”, the estimated 45-year-old man and his possessions were incredibly well preserved. His skin, hair, bones, and organs were cryopreserved in time, allowing archeological researchers a phenomenal insight into human life in the Copper Age.

The frozen-in-time corpse also gave modern science the opportunity to forensically investigate and positively determine how Otzi The Iceman was killed.

A44On a sunny September day, two hikers were traversing a mountain pass at the 3210 meter (10,530 foot) level and saw a brown, leathery shape protruding from the ice amidst running melt-water. Closely examined, it was a human body which they thought might be the victim of a past mountaineering accident.

They reported it to Austrian police who attended the following day and quickly realized they were dealing with an ancient archeological site. A scientific team was assembled and, over a three-day period, the remains were extracted and taken to the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Innsbruck.

B9Such an incredibly valuable find soon led to a jurisdictional argument between the Austrian and Italian governments and an immediate border survey was done, finding Otzi had been lying ninety-two meters inside of Italian territory. Italy gained legal possession of the body and artifacts, however in the interests of science and history, everything was kept at Innsbruck until a proper, climate-controlled facility was built at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano, Italy, where Otzi the Iceman now rests.

Many, many questions arose. Who was he? Where did he come from? How long ago did he live? And, of course, what caused his death?

Technological advances over the past twenty-five years have answered some questions surrounding Otzi’s life and death and surely the next twenty-five will answer more. This, so far, is what science knows about the Iceman.

A6Otzi was found lying face down with outstretched arms in a protected, rock depression near the Finail Peak watershed at the top of the Tisenjoch pass which connects two forested valleys. The trench measured 40 meters (131 foot) long, between 5 and 8 meters (16–26 foot) wide, and  averaged 3 meters (10 feet) deep. For millennia, this area was covered by glaciers which, by the end of the twentieth century, had receded.

Four separate scientific institutes conducted C-14 radiocarbon dating on Otzi, equivocally agreeing he came from between 3350 and 3100 BC — more than 5,000 years ago. This was the oldest-known preserved human being; far older than the Egyptian and Inca mummifications or the corpses found pickled in peat bogs.

A8Something exceptionally unique about Otzi was that he was a “wet” mummy—an almost unheard of process for a cadaver of this age where humidity was preserved in his cells, unlike the intentional dehydration processes used in Egypt and Peru. As well, Otzi was perfectly intact and not dissected or embalmed by a funeral ritual. His entire body achieved a state of elasticity and, although shrunken, remained as in the day he died including vital clues stored in his digestive tract.

Researchers felt Otzi must have been preserved through a chain of coincidences. It was evident that no damage had been done by predators, scavengers, or insects so it was obvious that the body was covered by snow and/or ice immediately after death. Secondly, the gully lay perpendicular to the main ice flow, allowing the grinding action of the glacier to pass overtop. Thirdly, exposure to air and sunlight was only a brief period before being found by the hikers.

It was vital Otzi remain frozen to avoid an irreversible decomposition and remain intact to preserve his historical significance. This gave researchers limited ability to examine the cadaver as would be done in a conventional autopsy.

B3A thorough external exam was done in 1991 along with Xray radiography images. Notable was a cut to the back of the right hand which showed early signs of healing as well as breaks to the left ribcage, which had healed, and breaks to the right ribs which were fresh at the time of death. A depression in the skull was thought to be caused by the weight of ice compression and analysis of the only remaining fingernail found that the Beau-Reil Lines, which are like rings on a tree trunk, showed significant stress to his immune system in three periods—16, 13, and 8 weeks before death.

A46Other factors told of Otzi’s failing health—understandable for a 45-year-old in the Copper Age who’d then be considered elderly. He suffered from tooth decay, gum disease, and worn joints. What shocked the researchers were the amounts, designs, and placement of tattoos on Otzi’s body. There were 61 separate markings, all made by incisions and insertion of charcoal—not ink as has been used by other cultures for centuries. The locations were consistent with known acupuncture points as practiced for pain relief thought to be discovered by the Chinese two thousand years after Otzi’s existence. It seemed these markings were therapeutic, rather than symbolic.

Despite examination by many leading experts, no exact cause of Otzi’s demise was determined and it was speculated this old man may have fallen, injured himself, then succumbed to the elements. That was until new technology was developed.

A47One of the great challenges was to examine Otzi endoscopically—that is to look internally at his organs. Special high-precision titanium instruments were invented—steel probes that were inserted through tiny incisions in Otzi’s back. Using computerized navigational aids, the tools were guided to exact spots were evidentiary samples could be taken. This was recorded with a hi-definition camera and an entire 3-D map of the mummy’s thorax and abdomen was made.

Lung and digestive tract contents told a time-of-year travel story through the presence of thirty different pollens which entered Otzi’s body by the food he ate, the water he drank, and the air he breathed.

A48Most pollens were from trees and indicated he ingested them during a bloom in the late spring or early summer. The locations and digested states of different pollens in different sections of the stomach and intestines showed Otzi had made a climb from the valley floor to the top of the pass where he died within a twenty-four hour period. Pollens in the lower gastrointestinal tract were identified to low elevation trees and pollens in the upper GI were from higher elevation species.

So, it was known that Otzi had left the populated valley and headed for high country where he met his death. Speculation rose that he might have been fleeing some danger.

A3This theory strengthened in 2001 when new Xrays identified a small, flint arrowhead in Otzi’s left shoulder which was missed ten years earlier. A close examination of Otzi’s back revealed a two-centimeter slash and established the arrow’s path. He’d been shot from a rear and lower position.

In 2005, Otzi was put through a high-resolution, multi-slice CT scanning machine which enlightened the arrow wound. Clearly, the arrowhead had caused a one-centimeter gash in Otzi’s left subclavian artery which is the main circulatory pipeline that carries fresh oxygenated blood from the heart to the left arm. Such a serious tear would have caused massive internal bleeding and rapid death—probably within two minutes.

A49The CT scan showed something else. There was serious bleeding at the base of the brain which corresponded to the depression in Otzi’s skull. He’d suffered a serious head injury right at the time of death. With the cause of death now certain to be from a violent act of homicide, the prime question centered on the circumstances of how all this went down.

Researchers felt the answer may lay in the Iceman’s possessions.

A50Among the artifacts found on and around Otzi’s body were a copper ax, a flint dagger, a quiver with twelve blank arrow shafts and two completed arrows with stone heads. There was also winter clothing and supplies to support wilderness survival.

This speaks to motive, for if robbery was behind Otzi’s murder, it’s certain that the perpetrator(s) would have made off with these valuables. Glaringly missing was the shaft of the fatal arrow, especially in light of Otzi’s quiver arrows being perfectly preserved.

A51Egarter Vigl, a leading archeological expert on the Iceman, believes that the assailant tried to pull out the fatal arrow to destroy evidence, only to snap off the arrowhead inside. Vigl was quoted in the archeology magazine Germani, “telltale markings in the construction of prehistoric arrows could be used to identify the archer much in the way modern ballistics can link a bullet to a gun. The killer yanked out the arrow to cover his tracks. For similar motives, the attacker did not run off with any precious artifacts that remained at the scene, especially the distinctive copper-bladed ax; the appearance of such a remarkable object in the possession of a villager would automatically implicate its owner of the crime.”

I’d have to agree with Mr. Vigl, and I’d like to add an observation of my own.

A33In the hundreds and hundreds of dead bodies I’ve examined as a cop and a coroner, I’ve never seen a cadaver with its arms outstretched in a hyperextended position like how Otzi the Iceman was found. This is absolutely unnatural and shrieks to me that someone placed the arms in that position after death.

I think it’s safe to speculate on what might have happened and here’s what Otzi’s crime scene evidence suggests to me.

A52The day before Otzi’s death, he was in a physical altercation down at the village on the valley floor where he suffered the cut hand and possibly the broken right ribs. This caused him to pack up and flee, climbing to the elevated pass where he was overcome by his attacker(s) and shot with the arrow from behind and below. This wound would have put Otzi into hemorrhagic shock and he would have quickly collapsed and internally bled out. Following his collapse, the murderer(s) went up and caved-in the back of Otzi’s head to finish him off.

I don’t think this happened in the gully. I’ve looked at the scene photos and can’t envision how Otzi could have been shot from below in that tight gully, which is what the forensic evidence clearly shows on the arrowhead’s track through the body—even if Otzi were bending over.

A53No, I suspect Otzi was shot elsewhere, dragged by the arms, dumped in the gully with all his possessions, rolled over to remove the arrow, and then covered with ice and/or snow to hide the crime.

After 5,000 years, the answers to “By who?” and “For what reason?” are unlikely to be known—despite what future technology might bring—and the murder of Otzi the Iceman will always remain a really cold case.

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For a fascinating look at the entire Otzi story, including exceptional photos, visit the official website www.Iceman.it at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano, Italy. Click Here