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Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Death on Ocean Boulevard

You know those cases where it's obvious we're never going to know what actually happened? Well, that's how I feel every single time I get new information about the deaths of Max Shacknai and Rebecca Zahau.

I highly recommend watching the Dateline or 20/20 episode about this case before reading Death on Ocean Boulevard. So many of the people involved in this case have the same names, and I found it much easier to differentiate who was who having already seen them on Dateline.

Jonah and Rebecca spent their summers at Spreckels Mansion, in Coronado, California. Rebecca was gearing up for a beach day with her sister and Jonah's son, Max. That trip was over before it began when Max suffered a fatal fall from the banister. Two days later, Jonah and his ex-wife, Dina, were hearing their son's grim diagnosis, while Rebecca was living out the final moments of her life.

Rebecca was found nude, hanging from her balcony, hands and feet bound, with a tshirt fashioned into a gag in her mouth. Jonah's brother, Adam found this horrific scene the next morning and called the police. In his 911 call, Adam made the assumption that this was a suicide, police grasped onto that idea and have yet to let go.

Caitlin Rother's book is the first full-length true crime book to fully explore this case from all angles. Death on Ocean Boulevard was released in 2021 and contains the most current information about Max and Rebecca's deaths. It lays out new unbiased theories on both sides of the murder/suicide debate. It even details the findings of the civil lawsuit against Adam Shacknai in 2018.

I won't post my personal opinions about the case because I feel different people will take away different things from the information Caitlin provided in this book. But I will say, I have very little hope that this case will ever be reopened. My hope is that since then-Sheriff Bill Gore has finally retired, maybe someone will get to look at this case with a fresh set of eyes. Gore's questionable ethics and statements surrounding the case and other cases he's been involved with (see The Federal Siege at Ruby Ridge) irk me to my very core.

1 comment:

  1. Intriguing review! I do enjoy true crime novels but they are also depressingly scary! Especially, when you read about some of the horrific deaths! One of my favorite ones is In Cold Blood by Truman Capote... I will put this one on my list!

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