Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Secret Sex Life Revealed After Millionaire Dentist-Wife "Commits Suicide" on African Safari With Hubby

Episode Date: January 19, 2022

On a big game trip to Zambia, Bianca Rudolph is killed by a gunshot to the chest. It's ruled an accident, Or was it suicide? That's something that husband, Dr. Lawrence Rudolph says was a possibility.... Now, US investigators say Rudolph killed his wife in order to collect on her life insurance. Dentist Lawrence Rudolph is charged with foreign murder and mail fraud. Rudolph reportedly told authorities that he believed his wife’s gun was accidentally discharged while she was putting it in a case. Bianca Rudolph is cremated in Africa — a move that investigators reportedly believe was part of the scheme. Lawrence Rudolph reportedly made claims on his wife’s life insurance policy totaling nearly $5 million. The policy was initially purchased in 1987 but was updated in 2016, the same year Bianca died.Joining Nancy Grace Today: Nicole Deborde Hochglaube - Criminal Defense Lawyer (Houston TX), Former Prosecutor, Twitter: @debordelaw, HoustonCriminalDefense.com Dr. Jorey Krawczyn - Psychologist, Faculty Saint Leo University; Consultant Blue Wall Institute, Author: Operation S.O.S. Lisa M. Dadio - Former Police Lieutenant, New Haven Police Department, Senior Lecturer, Director of the "Center for Advanced Policing" at the University of New Haven's Forensic Science Department Dr. Tim Gallagher - Medical Examiner State of Florida www.pathcaremed.com, Lecturer: University of Florida Medical School Forensic Medicine. Founder/Host: International Forensic Medicine Death Investigation Conference Alexis Tereszcuk - CrimeOnline.com Investigative Reporter, Writer/Fact Checker, Lead Stories dot Com, Twitter: @swimmie2009 Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to an iHeart Podcast. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. You know, when I go into a home and I see wild animals stuffed and put up on the wall. Feels like their fake eyes are watching me everywhere I go. I can't help but wonder how people would feel if animals killed them and put them on their walls. Safaris. I can't really connect with safaris. A, they're incredibly expensive. And B, whatever happened to a photo safari? Why do you have to kill the animal that you're admiring and stuff it and stick it on your wall? I don't understand that. But hey, to each their own. A lot of people just take it. As a matter of fact, SOP, Standard Operating Procedure,
Starting point is 00:01:09 that safaris do happen just for the thrill of the kill. And innocent animals are hunted down with scopes and shot at distances where they have no idea what's happening. Innocent animals. But what about innocent wives that are shot dead on extravagant safaris? I'm Nancy Grace. This is Crime Stories. Thank you for being with us here at Fox Nation and Sirius XM 111. You know, you think of dentists being meek and mild-mannered. Think again. Listen to this. Nine life insurance policies totaling more than $4.8 million
Starting point is 00:01:54 could be a possible motive for murder. Dr. Lawrence Rudolph ran Three Rivers Dental for decades, but he's now charged by federal agents for allegedly scheming to defraud life insurance companies after his wife was shot and killed on a big game hunting trip in Zambia more than five years ago. In a detailed 23-page complaint, the feds say they believe Lawrence murdered his wife Bianca with premeditation in such a manner that he could falsely claim the death was the result of an accident. The claims don't come as shocking for Lisa Stanley, who used to work for Dr. Rudolph in his Green Tree office. Honestly, I wasn't surprised.
Starting point is 00:02:29 As soon as I saw the name, I knew exactly who it was, and I thought to myself, yeah, I'm not that surprised. Former employees we talked to didn't know Bianca personally, but said Lawrence's behavior in the office was alarming. I've never been afraid to go to a job until this one. You know, I just was very uncomfortable, very uneasy around him. Wow. When people are afraid to go to work, afraid of the dentist. Again, I'm Nancy Grace. This is Crime Stories. Thanks for being with us. So how did Bianca Fenizio Rudolph end up dead, his wife of 34 years? That's the question. And we often hear of men taking their wives or
Starting point is 00:03:18 girlfriends on an exotic trip, and then somehow the girl ends up dead and the man lives. What do we know about their trip, their exotic trip to Zambia? I mean, if you're going to commit a crime, that's a long way from home to do it. Take a listen to Our Cut 3A, my longtime friend and colleague, Jim Murray at Inside Edition. On the last day of their two-week trip, a gunshot was heard coming from their cabin. Bianca Rudolph was found dead with a gunshot wound to the chest. According to the criminal complaint, her dentist husband told Zambian police he believed his wife had accidentally shot herself with her 12-gauge shotgun
Starting point is 00:04:02 while she was packing up the weapon. The dentist came under suspicion after a U.S. embassy official said he believed that the distance between the muzzle of the shotgun and Bianca's chest was approximately 6.5 to 8 feet, according to the criminal complaint. If true, it would make an accidental shooting unlikely. Which opens up a whole can of worms about how do you commit suicide with a long gun? Now, believe it or not, I've seen a few cases like that where the person sits down with their legs extended straight out in front of them, like on the floor. They point the rifle toward them, the long gun, and they actually pull the trigger with their toe.
Starting point is 00:04:46 Yes, it's happened. But how else can you commit suicide with a long gun? Or they concoct some type of a string or pulley apparatus so they can pull the trigger at themselves with a string, for example, but holding a long gun in your hand and shooting yourself, that's really hard to do. So how did these two meet to start with? Take a listen to our friends at CrimeOnline.com. This is Jackie Howard in Our Cut A. Lawrence and Bianca Rudolph meet while Rudolph is in dental school. Bianca is an undergraduate at the University of Pittsburgh. The couple marry in 1982 around the same time that Lawrence starts a dental firm. Bianca Rudolph joins her husband working in the practice.
Starting point is 00:05:36 In 2006, Rudolph separates from his partners forming a new dental group, Three Rivers Dental. In 2014, the couple moved to Arizona but keep the practices in Pennsylvania. Their net worth, about $8 million. When they aren't working, the couple likes to travel worldwide and hunt, especially in Africa. Both Lawrence and Bianca are well-respected international hunters, with Bianca occasionally undertaking excursions without her husband. They become active members of Safari Club International, a prominent hunting organization, with Lawrence serving at one time
Starting point is 00:06:10 as the club's president. Okay, the way I was raised, you don't shoot anything you're not going to eat. So I'm just wondering about all the hunting. Don't get me wrong. I believe in the right to bear arms while I support gun control in many cases being a victim of gun violence to go hunting is covered in the constitution and that's not what we're arguing about we're arguing about murder with me an all-star panel to make sense of what we know right now first of all high profile lawyer joining me out of Houston, former prosecutor Nicole DeBoard Hotchglobe. And you can find her at HoustonCriminalDefense.com. Dr. Jory Crawson. Boy, do we need a shrink. He is a psychologist on faculty at St. Leo University, consultant with the Blue Wall
Starting point is 00:06:58 Institute, and author of Operation SOS. Lisa Daddio, former police lieutenant in New Haven, senior lecturer and director of the Center for Advanced Policing at University of New Haven. Dr. Tim Gallagher, he is the medical examiner for the entire state of Florida, lecturer at University of Florida Medical School in Forensic Medicine, and he is the founder and host of the International Forensic Medicine Death Investigation Conference. Wow, that's a mouthful, and that's just a tiny portion of his resume. But first, to Alexis Tereschuk joining me, CrimeOnline.com investigative reporter. You know, Alexis, we've covered so many cases where the woman ends up dead and the man miraculously survives the scenario. And also, Alexis, we've covered a lot of cases where the deaths of these women happen either on the high seas or in another country.
Starting point is 00:08:02 Some little island that many people have only heard of and can barely find on a map. But, you know, to commit a crime in another country, a murder, when you pick a country that has, let's just say, an underdeveloped police department, let's just say this is not the NYPD Homicide Task Force investigating this in Zambia. I'm putting the cart before the horse. I love to call you on it, Alexis Tereshchuk. Why don't we start at the beginning? Tell me everything. Don't leave anything out, Alexis. Okay, so Lawrence and Bianca, as you said, they have been hunting for decades they take a trip to Zambia it is about a two-week trip they leave on their final day of the trip early early in the morning they are getting ready to
Starting point is 00:08:53 leave all up there in a small one bedroom one bathroom cabin all of a sudden a shot rings out Lawrence says that his wife was in the living room. He was in the bathroom. He runs into the other room. He sees that she is on the ground bleeding. He hears the shotgun. So the people from, as you said, you know, it's a hunting trip. It's safari. There are a lot of people there.
Starting point is 00:09:20 Everybody comes running to their hut, and she is on the ground. The gun, which is a long barrel shotgun, is sort of tucked a little bit into a case it's like a soft-sided travel case oh alexis slow down tell me that part again part of the long gun which is rifle is tucked in the carry case yes i assume that would be the butt go ahead so he what laurence said is that she was packing up the gun because they were getting ready to leave he was in the bathroom she was packing it up and it fired accidentally she accidentally somehow somehow triggered the trigger and it shot her right in the chest and knocked her blew her to the ground so from what you're telling me, she is an experienced hunter herself. Yes.
Starting point is 00:10:07 And would go on safaris without him. So she knows how to handle a gun. Yes. And in fact, she was the only one hunting. She was the only one hunting this time because she wanted to kill a leopard. They had a special permit for her to kill a leopard. So this was her special trip to kill the leopard. That was her goal this time. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. crime stories with nancy grace i want you to take a listen to what our friends have to say crime online our cut b bianca rudolph was shot in the chest the bullet coming from her personal
Starting point is 00:10:58 shotgun lawrence rudolph told the zambian police he had been in the bathroom when he heard the gun shot rudolph said he found his wife lying on the ground bleeding and believed that the gun had gone off while Bianca Rudolph was trying to pack it into its case. Lawrence Rudolph said he believed the gun was still loaded from the previous day's hunt. Hmm, still loaded. I mean, any expert marksman does not leave a gun loaded, much less point it toward yourself when it's loaded. Enter Dr. Tim Gallagher. You know, the renowned medical examiner I told you about earlier,
Starting point is 00:11:31 the medical examiner for the entire state of Florida. Dr. Gallagher, could you put in regular people talk, Dr. Gallagher, what is a trajectory path? Well, a trajectory path is the path or the track that the bullet takes when it exits the muzzle of the firearm. You know, in this case, we're talking about a shotgun and a shotgun is different than a handgun and a rifle. In a rifle and a handgun, when you pull the trigger once, one bullet comes out of the firearm. A shotgun is different. When you pull the trigger once in a shotgun, many, many bullets or projectiles or lead shot come out of the shotgun all at once and they come out in a very clustered tight pattern kind of like a bunch of grapes and then as they fly through the air they just spread apart a little bit more and judging by how much the projectile spread apart,
Starting point is 00:12:45 you can determine how far that lead traveled after it left the gun and hit the body. So you can determine the range of fire from the bullet wound or the projectile wound and your knowledge of ballistics. So this is an area of forensic called ballistics, and this is typically what they do on a daily basis, check for range of fire. How far was the victim from the gun when the gun was discharged?
Starting point is 00:13:20 Dr. Gallagher, what you just said was like an aria. It was just beautiful. I feel like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir just let loose in this studio. Well, thank you, Nancy. I can listen to you talk all day long. I bet juries love you. Come on down to the conference one year, Nancy. Hey, let me rephrase what you just said and tell me if I've got it right.
Starting point is 00:13:47 So with a shotgun, which is unlike a rifle or handgun, it's a long gun, it shoots out a spray of buckshot. And the closer you are to the muzzle, the tighter together the pellets will be. The further away you are, you get more of the spray. It'll be a wider gunshot wound, correct? The spray will be much wider. Wider pattern, you're absolutely right. And I guess you'd also look for stippling, which would be burning on the skin if the muzzle of the gun is contact. And you would look for gunshot residue on the victim's hands. Jump in. You're right.
Starting point is 00:14:32 I mean, that's true. But one thing we have to know here is that the gun may have been fired through the gun case. And if there's an intermediary target, the range of fire distance becomes less precise. You have to adjust. So was the gun shot through the case? Was the case made of canvas? Was it made of plastic? Could it have been metal in the case? So all those would affect the range of fire. And that has to be determined into your equation. And it would diffuse the pellets. Understood. I don't have any evidence that the gun case was shot in any way. Jackie, no. So, wow.
Starting point is 00:15:12 This is quite the, you know, this woman should have been a contortionist for the circus because she somehow managed to get the butt end of the shotgun in the, I'll just say leather carrying pouch or canvas, whatever it was, and shoot herself before the muzzle could be put in. Wow, that's certainly a feat.
Starting point is 00:15:34 Lisa M. Daddio, former police lieutenant and Haven PD, now director of Center for Advanced Policing. Lisa Daddio, how many suicides have you seen with a long gun? None. It's not, it's very difficult to do given a lot of different things. The length of the barrel, just how long you would need to be unless you rig it somehow in order to kill yourself. And so in 20 years of doing investigations and whether it was me or the people that worked for me, we never had a single case. Wow. Never, never once. Never once. When you say it would be difficult to rig it to commit suicide with a long gun. How could it be done?
Starting point is 00:16:25 You know, there are well-documented cases where people prop it up in such a way where they like put a string on the trigger and then they pull the string in order to kill themselves, theoretically causing the gun to go off. That's been kind of the most common. And then there's been other like contraptions that they actually make because they're so determined on killing themselves via a shotgun, which as you can imagine, causes catastrophic permanent and death injuries, no matter where you get it. If you get it center mass and up, you know, your body, parts of your body are shredded. So those that are really kind of set on killing themselves, utilizing a long gun, a shotgun, a rifle, have designed ways to do it versus where it would be just much easier with a handgun. But you can survive with a handgun. You know, another factor, Lisa Daddio,
Starting point is 00:17:26 is that the victim in this case, Bianca, is only 5'4". So even then, it makes it much more difficult. I mean, unless she has like these super, you know, not human arms that are, you know, four feet long. How the heck is she killing herself and hitting herself in the chest? Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. He wanted his wife's body cremated immediately. I know that Nicole DeBoer Hotsclo, former prosecutor, now high-profile defense attorney out of Houston, would claim this means absolutely nothing. The fact that he wanted his wife's body cremated right there in Zambia.
Starting point is 00:18:23 Forget about bringing her body home for a burial. Uh-uh. He wanted to bring her back in a plastic bag. Okay, take a listen to our cut. See again our friends at Crime Online. Lawrence Rudolph called the U.S. Embassy in Zambia while discussing funeral options. Rudolph tells officials that he wants Bianca Rudolph's body cremated. She is just three days after the shooting. The U.S. Embassy's consular chief alerted the FBI saying he thought the situation was moving too quickly. So the chief, along with two embassy officials, traveled to a local funeral home to take photos of the body to preserve evidence. During the funeral home visit, Dr. Rudolph suggested that Bianca may have committed suicide. The funeral home visit troubled embassy officials. The consular chief, a 20-year U.S.
Starting point is 00:19:10 Marine veteran, told investigators that the angle of the wound was straight on the heart, not angled as it would be from a self-inflicted shot from a long arm. The chief also pointed out that the wound did not appear to be caused by a tight group of pellets. When a shotgun fires buckshot, the pellets spread out as they travel to a target. Up close, the pellets would be tight. There were also no gas burns on the body, which are typical for gunshot wounds at point-blank or near point-blank range. The consular chief also noted that Bianca had a second injury to the chest
Starting point is 00:19:40 caused by wadding from a shotgun cartridge. Now, it's really interesting that he immediately wants his wife cremated. Now, Nicole DeBoer-Hotsclob, you yourself are the one that told me that she was Catholic. Now, what does that have to do with anything? Well, her friends and family say that that is not what she would have wanted, that she would not have wanted to be cremated. And I've also learned that in fact, there was a family member or close friend of the couple who tried to talk to him
Starting point is 00:20:11 about not having her cremated and he persisted. So I think these are going to be difficult circumstantial pieces of evidence for the defense, but they certainly don't mean that he killed her on purpose. Take a listen to our friend Royce Jones at CBS. Bianca's death was ruled an accident by Zambian law enforcement and that Lawrence Rudolph told police he suspected the gun discharged while she was packing it into its case. We reached out to Dr. Rudolph's attorneys. They all say this is outrageous. Dr. Larry Rudolph loved his wife of 34 years and did not kill her. They go on to say that the government is seeking to manufacture a case against this well-respected and law-abiding dentist.
Starting point is 00:20:54 Straight out to Alexis Tereschuk with CrimeOnline.com. So Alexis Tereschuk, they had been married 34 years. Is that correct? They had 34 years. They had two children together. One of their adult children actually worked in the dental practice with dad, with Larry. Wow. Okay. Well, surprise, surprise, surprise. As my friend Gomer Pyle would say. Take a listen to our cut 3B, Jim Murray with Inside Edition.
Starting point is 00:21:25 The investigation was launched after a friend of Bianca's told the FBI she suspected foul play because Dr. Rudolph was allegedly having an affair with the manager of his dental office outside Pittsburgh. The dentist's alleged mistress reportedly gave him an ultimatum of one year to sell his dental offices and leave Bianca. An ultimatum, Alexis Tereschuk? Did you leave a little, one of the facts out? An ultimatum? A mistress that he works with? I mean, really? Could somebody just surprise me one time and it not be the secretary or the assistant? I remember one case, the husband's having a midlife crisis and
Starting point is 00:22:06 he starts an affair with the cashier and the GNC where he's buying all sorts of vitamin supplements to enhance his manhood. You know, surprise me for one time, for Pete's sake, Alexis, a sex affair. And it wasn't just for a month or two. It was about a decade. And in fact, he and his girlfriend, they traveled out of the country all the time. They would constantly go to Cabo San Lucas. They went in 2010. They went twice in 2011. They went again in 2013, 14, 15, and in July 2016 before Bianca's death just a few months later.
Starting point is 00:22:42 And then after she died, just a few short months after she died, three months after she died, they went back to Cabo again, he and the girlfriend. It was, there was barely a blip of time where he wasn't, where he was mourning his wife dying. Tell me that timeline one more time again. So Lawrence, Dr. Rudolph and the girlfriend, they traveled to Cabo San Lucas, which is in Mexico, beautiful, beautiful resort on the West Coast. Very nice. They went in 2010. Then they went twice in 2011. They went again together in 2013, 2014, 2015. And then in July of 2016, just months before Bianca's October 2016 death, they went to Cabo San Lucas. Then again in February of 2017.
Starting point is 00:23:25 That's right after she's killed. She died. Yes. Like three months after she's dead, he takes his mistress to Cabo. Okay, Dr. Jory Croson, we need to shrink.
Starting point is 00:23:41 What is wrong with men? Don't they think we'll notice he's taking his mistress on an international trip while his wife was just killed that's that's easy to track too and looking at his thought process my question is what's wrong with men that was my question oh well we're just um why don't you just do what my husband does actually given up asking this when he does something i say what is wrong with you and he goes everything and when he says that i'm kind of like there's nowhere i can go with that and have to stop it ruins the whole argument everything i mean this guy is a a dentist for pete's sake or is alexis tereshka keeps calling
Starting point is 00:24:28 him dr rudolph and he doesn't think we're gonna find out about the sex at the dentist office oh okay whoa whoa whoa sex at the dentist office i wish i hadn't even said that i didn't know those three words should be put together sex and dentist office four words oh he didn't think would find out about that jory crawson i don't think he really cared because if you look at how long he had been doing it and getting away with it 10 years yeah is that right a routine behavior for him yep almost decade. At least they started traveling to Cabo San Lucas in 2010, but they could have, it may have been longer that one of his other employees who left said that the person, the woman confessed that they had been together for between 15 to 20 years, which is
Starting point is 00:25:16 almost his, you know, his entire time that he was married. I mean, they had been married for 34 years. What, did he have a mistress on day one, Alexis? I mean, it seems like, but well, I don't know if he had a different mistress, but this one was very soon after. And can you tell me, is it true that within 12 months, in less than 12 months, he moves her into the marital home? Is this true? Yes, that is what the investigators determined. And in fact, people were calling her his new wife.
Starting point is 00:25:45 They say they're not quite sure if they ever got married, but she definitely was living with him. So in less than a year, he's moved her into the home. And within a couple of months, he's taking her off for another sex-soaked trip to Cabo. Wow. A jury's going to love that. We're trying to find out more. Was it just sex that was the motive? Take a listen to our cut to a Melanie Gillespie at NBC. Former employees we talked to didn't know Bianca personally, but said Lawrence's behavior in the office was alarming.
Starting point is 00:26:23 I've never been afraid to go to a job until this one. You know, I just was very uncomfortable, very uneasy around him. The FBI said the embassy in Zambia grew suspicious and looked into Bianca's death. FBI agents found those life insurance policies were adjusted and updated just a few months before their hunting trip. The agent said the primary beneficiary of each of these policies was a revocable trust established by the Rudolphs on or about April 25, 2016. The terms of that trust made Lawrence the ultimate beneficiary. Witnesses told investigators Lawrence was having extramarital
Starting point is 00:26:56 affairs, allegedly with a former office manager who moved in with him in January of 2017, just months after Bianca's death. Not only that, take a listen to our cut E from CrimeOnline.com. After Bianca Rudolph died, a friend contacted the FBI in Pretoria, South Africa, suggesting that Bianca's death was foul play. The friend claimed that Lawrence Rudolph was verbally abusive and the couple had fought over money. What's more, she claimed Lawrence Rudolph was having an affair. She also pointed out that Bianca Rudolph was a strict Catholic and would not have wanted to be cremated. Would not have wanted to be cremated. And what better place to commit a murder than far,
Starting point is 00:27:38 far away from home? What about Elisa Daddio, former police lieutenant, now director of the Center for Advanced Policing? Why is it when couples go away, suddenly the woman ends up dead and the husband makes it home? It's easier to get away with in countries like, and I hate to say, but in certain countries, it's much easier to get away with that type of crime. Why do you hate to say it is true? Because their police forces are not used to investigating homicides. It's just that simple. Like where I grew up in Bibb County, out in the middle of middle Georgia, there were many less homicides than are in New York City or in inner city Atlanta. The reality is detectives are trained in the field. And when they don't see a lot of complicated homicides,
Starting point is 00:28:29 then they don't know how to investigate them. It's just, it's not a slight in any way. It's reality, Lisa Daddio. You're right, Nancy. And so that's why we're seeing it happen outside of the United States. Laws are different. Penalties are different.
Starting point is 00:28:49 Investigative techniques are different. And in this case, it was believed he got away with murder. You know, I'm just thinking about the way this whole thing went down. Take a listen to our cut D. The consulate chief estimated that Bianca Rudolph had been shot from between six and a half and eight feet away. A separate inquiry by a Colorado medical examiner concluded that it would be physically impossible to accidentally fire the shotgun in its carrying case and produce an entrance defect noted on the body of Bianca Rudolph. The medical examiner determined the tip of the carrying case was at least two feet away from Bianca Rudolph when it discharged. What's more, at just five feet, four inches tall, it would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, for Bianca Rudolph to reach the
Starting point is 00:29:30 trigger of the weapon, even if it was placed in the case with the muzzle pressed against her chest. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. So, Alexis Teresha at CrimeOnline.com, between the longtime motive, millions of dollars, and the forensics, I'm just surprised that it was initially ruled to be accidental. How did that happen? Well, there were, the investigation was very sort of quickly ended. He's, you know, he's a very, very wealthy man who's obviously been going on these trips for years and years. You know how rich people are. The more money they have, the more they don't want to share it. And he, well, he did kind of share his money a little bit because a witness has come forward and said that he was actually paying bribes to people in Zambia to expedite the cremation of his wife.
Starting point is 00:30:45 Did it work? Well, it did, yes. She got cremated very quickly. And so she, and it would have just, nothing would have happened, but the U.S. Embassy, the person that was contacted from the U.S. Embassy was very concerned that this was happening so quickly. So the embassy sent someone to the funeral home to take pictures of her body. And in fact, they got these photos. And these are what are being used now as proof because,
Starting point is 00:31:10 and he was furious when this happened. The officer, in fact, said he was, quote, livid that the embassy staff had taken photos and the investigator of his wife's dead body. How did it go again, Alexis Teresh tereshuk the funeral home gets the body and then what happens well so the doctor called the embassy and said my wife has died um and then he's like i i need to get her out of the country really quickly so i'm very concerned you know the consul consular chief at the embassy said um lawrence identified himself he said she died of a gunshot wound and he said you know we've got to get her cremated and out of here very quickly, which seemed a little suspicious. So the consular chief called the funeral home. And then he, the funeral home said,
Starting point is 00:31:55 we are scheduling the cremation for the next day. But this raised a flag for the embassy employee. He said this, he had a bad feeling about this. He just thought it was going too quickly. after having a conversation with Larry, who said, you know, let's go, let's go, let's get it, get her cremated, let's get her out of here. And so he decided to take it upon himself. And he took two other employees from the embassy and they went to the funeral home and they took the photos. And so I'm understanding that the husband, the dentist, was furious. You said that also. Yes. He was, quote, the livid that they had taken the pictures of her.
Starting point is 00:32:35 And the consular chief, he said, come to the embassy. I will meet with you. But he declined. And so the interesting thing was the dentist was complaining. He was saying, it's so good. It's going to be so hard to take the body back to the United States. You must, you need a lead lined coffin to do so. And it was very difficult, very expensive. And that's why he just wanted to get her cremated. But they investigated. He has taken many of these large game animals back to the United States and they have to be transported
Starting point is 00:33:01 in a similar fashion. You can't just stick them in your overnight bag and stick them in the cabin of the airplane. So he is very familiar with dealing with this. And it's not easy, but certainly if you wanted to take your wife's body home so that your children could see them before you cremate mommy, that that was something that could happen. But he was complaining, saying it was much too complicated and difficult, even though he'd been doing it for decades with animals. Alexis Torres-Shutt, CrimeOnline.com, isn't it true that he allegedly also paid at least one tour guide to state as a witness how the tour guide saw the body in their bungalow? Yes, that is what it's claimed, that he paid this tour guide to say that she was on the ground, that the gun was facing and it was just a few feet away from her. Throwing around money doesn't seem to be helping him. Speaking of money, you know, the smarter people are,
Starting point is 00:33:57 you'd think the better they could cover their tracks. Not necessarily true. Take a listen to Royce Jones, CBS, our cut four. Federal investigators allege Rudolph killed his wife and had her cremated in Africa in a scheme to collect millions in life insurance claims tied to her death. According to the criminal complaint, Rudolph allegedly made claims through seven different insurance companies totaling more than $4.8 million in payouts. Investigators go on to say that Rudolph had his attorneys use FedEx to mail claim-related documents to one of the insurance companies. The complaint also states the earliest life insurance policy to cover Bianca
Starting point is 00:34:38 was purchased around 1987 and that the policies in which Lawrence Rudolph was the primary beneficiary were updated and adjusted in 2016, the same year Bianca died. You know, to you, Dr. Jory Crawson, psychologist, faculty, St. Leo University, to adjust your wife's life insurance policy just before a rifle accident in Zambia, isn't that a little bit too much for a jury to swallow? Yeah, and to think also, he put it in a trust that he controlled. I mean, again, thinking like, you know, I would consider him thinking that he's considering he's covering his tracks by putting it in a trust. Yet, you know, the trust is under his total control.
Starting point is 00:35:24 And take a listen to our cut 1A. Our friend Sheldon Ingram at Pittsburgh Action News. In 2016, it says Rudolph killed his wife, Bianca Rudolph, during an African safari in Zambia. He told authorities it was an accidental shooting as Bianca packed away a shotgun and it went off. But forensic analysis, they say, do not match that story. And investigators also say Rudolph collected $4.8 million in life insurance after his wife's death. Those policies were updated the same year before her death in October of 2016. Investigators also say they were told by a friend of Rudolph's wife that he had an
Starting point is 00:36:06 active affair with another woman at the time of Bianca's death. You know, to Nicole DeBoer-Hodgeglobe joining us from Houston, the reality is, while this seems very nefarious, how hard is it going to be to prove all of this ballistics without a body and without the appropriate investigative photos and measurements? That's a great point. And the reality is, I think this is where the defense team has its strongest argument. They don't have the ability to go back and analyze the forensics because there were no forensics. There were a few photographs and photographs can really look different based on perspective. And that's why you'll see in the complaint, the FBI has spent such a huge amount of time
Starting point is 00:36:51 going back and trying to reconstruct these photographs. Still, though, the data just can never be there. Will he get away with it? Take a listen to our cut five from Pittsburgh Action News. Tom Garris. A federal grand jury is charging the owner of Three Rivers Dental with foreign murder and mail fraud. The FBI claiming that Lawrence Rudolph killed his wife in 2016 on that hunting trip in Zambia in order to collect nearly $5 million in life insurance money.
Starting point is 00:37:27 Now, the FBI also says the owner of the dental practice had a longtime relationship with a manager at the practice. That woman is said to have given Rudolph an ultimatum to sell the dental offices and to leave his wife, Bianca, within a year. The ultimatum, the money, the mistress, the forensics, what does it boil down to? A federal grand jury or investigation does not a conviction make. Well, he was taken into custody ultimately. Take a listen to our cut one. Dr. Lawrence Rudolph owns Three Rivers Dental and he greets all callers with a recorded automated message. But tonight he is in federal custody in Colorado, accused of murdering his wife. No one in his five offices are talking, which includes locations in Greensburg and Green Tree.
Starting point is 00:38:17 His arrest is detailed in a 21-page affidavit from the FBI. It details how he allegedly killed his wife to collect more than $4 million with a life insurance policy. And that's not all. Take a listen to what the defense says. Hour cut six from KDKA. Dr. Larry Rudolph's attorneys call this case manufactured, saying it's so weak they're keeping a nearly 70-year-old man with a severe heart condition in jail, all as part of what they're calling an FBI witch hunt. In court documents just released, attorneys claim the couple signed a prenup, saying he wouldn't lose much during a divorce, and also claiming his dental franchise, Three Rivers Dental, is valued at close to $8 million,
Starting point is 00:39:03 claiming he had no financial reason to kill his wife. Local law enforcement in Africa ruled it an accident and allowed for cremation days after her death. Now, FBI agents believe Bianca could not have physically pulled the trigger. Investigators believe his wife's life insurance policies, some adjusted in the months leading up to her death, tell a different story, a nearly $5 million story. The dates show Dr. Rudolph received the money in under one month's time. He got the money in under one month's time after her death. And don't be feeling sorry for this guy because he's 70 years old.
Starting point is 00:39:38 He's still young enough to take his mistress to Cabo for a sex-soaked weekend. We wait as justice unfolds. Nancy Grace, Crime Story, signing off. Goodbye, friend. You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.

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