‘Unicorn Killer’ Ira Einhorn Dies In Prison At 79
By CBS3 Staff
April 3, 2020 at 5:19 pm
A killer in P.C. clothingby Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
July 25, 2001A BEAUTIFUL young woman vanishes. For months, her family searches in vain. They suspect her boyfriend, a secretive and arrogant older man who is active in public life. But his friends, including many famous members of the political and cultural elite, refuse to believe that their charismatic chum could be a suspect in any criminal wrongdoing. Frustrated with the police’s lack of progress, the missing woman’s family hires its own private investigators.
And waits and waits and waits for the nightmare to end.
Chandra Levy and Gary Condit? No, this is the tragic story of Holly Maddux and Ira Einhorn. New developments in the two-decade-old case barely registered a blip on the national media radar screen last week. That’s a crying shame. Holly Maddux deserves to be more than an afterthought. What makes this matter especially outrageous – and deadly instructive — is how Ira Einhorn remained a darling of the Left and a fugitive from justice for so long after Maddux was found. ...
Eighteen months after she went missing, detectives discovered her body stuffed and mummified inside a black steamer trunk hidden in Einhorn’s closet.
Maddux’s skull had multiple fractures and she had shrunk to less than 40 pounds. Experts say she was alive when she was forced into the trunk. Author Steven Levy wrote that when horrified cops informed Einhorn, who was waiting in his kitchen during the search, that the corpse looked like Maddux’s body, Einhorn coolly replied: “You found what you found.â€
The peaceniks rushed to Einhorn’s side and insisted he was incapable of violence — let alone the monstrous evil that befell Maddux. A parade of liberal aristocrats lavished praise on the accused murderer at his bail hearing. And Einhorn had the best legal representative in town – former district attorney and soon-to-be-U.S. Senator Arlen Specter, who won an obscenely reduced bail for Einhorn of $40,000. Wealthy socialite Barbara Bronfman of the Seagram’s liquor empire put up the measly $4,000 bond needed to spring Einhorn out of jail in 1981 before trial.
Einhorn fled. ...
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