Imperial Valley Press

Family offers reward for info in death of billionair­e

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TORONTO (AP) — A Canadian lawyer announced Friday a multimilli­on-dollar reward for informatio­n about the death of drug-company billionair­e Barry Sherman and his wife, Honey.

Lawyer Brian Greenspan said Toronto police haven’t properly handled the case.

He said the billionair­e’s family has set up a tip line and is offering up to 10 million Canadian dollars ($7.6 million) for informatio­n leading to the arrest and prosecutio­n of a suspect.

“We’re trying to light the fire,” Greenspan said. “To provide new incentive for the members of the public to come forward with informatio­n but also to light the fire under the Toronto police service.”

He also said he would like Toronto police to share informatio­n with his private investigat­ors.

Sherman, the founder of generic drugmaker Apotex, and his wife were found dead by their basement pool in their Toronto mansion last December. Greenspan said they were seated next to each other with ligatures pulled up around their necks and wrapped around a railing.

The day after, some media outlets quoted unidentifi­ed police officials as saying the deaths appeared to be a murder-suicide. That upset the couple’s four adult children, who hired their own team of investigat­ors.

Police said six weeks later the couple was murdered.

Greenspan said Toronto police made a litany of mistakes. “They failed to recognize the suspicious and staged manner in which their bodies were situated,” Greenspan said.

Greenspan also said police did not properly check points of entry into the mansion or collect enough fingerprin­t and DNA evidence. He also said his team has recovered evidence, including 25 finger and palm prints, that Toronto police missed.

And he said police didn’t vacuum the area where the they were found, noting intruders might have left behind a small sample of hair.

Toronto police chief Mark Saunders later defended his officers and said they did not reach an early conclusion that it was a murder suicide. Saunders said over 50 officers have been involved in the case and the house was searched forensical­ly for over six weeks. He also said over 200 people have been interviewe­d and said the investigat­ion continues.

“The investigat­ion was done well and continues to be done well,” Saunders said.

Saunders said he supports the family’s decision to put up the reward.

“The Sherman family is frustrated,” he said. “We all have the same goals.”

Saunders declined to release details of the investigat­ion, noting he had no doubt the suspects were watching his press conference.

Sherman, 75, was known for litigiousn­ess and aggressive businesses practices as he developed Apotex Inc., which has a global workforce of about 11,000. In “Prescripti­on Games,” a 2001 book about the industry, he mused that a rival might want to kill him.

 ??  ?? Brian Greenspan (far right) the lawyer for the family of billionair­e Barry Sherman and his wife Honey, speaks at a news conference in Toronto on Friday. AP PhOtO/RObeRt GIllIeS
Brian Greenspan (far right) the lawyer for the family of billionair­e Barry Sherman and his wife Honey, speaks at a news conference in Toronto on Friday. AP PhOtO/RObeRt GIllIeS

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