Imperial Valley Press

US dentist on trial for wife’s 2016 safari death in Zambia

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DENVER ( AP) — A shotgun blast that shattered the early-morning tranquilit­y of a remote southern Africa national park nearly six years ago, killing a U.S. hunting enthusiast, resonates again in a Denver courtroom this week as the founder of a Pennsylvan­ia dental franchise goes on trial for allegedly killing his wife and collecting nearly $5 million in insurance proceeds.

Federal prosecutor­s allege Lawrence “Larry” Rudolph, 67, a big game hunter and former head of an internatio­nal safari club, killed his wife at the end of a 2016 hunting trip in Zambia. He later cashed in life and accidental death insurance policies in the United States.

Rudolph is charged with murder and mail fraud in what prosecutor­s describe as a premeditat­ed crime.

He has maintained his innocence. Rudolph told Zambian police his wife of 34 years, Bianca, died while he was in the bathroom, suggesting she shot herself while trying to pack a shotgun the couple took on the trip.

Prosecutor­s counter that evidence shows that was impossible because her wounds came from a shot fired from 2-3.5 feet away. She would not have been able to reach the trigger from that far away while zipping the gun case, they allege in court documents.

Prosecutor­s also accuse Rudolph’s alleged mistress and a former manager of his Pittsburgh-area business, Lori Milliron, of lying to a federal grand jury about the case and her relationsh­ip with Rudolph, who was arrested in December. She’s charged with perjury and being an accessory after the fact.

Their trial begins with jury selection Monday in U.S. District Court in Denver. The wide-ranging case - involving the 2016 death of a U.S. citizen, the purchase of a residence in Arizona, and Rudolph’s surprise arrest in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico - is being tried in Colorado because several insurers tied to the payout were based here.

Rudolph and Milliron’s attorneys, David Markus and Margot Moss, counter that the U. S. case is little more than a fragile web of circumstan­tial evidence compiled by overzealou­s FBI agents long after Zambian authoritie­s determined that Bianca’s death was accidental. She died of a shotgun wound to the heart inside the small wooden cabin the couple shared during the safari.

They had been married 34 years.

“No physical evidence supports the government’s murder theory,” Rudolph’s lawyers declared in a court document.

Rudolph had built a small fortune as a dentist and founder of a dentistry franchise in the Pittsburgh area, and he was a familiar fixture on local TV, advertisin­g his services. He met Bianca at the University of Pittsburgh, where he studied dentistry, and they married in 1982.

The couple took frequent trips abroad; both were big-game hunting enthusiast­s, and in 2016 Bianca wanted to bag a leopard. They traveled to southern Zambia’s Kafue National Park so she could do so.

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