Editor’s note: This story
was originally published on April 13, 2016. On Thursday, CBS News published a
report quoting an investigator who described Robert Wagner as “more of a person
of interest now” in then-wife Natalie Wood’s drowning death.
The circumstances
surrounding the death of Natalie Wood on Nov. 29, 1981, while sailing off of
Catalina Island outside Los Angeles, have become the stuff of Hollywood legend
and mystery.
Wood, 43, drowned while
sailing with her husband, Robert Wagner, on their yacht, Splendour. Christopher
Walken, Wood’s then-costar in the movie Brainstorm, and the boat’s captain,
Dennis Davern, were also on board.
At the time, Wood’s death
was classified as an accidental drowning. Thirty-six years later, the case,
which was reopened in 2011, is still making headlines.
“We continue to look into
it and we will continue to look into it until we can come to some conclusion,”
L.A. County Sheriff Lt. John Corina told PEOPLE in 2016.
For an upcoming 48 Hours‘
episode on the case to air in February 2018, Corina told CBS, “As we’ve
investigated the case over the last six years, I think he’s [Wagner is] more of
a person of interest now. I mean, we know now that he was the last person to be
with Natalie before she disappeared.”
Wagner’s attorney did not
immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment about the 48 Hours report.
In Wagner’s 2008 memoir,
Pieces of My Heart, he wrote that after a night of drinking, he got into an
argument with Walken over Wood’s career.
At one point, Wagner wrote,
“I picked up a wine bottle, slammed it on the table and broke it into pieces.”
From left: Robert Wagner
and then-wife Natalie Wood circa 1970Silver Screen Collection/Getty
As for what caused her to
fall off the boat, Wagner wrote it was “all conjecture. Nobody knows. There are
only two possibilities: either she was trying to get away from the argument, or
she was trying to tie the dinghy. But the bottom line is that nobody knows
exactly what happened.”
Speaking to PEOPLE for a
cover story in 2016, Wagner said the family was left in despair over Wood’s
death. “We were all so shattered by the loss, and we were hanging on to each
other,” he said.
In his memoir, Wagner also
wrote of his grief and shock following his wife’s untimely death.
“Did I blame myself?” he
wrote. “If I had been there, I could have done something. But I wasn’t there. I
didn’t see her. The door was closed; I thought she was [below decks]. I didn’t
hear anything. But ultimately, a man is responsible for his loved one, and she
was my loved one.”
http://people.com/crime/natalie-wood-the-latest-on-her-drowning-death-investigation/
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