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Las Vegas jury hears pro golfer's suicide note
LAS VEGAS (AP) -
expresses deep personal unhappiness and describes a mixture of drugs kicking in before ending with the words,
"love and kisses, eternity, Erica.""I'm sad and don't want to be doing this right
now," the 25-
the letter that was read to a jury on Wednesday. "Sorry for all the people I've hurt doing this, but please
understand how miserable and sad I am, and that I feel no way of escaping it."
The note provided a dramatic opening to a civil wrongful death, medical malpractice
and breach of fiduciary duty trial against Blasberg's then-
Blasberg's parents' attorney, Nick Crosby, told the jury Wednesday that circumstantial evidence and series of seemingly secretive acts surrounding their communication point to Hess' responsibility in the death. "This is a case about a doctor who let his personal interest get in the way of his professional responsibility," Crosby said, "and my clients' daughter died as a result."Two days before she died, Blasberg and Hess played golf at the exclusive Southern Highlands Golf Club outside Las Vegas, where both had free memberships, Crosby said. They then watched a televised hockey game at a lounge at a resort hotel in Henderson, where they were seen touching hands and with Hess' hand on Blasberg's leg. The married Hess bought a prepaid cellular telephone the next day, which he used only to call Blasberg, and Crosby said evidence would show that Hess left an obviously drunk Blasberg at her home the night before she died.
"He left her in a compromised state," Crosby said. "He was torn between leaving Erica
and getting in trouble with his wife."Crosby said phone records show that Blasberg
tried to call Hess about 3:30 a.m. the following morning -
Blasberg was in bed with a dust mask over her mouth and a plastic bag over her head,
secured by rubber bands. The Clark County coroner determined that she committed suicide
by asphyxiation, with a toxic combination of medications in her system. Crosby told
the jury that Hess' then-
Blasberg had been seeing a psychiatrist for depression, but Hess didn't know that,
the defense attorney said. Hess "stupidly removed the suicide note and a blister
pack of Mexican medications, Xanax," Mandelbaum said. Hess has maintained he was
trying to spare Blasberg's family from anguish. Blasberg's note -
She was an All-