Mississippi State Rep. Jessica Upshaw found dead
Source: CBS News
MENDENHALL, Miss. Simpson County Coroner Terry Tutor says state Rep. Jessica Upshaw has died.
Tutor said the Diamondhead Republican died Sunday.
Mississippi Bureau of Investigation spokesman Warren Strain says the crime scene unit is at a home in Mendenhall, investigating her death.
Neither Strain nor Tutor would comment about the cause of death. Strain says it does not appear to be a natural death. The Clarion-Ledger reports the lawmaker died from a gunshot wound to the head, citing state Capitol sources.
Simpson County Sheriff Kenneth Lewis tells The Clarion-Ledger that she was found at the home of former Mississippi State Rep. Clint Rotenberry, who has not been arrested.
Read more: Link to sourcehttp://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162-57576043/mississippi-state-rep-jessica-upshaw-found-dead/
hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)I remember hearing a mayor or a mayoral candidate was killed in MS a few weeks ago.
Response to defacto7 (Original post)
Post removed
lexw
(804 posts)davidpdx
(22,000 posts)REASON FOR ALERT:
This post is disruptive, hurtful, rude, insensitive, over-the-top, or otherwise inappropriate.
ALERTER'S COMMENTS:
Baseless conspiracy craziness.
You served on a randomly-selected Jury of DU members which reviewed this post. The review was completed at Mon Mar 25, 2013, 08:56 PM, and the Jury voted 2-4 to LEAVE IT.
Juror #1 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE and said: Pure speculation but not worthy of hiding.
Juror #2 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE and said: While it is conspiracy-ish, it really is just someone giving their opinion. I don't believe this quite falls under "Don't go overboard with the crazy talk" in the TOS. If the person said something beyond this, I might agree with your reasoning.
Juror #3 voted to HIDE IT and said: No explanation given
Juror #4 voted to HIDE IT and said: No explanation given
Juror #5 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE and said: just random "internets chatter"
Juror #6 voted to LEAVE IT ALONE and said: No explanation given
bitchkitty
(7,349 posts)Because if you are, the alert system is broken. Your post says that 4 jurors voted to LEAVE IT ALONE, but the post says that a jury voted 4-2 to HIDE IT.
davidpdx
(22,000 posts)The one I replied to was alerted and the jury decision was 2-4 to leave it.
Kelvin Mace
(17,469 posts)What is your evidence for such a conclusion?
struggle4progress
(118,295 posts)Rep. Jessica Upshaw, 53, is believed to have killed herself, police said. No arrests have been made. It appeared she had a gunshot wound to her head; it appeared to be self inflicted, Simpson County Sheriff Kenneth Lewis told ABC News affiliate WLOX-TV ...
Mystery Surrounds Death of Mississippi Lawmaker, Jessica Upshaw
Mar 25, 2013 12:42pm
By Russell Goldman
struggle4progress
(118,295 posts)for some time prior to her suicide on Sunday ... She and I did have a relationship for years, and that relationship continues, he said. He described Upshaw as a woman of courage and character, and someone who did not back down to political pressure ...
Rotenberry: Upshaw's story should be 'about her life'
Mar. 25, 2013 5:35 PM
Written by Therese Apel
mahina
(17,668 posts)What is wrong with people, my god.
Ford_Prefect
(7,901 posts)Full Story here : http://www.clarionledger.com/article/20130324/NEWS/303240070/Miss-Rep-Jessica-Upshaw-found-dead-former-legislator-s-home?nclick_check=1
Why does an apparently happy 53 year old grandmother kill herself? Why does a Republican state legislator involved in Natural Resources take her own life? Why do it in a friend's home? Why is Conservative Coalition Republican Clint Rotenberry not discussing the case? Why was she at his home 30 miles east of the Capitol rather than at her home in Diamondhead 110 miles away? Where was Rotenberry at the time? Who found her and when?
see also: http://news.msn.com/us/police-investigate-death-of-mississippi-state-legislator
Foul Play? Depression? Reaction to a diagnosis of fatal disease? Convenient death in the path of the XL-Pipeline? Love Affair gone bad? Debts at the Casino? Alzheimer's? Sour Tea Party? Bad Karma come home to roost?
Kelvin Mace
(17,469 posts)I would pick "love affair gone bad".
Of all the choices, it meets the criteria for the simplest explanation.
Of course, actual information is almost non-existent at the moment.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)That's what it sounds like to me, too.
magical thyme
(14,881 posts)By the time you're that age, you've had many love affairs gone bad. A single grandmother with successful career doesn't seem likely to kill herself over any man. She already knows there either will be another, or that she'd prefer none. And she had much to live for.
Unless you mean she was murdered by lover.
My first gut response was a disgruntled teaparty-type. Even a hit seems more likely to me. But that's just me.
Kelvin Mace
(17,469 posts)I am including murder as a possibility.
RILib
(862 posts)magical thyme
(14,881 posts)not suicide. Suicide doesn't make sense to me.
Beacool
(30,250 posts)Her colleagues are saying how much she enjoyed being a grandmother. How she looked forward to her summer vacations with her daughter (the daughter and husband are engineers living in So. Korea). How when she returned from those vacations she couldn't wait to regale her friends with stories from the trip. Why would someone who appeared happy kill herself?
Did she and Rotenberry have an affair and it ended badly? It is very unusual for a person to go to someone else's home to kill themselves.
they are fooling around with that person and something goes sour.
judesedit
(4,439 posts)Aerows
(39,961 posts)She's a Mississippi Republican. The pretty much wrote the book on looking the other way if they aren't corrupt themselves. Since she was at the guy's house, I'm going with "love affair turned sour".
graham4anything
(11,464 posts)the madness and insanity of the gun and the bullet continues unabated in America until it finally stop.
How many more will die from private citizens with guns?
10?
100?
1000?
10000?
1million?
10 million?
100 million?
1 billion?
Who shall be the last to die from a private citizen and a bullet and a gun?
OneMoreDemocrat
(913 posts)Seems like typing it all out it on every gun-related thread would get tiring.
Guns, bad...got it. EVERYONE gets it. Jeez.
Paul E Ester
(952 posts)Two Democratic state senators, Bennie Turner, of West Point, and Alice Harden, of Jackson, died in late 2012.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2298608/Jessica-Upshaw-Politician-shot-death-home-lawmaker-Clint-Rotenberry.html
Isoldeblue
(1,135 posts)There are so many unanswered questions and the whole story has a real stench to it. Her connection to Rotenberry (what a name for a politician!) will be a key factor.
Anyway, considering that Upshaw, a former attorney, was chairwoman of the Conservation and Natural Resources Committee in the Mississippi House of Representatives is why I bring the fracking up. There is so much controversy over it in MS (nationwide too), currently. But I'm sure that republicans will bend over backwards, to tamp this story down, whatever the reason were for her death.
http://www.clarionledger.com/article/20130315/OPINION02/303150308/Mississippi-Fracking
Already in Mississippi, the counties of Amite, Wilkinson, and Adams have active fracking wells, but there is little regulation. Ray Lewis, an environmental administrator with the Mississippi State Oil and Gas Board, said companies are not required to inform us of what chemicals are being used in the fracking fluid. According to Gaslands, there are over 500 chemicals in fracking fluid, many of them known to be highly toxic. Mississippi State Oil and Gas Board needs to allow adequate un-biased studies to be performed and create strict regulations for any company that wishes to drill in our state.
Another article and info:
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Mississippi_and_fracking
In 2011, Devon Energy and EnCana began drilling in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale (TMS) play, an unproven unconventional 7 billion barrel oil resource spanning the central Louisiana and southwestern Mississippi counties of Amite, Wilkinson, Adams, Franklin, Pike, and Walthall, for a total of 2.7 million acres (the term play refers to a geographic area targeted for exploration).[1]
In February 2012, Amite County said it will study oil shale and shale gas development in southwest Mississippi. It will focus on Tuscaloosa Shale production in Amite, Pike and Wilkinson counties - a large formation covering central Louisiana and parts of southwest Mississippi that oil companies have been working at for months. Pike County Economic Development District executive director Britt Herrin says there are hundreds of wells that could be drilled.[2]
On March 21, 2012, Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant unveiled plans to incorporate natural gas as a "priority" in a new statewide energy policy that he is developing along with local business leaders, including Clean Energy Fuels' T. Boone Pickens. Clean Energy Fuels plans to build a station in Pearl before 2014, absorbing the $2 million start-up cost while promoting state and commercial vehicles run on natural gas - which the company would supply. Bryant said other businesses have shown interest in building stations in Harrison and Jackson counties.[3]
SleeplessinSoCal
(9,123 posts)Ford_Prefect
(7,901 posts)and then Rotenberry explains about her depression, etc.
http://www.clarionledger.com/article/20130325/NEWS/303250060/Rotenberry-Upshaw-s-story-should-about-her-life-
If true it is quite sad.
dembotoz
(16,808 posts)it is why a recovering drug addict should not keep drugs around the house
or why I as someone who no longer smokes cigarettes would never keep a pack in the drawer for
memory sake
the temptation is there
the means is there
a depressed person who has easy access to a gun is at more of a risk to use it than a depressed person who does not have
access to a gun
like duh