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NYC
03-06-2006, 08:34 PM
I have a good one for NYC too.

January 30, 2006

Man's Body Found in Room at the Indonesian Consulate

By ROBERT D. McFADDEN and MARC SANTORA (http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=MARC SANTORA&fdq=19960101&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=MARC SANTORA&inline=nyt-per)

Correction Appended

An Indonesian man stranded in New York for the weekend pending a flight home was found dead yesterday, a knife protruding from his chest and one hand nearly severed at the wrist, in a blood-spattered basement room of the Indonesian Consulate on the Upper East Side, the police said.
The consulate, an elegant 19th-century Beaux-Arts mansion off Fifth Avenue that is Indonesia's (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/indonesia/index.html?inline=nyt-geo) home in New York for cultural events, cocktail receptions, economic conferences and aid to travelers, was transformed on a quiet Sunday morning into the setting of a locked-door mystery. It appeared to be a homicide, investigators said, though they did not rule out suicide.
If it was suicide, the victim — Bambang Wielianto, 35, of Jakarta, the Indonesian capital — would have had to plunge a butcher knife into his chest before or after cutting his left wrist so deeply that his hand was almost severed. At least three knives, including the one in his chest, were found in the room, but no note, the police said.
But if it was murder, the motive was murky and the case swirled with Agatha Christie shadows. Mr. Wielianto, who had been put up at the consulate on Friday, was last seen on Saturday when he told a consulate employee that he was homesick and eager to get back to his wife and two children. He had been alone overnight in the four-story mansion, at 5 East 68th Street, except for a security guard and a visiting Indonesian diplomat.
Investigators and employees said the diplomat, who was not identified by the authorities, stayed in a top-floor suite Saturday night and flew back yesterday to Los Angeles, where he works. And the security guard, who found the body and called the police just after 9 a.m., was said to have been posted all night at a desk just inside the consulate's locked basement door, about 25 feet from the room where the victim died.
The virtually severed hand appeared to be a tantalizing clue. A hard-line Muslim group, the Majelis Mujahedeen Indonesia, began a campaign in Jakarta last month to demand the enforcement of the hudud, the harsh criminal code in the Muslim law called Shariah, which prescribes punishments like the amputation of hands for theft and stoning for adultery.
There were no signs of a break-in, investigators said. And under strict procedures of the security-conscious consulate — rules sharpened by terrorist attacks in Bali and other parts of the Indonesian archipelago in recent years — a visitor would have had to phone the guard and ask permission to enter the locked basement door, the only door used overnight.
The security guard, identified by fellow employees only as Adi, was one of many consulate workers and officials interviewed by the police yesterday. But there was no immediate word from investigators about what the guard saw or heard Saturday night and yesterday morning — specifically whether anyone was allowed in or went out — and the circumstances surrounding his discovery of the body.
The investigation transformed the consulate into a movielike crime scene yesterday, with detectives and Indonesian and State Department officials scurrying in and out, access to the block cut off for hours and stunned employees and members of a regular Sunday dance class turned away by officers and yellow tape. Because the consulate is sovereign Indonesian territory, the police were there by invitation.
Jay Suherwanco, on his way to a traditional Balinese dance class at the consulate, was amazed when told that there was a body inside. So was Nyoman Sapta, 42, director of the Gamelan Dharma Swara dance company, which meets there every Sunday for classes. "No one knew him," Mr. Sapta said of the dead man. "On Friday, people were like, 'Who's this guy?' and today he's dead."
Residents of the block were less sanguine. "I thought they were filming for an episode of 'Law and Order,' " Michelle Brilliant, who lives next door, said as she emerged with her daughter, Aza Hougie, 3, carrying a Snow White umbrella into the light drizzle of an overcast day.
Little was known of Mr. Wielianto. Acup Setia, 45, who has been the consulate chauffeur for 20 years, said that he saw the victim's passport when the man arrived on Friday seeking accommodations, and that a fellow consulate employee had spoken to the visitor and learned that he had a wife and two children in Jakarta and had arrived in the United States on a tourist visa on Dec. 13.
It was unclear where Mr. Wielianto had spent the intervening time, but he told the consular worker that he had come to New York from Philadelphia on Friday and needed a room for a couple of days until his departure for home. He said he had a confirmed seat on a Japan Air Lines flight leaving Wednesday, but was wait-listed for a flight departing as early as yesterday.
While it is rare for Indonesian nationals to seek accommodations at the consulate, it happens two or three times a year and is not regarded as extraordinary, consular employees said. Diplomats and dignitaries are given suites on the consulate's upper floors, while the occasional traveler in need is given a room in the basement, they said.
The room Mr. Wielianto was given is normally used to store the musical instruments of the Gamelan Dharma Swara company, mostly drums, gongs, brasses and other percussion pieces, according to Mr. Sapta, who said he himself moved the instruments out on Friday so that a bed for Mr. Wielianto could be moved in.
To reach the room, one enters the basement from the sidewalk down a flight of steps to the right of the portico at the main entrance. Just inside the locked basement door is a large foyer, with the security guard's desk on the right and a reception area with seating for guests on the left. Straight ahead, at the back of the foyer, is a door leading to a hallway.
Down that hallway, at the far end, is the consulate kitchen, where, one investigator said, the knives may have come from. On the left side of the hallway, between foyer and kitchen, a door leads into the room given to Mr. Wielianto. Among many unanswered questions in the case is what Mr. Wielianto did after getting the room — whether he went out Saturday or met anyone in or outside the consulate.
His body, the police said, was found on the floor of his room, shirtless and face up, the long knife protruding from his chest and his nearly severed left hand dangling loose. At least two other knives were found near the body, and blood streaked and spattered the room. It was unclear if the door had a lock.
Signs of normalcy began returning to the consulate late in the day as a long-scheduled reception began upstairs even as detectives worked around the body in the basement. At 5:45 p.m., as guests in evening dress flowed up the portico into a reception given by the Council of Senior Centers and Services to benefit the New York City Conference on Aging, men carried the body out in a bag. An autopsy was set for today, said Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for the city medical examiner.
A curious feature of the consulate, a 50-foot-wide gray stone manse with bay windows that was built in 1894 by the Boston firm of Peabody & Stearns as a residence for the real estate investor John Emery, is that it is a mirror-image, back-to-back twin of a town house at 8 East 69th Street, built by the same firm in 1892 for Charles S. Colby, the railroad magnate who endowed Colby College in Waterville, Me. There is no known passage between the two structures.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/30/nyregion/30consulate.html?ei=5090&en=e98e9aae45452087&ex=1296277200&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss&pagewanted=print

NYC
03-07-2006, 05:39 PM
Follow-up

Family Denies New York Stabbing Death Was Suicide

Posted by: Roy Tupai on 02, 02 2006 @ 01:18 am

Relatives of an Indonesian man found dead in the Indonesian Consulate in New York have rejected findings that he committed suicide after apparently suffering a mental breakdown brought on by homesickness.
Despite their distrust, the family of the Bambang Wielianto (35) is not pursuing legal action to challenge the report by the New York City Police Department (NYPD) and Medical Examiner's Office that Bambang Wielianto (35) had stabbed himself to death.
Wielianto, a groceries trader from Jakarta, was found dead on Sunday (29/1/06) morning in a small room in the basement of the consulate on East 68th Street. He had suffered multiple stab wounds to his body and had a kitchen knife in his chest.
"He had been quiet and well-behaved since childhood. I think it is impossible that he committed suicide,” Wielianto’s uncle John Wilki was quoted as saying by detikcom online news portal.
The deceased’s sister Meina (39) said her brother would never harm himself or his family. "We think he was murdered," she was quoted as saying by The New York Times.
Wielianto, a father of two young children, had arrived in the United States on December 13 after being granted a tourist visa by the US Embassy in Jakarta. He apparently became depressed because of the unfamiliar culture, his inability to communicate in English and his failure to find full-time work during six weeks of travel that covered New York, Maryland and Pennsylvania.
He was not allowed to work under the terms of his visa. His relatives said he never mentioned any desire to find employment in the US, claiming he only intended to stay for a month or two. "He just wanted to travel and he was very happy when he first arrived, but in the last week he said he didn't like the life there," said Meina.
Wielianto was stressed, agitated and disheveled when he showed up at the consulate last Friday afternoon, seeking assistance to get a flight home as soon as possible. He already held a ticket for a Japan Airlines flight to Jakarta in June and was desperate to bring forward the departure date.
"He came to our consulate and said he did not want to live any longer in the US, in part because of encountering difficulties in looking for work. He told our consular staff that he wanted to return home to Indonesia immediately, whereas the departure date of his Japan Airlines ticket was not until June 8, 2006,” acting consul general Harbangan Napitupulu was quoted as saying by state news agency Antara.
"He wanted to go home earlier. He was homesick," Acup Setia, a driver at the consulate, was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.
The New York Times reported that Wielianto showed consulate staff $700 in cash in his wallet, enough to stay in a cheap hotel for a few days until a flight could be arranged, but he apparently lacked the ability to negotiate a room for himself.
Staff were able to get Wielianto a seat on a February 1 flight to Jakarta and said he could stay at the consulate until then.
Napitupulu said although it was not common for the consulate to provide accommodation for stranded tourists, officials decided to set up a makeshift bedroom for Wielianto in the storage area of the basement.
Over the following day, Wielianto made several phone calls to his family in Jakarta, restlessly paced the hallway outside his room and smoked heavily. After nearly all staff had left the building for the weekend, he made a final call to his wife and parents at 3am Sunday to wish them a happy Chinese New Year. Police said he then went to the kitchen, took several knives back to his room, stabbed himself repeatedly and bled to death.
A security guard at the building that night told investigators he did not see anyone enter or leave the premises. He also said he did not hear any noises from Wielianto's room. At 9am Sunday, the guard noticed blood in the hallway outside the room, discovered the body and called police.
Authorities initially suspected a homicide, prompting a search of the building by the US State Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation. But the NYPD on Monday said an autopsy by the Medical Examiner's Office showed Wielianto had committed suicide by almost entirely chopping off his left wrist and stabbing himself in the chest.
Wielianto’s wife Melia Sanjaya reportedly told investigators that her husband was supposed to be taking medication for a psychological disorder.
Napitupulu said the consulate was shocked by the suicide. "All of us are in a shock situation. He seemed very eager to go home… His psychological condition was not so strong to face the challenges," he was quoted as saying by The New York Times.
Wielianto leaves behind his wife and their two sons, George (2) and Nathan (10 months), at the family’s house in Green Ville residential complex, Tomang, West Jakarta.
Wielianto’s uncle said Melia could not believe her husband had killed himself. "She is still crying and not yet able to accept Bambang’s death. She is still in shock,” Wilki was quoted as saying by detikcom.
He said Wielianto’s parents also could not believe the news. “When Bambang telephoned his mother [on early Sunday], he told her not to worry about him because his situation was ok and he would return to Indonesia on Monday."
Wilki said the family doesn’t believe that Wielianto committed suicide but would not press for an investigation into the NYPD’s inquiry into the incident.
Foreign Affairs Minister Hassan Wirajuda confirmed that Wielianto had been "in a stressed-out state" at the consulate. He said the man had been working in the US for sometime and "was always moving around".
While the family disputed the cause of death, the Indonesian government said it accepted that Wielianto had committed suicide. “We suspected suicide was the cause of death and the NYPD’s investigation confirmed that,” Wirajuda was quoted as saying by detikcom.
"We are now coordinating with his family over whether the body will be sent home intact or cremated in New York and the ashes sent to Jakarta,” he added.
Meina has reportedly traveled to the US to formally accept the autopsy report and make arrangements for the return of the body.
Wilki said the family would likely opt for a cremation in New York because the Foreign Affairs Ministry was unwilling to help cover the cost of sending home the body intact. “The cost of sending the body from the US to Indonesia is quite expensive. The Foreign Ministry does not want to help cover the repatriation cost. So our likely option is to bring home his ashes.”
Foreign Ministry spokesman Desra Percaya on Wednesday said it was unclear when the body would be brought home. "We do not yet know when it will be returned. Up to now we are still coordinating with the family. If the body is returned intact, then the cost of repatriation will be expensive. But if it is cremated, the cost will be cheaper. But that depends the decision of the family," he said.
"All practical costs are the responsibility of the family, but that does not rule out the possibility of the Foreign Ministry providing help," he added.

http://www.laksamana.net/news_read.php?gid=133

exitwound
03-07-2006, 06:44 PM
Dang! :0