Autopsy confirms Gene Hackman died from heart disease, notes his Alzheimer’s and prolonged fasting

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By JACQUES BILLEAUD and MORGAN LEE, Associated Press

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — The main cause of Gene Hackman’s death was heart disease, but he was also in the advanced stages of Alzheimer’s disease and likely had not eaten for a long time, according to a new autopsy report.

The report documents the 95-year-old actor’s poor heart health, noting he had experienced congestive heart failure, an aortic valve replacement and an irregular heart beat. He was given a pacemaker in April 2019.

Hackman’s carbon monoxide concentration was less than 5% saturation, which is within the normal range. He tested negative for the hantavirus, which is a rare but potentially fatal disease spread by infected rodent droppings.

FILE – Actor Gene Hackman arrives with his wife, Betsy Arakawa, for the 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif., Jan. 19, 2003. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill, File)

Authorities have said Hackman’s wife, Betsy Arakawa, likely died Feb. 11 at home from hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. Her autopsy report hasn’t yet been released.

A toxicology report says Hackman tested negative for alcohol and intoxicating drugs, but that he had a low concentration of acetone in his system that indicates prolonged fasting.

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Hackman appeared to have outlived Arakawa at home by about a week, possibly unaware of his wife’s death. Hackman’s pacemaker showed an abnormal heart rhythm on Feb. 18 — the day he likely died, according to the state’s chief medical examiner.

Records released earlier in the investigation showed Arakawa made phone calls and internet searches as she scoured for information on flu-like symptoms and breathing techniques.

Recently released videos outline the scope of the investigation into the deaths of Hackman and Arakawa.

Before they understood how Hackman and Arakawa died, authorities recorded themselves conducting interviews with workers and returning to Hackman’s home to search for more evidence. Detectives searched the home in early March for Arakawa’s laptop and other clues.

Billeaud reported from Phoenix.

Travel: A Bigfoot- and UFO-lovers’ guide to Colorado

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The first time I heard a Sasquatch grunt, I was six episodes deep into the Wild Thing podcast, Denver journalist Laura Krantz’s three-part show about Bigfoot, UFOs and nuclear power.

As it turned out, the huffing vocalization that caught my ear was only Shane Corson, field researcher at the Olympic Project, a group that explores the science behind Bigfoot. Like a birder mimicking a yellow warbler’s soft pish-pish-pish, Corson was attempting to lure a Bigfoot out of the brush while tromping through the woods with Krantz and her podcasting team.

Related: Bigfoot tourism brings cryptid-curious to Colorado

Now, I wouldn’t go so far as to say I believe in Sasquatch, but I suspect this is how any obsession starts: Reddit threads, a History Channel binge. One minute you’re innocently enjoying Krantz’s superb storytelling, and then you’re mapping out a road trip across rural Colorado.

I guess I’d always know it, but Krantz’s work illuminates a simple truth: Colorado is a hotbed of strangeness; a place where the Rocky Mountains rise to meet the unexplained. Whether you’re a skeptic or a seeker, exploring otherworldly corners of the Centennial State is a great excuse to experience beloved and overlooked destinations alike.

Sasquatch Outpost

Bigfoot cookie cutters are sold at Sasquatch Outpost in Bailey, Colorado on Wednesday, June 26, 2024. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

Rumor has it Bigfoot is nocturnal, but I wouldn’t recommend a backcountry night hike unless you’re a very confident wayfarer with honed navigation skills and proper gear. For most of us, it’s better to start southwest of Denver in Bailey at the Sasquatch Outpost, 149 Main St., open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and closed Wednesdays. This fun retail shop is packed with a veritable hodgepodge of Bigfoot sundries–everything from mugs and figurines to books, postcards, and t-shirts.

Behind the store, enter the Sasquatch Encounter Discovery Museum ($8 for adults; $5 for kids), a homespun gallery housing an impressive collection of documents on Bigfoot history and research alongside items such as track casts, large-scale maps, and several sculptures and replicas. Owners Jim and Daphne Myers host regular meet-ups for enthusiasts, and they’ll also take folks out on expeditions. They’ve been putting the finishing touches on a bigfoot-themed escape room, and are hopeful it’ll be operational by June.

Where to eat: The Cutthroat Café, 157 Main St., within walking distance of the outpost, serves a pretty solid breakfast. Or you can quench your thirst at Craft Mountain Brewing, 23 Main St., or at a waterside seat at Aspen Peak Cellars, 60750 U.S. Hwy. 285, offering a perfect setting for higher-end lunch and dinner fare.

Where to hike: Hoping to spot a Bigfoot? The trailhead to Colorado Trail Section #6 is only 20 minutes west of Bailey, directly off Highway 285. This segment of Colorado’s epic 567-mile cross-state hiking and biking route takes outdoors enthusiasts through some premium mountain terrain. Or head to Staunton State Park, 12102 S Elk Creek Road. The 12-mile route to Elk Falls is a personal favorite, but there’s a lot to love about the (much shorter) David Ponds Loop, measuring in at about 2.3 miles across even, easy terrain.

Nederland

A Frozen Dead Guy Day statue stands near the Pavilion pond during the Frozen Dead Guy Days’ Polar Plunge in Estes Park. The festival used to be in the town of Nederland. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

Nederland may be on your weirdness radar as the birthplace of a peculiar and totally beloved festival: Frozen Dead Guy Days. The annual celebration of Grandpa Bredo (rumored to be kept frozen in a Tuff Shed) might have relocated to Estes Park, but Ned hasn’t gotten any less strange, and it boasts a strong showing in the Sasquatch department. Campers tell of shadowy shapes darting between trees and screams echoing down from the Indian Peaks. As recently as March, the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization reported a new sighting 11 miles outside Boulder.

Where to camp: Spend a night in one of 22 designated tent sites at West Magnolia Trailhead, past 45 Peak to Peak Hwy., and you might find yourself reconsidering what you thought you knew about the animal kingdom. Camping is first-come, first-served; no facilities of any kind.

Where to hike: Mud Lake Open Space, 2034 County Road 126, is an excellent choice. From the Mud Lake Trailhead, combine the forested Tungsten and Kinnickinnick loop trails, and end at the on-site lake, which is way more spectacular than the name suggests.

Where to eat: I’m partial to Crosscut Pizzeria, 4 E. 1st St., which offers wood-fired pizzas, good craft beer, and creek-view dining on the patio. Salto Coffee, 112 E. 2nd St., is another solid option.

UFO Watchtower

When it comes to alien activity, you’ll probably want to start where the skies are darkest and the stories wildest: the UFO Watchtower off Highway 117, two miles north of Hooper, (GPS sometimes gets this destination wrong, so watch for the signs and green alien sculptures).

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

A sign welcomes visitors to the UFO Watchtower, an elevated metal platform offering a view of the skies, and perhaps travelers from outer space. (Andy Cross, The Denver Post)

Judy Messoline, author of the 2005 book “That Crazy Lady Down the Road,” built her 10-foot-tall watchtower on a whim in 2000. (Some uninformed travelers might call it a raised metal platform surrounded by lawn ornaments; you’ll have to see for yourself if you can feel the energy vortex.)

In 25 years, the structure has become a beloved roadside attraction that doubles as sacred ground for many sky watchers. Apparently, the UFO Watchtower has drawn more than 30,000 human visitors, many of whom have added their own small trinkets to the growing collection that’s laid out on the pea gravel near the site’s main attraction.

Currently, guests are welcome on weekends, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., but these hours extend in the spring and summer — we think. Messoline doesn’t answer her phone, but she maintains a website with updated information: theoriginalufowatchtower.com. Be ready to pay a nominal visitation fee of $5 per person; children under 6 get in free.

Where to camp: Onsite! You don’t need a reservation. It’s $20 per night per tent; BYO water, food, firewood, and trash bags. You can also pitch a tent at Piñon Flats Campground inside Great Sand Dunes National Park nearby. A moonless night is the best time to experience this International Dark Sky Park. You probably won’t see any pulsing orbs or darting shapes, but looking up at a pitch-black sky, you’ll get a real sense for the vastness of our mysterious universe.

Fiske Planetarium, Boulder

Krantz’s podcast and books are all about determining science fact from fiction. To that end, she recommends Fiske Planetarium, 2414 Regent Drive on the CU Boulder campus. The largest planetarium between Chicago and L.A., the museum functions as a project zone for CU students and faculty. When the space isn’t being used for educational pursuits, the general public is invited into the 65-foot-diameter dome for films, star talks, and even laser shows.

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Where to eat: Head to Pearl Street Mall for a bite. There are dozens of restaurants, both casual and upscale, with just about any kind of cuisine.

Where to hike: On the west side of the National Center for Atmospheric Research building at 1850 Table Mesa Drive, you’ll find the Walter Orr Roberts Weather Trail, a half-mile loop with informational signage. For a longer hike, follow Mesa Trail until it links with Enchanted Mesa Trail. This out-and-back hike weaves through a less-crowded segment of Chautauqua Park.

Meow Wolf

Consider traveling the stars and transcending space-time at Meow Wolf Denver’s Convergence Station, 1338 1st St. Here’s how the story goes: When a rare cosmic glitch aligned four worlds into one, a portal opened. For $45, curious travelers can walk through an immersive, interactive science fiction exhibition. Have fun trying to solve on-site mysteries, or just enough this over-the-top intergalactic art. Purchase tickets in advance online.

Denver International Airport

It’s impossible to write about Colorado’s strangeness without mentioning Denver International Airport, which has become a conspiracy theory theme park, complete with apocalyptic murals, a time capsule, underground tunnels, and 3the 2-foot-tall blue Mustang sculpture with the glowing red eyes. (Surely you already know that “Blucifer” killed its creator.)

While most of the weirdness is likely just eccentric art, there are some who believe the airport is a hub — or maybe a cover — for extraterrestrial activity. Keep your eyes peeled the next time your flight gets delayed. It’s OK to want to believe.

Why ‘Chronology of Water’ author Lidia Yuknavitch revisits the past in ‘Reading the Waves’

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There’s a pocket of the literary world where the name “Lidia Yuknavitch” is spoken in reverent tones, as if invoking a sort of high priestess. You might think I exaggerate; I don’t.

It all started in March 2011 with the publication of her first book, a memoir titled “The Chronology of Water.” Among lovers of the memoir genre, poetry and experimental writing, it became a modern cult classic for its rich language and unique exploration of grief, sexual abuse, addiction — and the myriad other things braided into its hypnotic, form-bending narrative. Now “Chronology” is on track to be the next buzzy indie film as Kristen Stewart makes her directorial debut, having also co-written the screenplay based on Yuknavitch’s memoir.

In the intervening years since “Chronology” first landed, Yuknavitch’s reputation as a boldly innovative author has only expanded: She published the short story collection “Verge” and four novels including “The Small Backs of Children,” “Thrust” and “The Book of Joan,” which inspired this headline from the New York Times: “A Brilliant, Incendiary Joan of Arc Story for a Ravaged Earth.”

Beyond that, Yuknavitch, who calls the Oregon Coast home, has also attracted a dedicated following for her “The Misfit’s Manifesto” – a TED Talk with over 4 million views and counting. In the inspiring presentation, Yuknavitch, wearing a calico dress and Doc Marten’s, sticks up for the eccentrics, the oddballs, and anyone who has ever felt like a screw-up. Also a longtime creative writing instructor, she’s the founder of the Portland-based workshop series Corporeal Writing.

Now, a decade and a half after “Chronology,” she’s back with another memoir, “Reading the Waves.” In many ways, this work feels like picking up the conversation begun in “Chronology” all these years later; themes and stories from the first book ripple through its pages, now considered from vantage points offered by age and experience.

As she writes in the introduction, “I mean to make a series of returns to the people and places that marked me in ways I have carried around in my body most of my life. I believe our bodies are carriers of experiences. I mean to ask if there is a way to read my own past differently, using what I have learned from literature: how stories repeat and reverberate and release us from the tyranny of our mistakes, our traumas, and our confusions.”

Now might be the time to reveal that I’m not an objective source on this author and that referring to Lidia by her last name in this article feels weird. I count her among my friends, and we have worked together in years past. I can tell you that in person Lidia is both as unpretentious as an old shoe and yet also electrifyingly intelligent, to the point of nerdy. She’s like that shy girl in class drawing unicorns in her notebook; you don’t think she’s paying attention until she gets called on by the teacher and then says something so observant and unique that it blows everyone away.

Also important to know about her: She’s a mighty swimmer who feels most at home in the water. She’s a tree-hugger, as in she literally hugs trees.

We traded emails recently to talk about “Reading the Waves.” Here’s an edited version of our exchange:

Q. What’s outside your window right now?

Well, there is a tree, so that’s good. A dogwood.

Q. One of the many, many lines that caught me in “Reading the Waves” was, “Instead, I’ve chosen to spend my life creating literature as resistance.” Can you tell me about the meanings that sentence holds for you?

I think, in some ways – and you can tell me if you agree with this or not – all kinds of stories come at us about who we are supposed to be and how we are supposed to live our lives. And we may or may not fit those stories. They may help some people and not others. They may injure some people and not others. Stories about identity, or thoughts, or feelings and experience.

The stories that have come my way, the stories I have inherited about daughter, mother, wife, lover, survivor, teacher, writer – I don’t fit well. I’m misfitted. And I’m not alone. So some of us find ourselves creating and sharing stories against the grain of mainstream ideas and narratives meant to collect human experience.

I count myself amongst those whose stories off alternatives, cracks and fissures, possibility threads in the face of family, social, or cultural narratives that hem our hearts in. While that is not the same as resistance against tyranny or violence or war, it is not nothing either. Storytelling is a powerful realm of resistance, revolt, revision, change. Art is a realm capable of endless resistance and transmogrify.

Q. What prompted the return to memoir? Why this, why now?

I suspect two different confluences: One, our times, and the pressure of these times. Attacks on women, on LGBTQ+ folks, on BIPOC. Repression and oppression in every epoch all over the globe breeds artistic expression.

The other rivulet involves aging. Moving through the transformational space of menopause (another word might be “crucible,” ha).

And a third thing I’d say is the act of returning itself drew my attention. Mightily. When we get old enough, we tend to look back differently. So I wanted to ask big questions about returns.

I should note that I asked a salmon first. Seemed logical. She said birth and death swim in the same stream. Once I was writing my way through returns, once I was inside the writing process, narrative illuminates even better questions and ideas.

Q. A salmon? Of course you did. In this book, you pick up threads again and again of experiences and memories and re-enter them from different points. I thought about [Argentinian writer] Jorge Luis Borges, and how he spoke about autobiographical writing as being either an opportunity to look at life in a mirror or through a prism. You always choose the prism.

I thought of Borges, too! Ha! And you are correct. The prism is everything. The mirror doesn’t interest me. Ever. I don’t even look in the mirror when I brush my teeth.

Q. What is gained by writing deeply into our lives?

Well, the thing is, we tend to carry certain stories of ourselves around as if that is the only story of what happened to us. Especially difficult stories. But there are stories underneath those heavy narratives, there are other vantage points, there are the stories in the periphery or blind spot of what happened to us, there are stories that would come to us differently if we went back through memory and asked different questions – for instance, about color or sound, smell or light, or if we simply continued to ask of our memory, “and what is the story underneath that one?” Writing gives us the ability to understand our human experiences as layered and expansive, rather than too heavy, conclusive, done. Writing opens experience up. Writing lets memory breathe, change, die, become again.

Q. One of the threads in the book is about a student in one of your classes who was murdered. How has teaching made an impression on you, shifted you, enlarged you as a writer — and a person? Is it possible to separate writer and person?

Teaching has been the formative experience of my life. And by teaching, I mean sharing collective and collaborative idea space with other humans. The transference and transformation available when people agree to share ideas and stories — even difficult ones — can rearrange your DNA. But I’m not talking about a static, patriarchal lecture mode. I’m not talking about a “knowledge king” kind of teaching. I’m talking about people agreeing to work together to hold questions open as long as they can until meanings are reinvented in ways that help a collective to thrive.

Q. You received a lot of critical claim and attention in your novels. Did it put a new pressure on your writing, or did it serve as a kind of validation that was liberating? Both, all and more?

I have been very lucky to have had some brilliant readers, passionate readers, speak to the books I have written, and those experiences have been profoundly meaningful to me. I don’t think very much about validation. I don’t mean to sound like a [jerk] — what I mean is, when I receive praise, I am humbled and grateful, but I don’t hold onto it very long or give it gigantic worth beyond the moment. When I receive criticism, I don’t hold on to that either. Both praise and criticism are fleeting experiences, you know? I don’t think I write for affirmation or validation … I think I write trying to make these small dorky bridges to others who might need a lifeline or just an image or story to ride alongside them in their lives.

I only ever wanted my writing to be useful to someone else. Or help someone feel like it was their turn to write or create something. The writing I love the most feels kinetic in that way to me. Inspires me, moves me to creative action. I’m pretty suspicious of prizes and accolades built from capitalism.

Q. Is “Chronology Of Water” still on track to reach the big screen? Have you been involved in that writing-for-film process at all?

Hell if I know, but I think so? I do know that Kristen finished filming in Latvia, and I have been told that she is in post-production now, trying to finish in time for spring festivals. I was a little involved early on, in terms of ideation and bouncing things back and forth creatively. I will also say that this film will be an arthouse film, for sure. She was interested in reflecting the experimental nature of the book. And you know for me, it’s not really a classic “bio pic.” It’s more like jazz — one artist riffed off of another artist’s work in a kind of creative jam session. That’s how it feels to me. I do know it will not be, you know, dull.

Q. Your TED talk has more than 4 million views the last time I checked. It is still as resonant as it was nine years ago! Did you have any idea that it would strike such a chord? And do you still have that dress?

No, I did not! I almost died doing it. That experience was much taller than me. Ha, yes! Yes I still have the dress…what a great question…I saved it the way one might save a wedding dress. I hope Miles [ her son] wants it.

Q. But let me get back to “Reading the Waves.” Talk to me about the word “transmogrify.” That or some version of it repeats many times in interviews you give and in the book itself.

I think transmogrifying might be the central theme of the book. I mean it both in terms of, say, frogs, or butterflies, and their powerful transmogrifications, what that has to teach us puny humans about constant change, constant life-death-life. The other way I’m into transmogrify has to do with fairytale and fable space. That story space. I was way too into Marie Louise Von Franz (a student/colleague of Jung’s who studied the world’s fairy tales)…but just in general, I think my novels are all oversized fables that got out of hand.

Q. Another line I keep thinking about, “Your failures and fears are portals. Step through.” For me, that is the best description of writing memoir.

I agree. I mean, you probably get this question a lot too — why go back into failures and fears in writing if it is painful?” I think memory and trauma and failure are carried in the body. I think writing releases and rearranges and rebirths the possibility of change.

Q. Related to that is an earlier passage I love in the book, “Instead of a conclusion, or proof of right or wrongness, I embrace storytelling again and again. I look for the places where stories and lives intersect, where the lines on the maps that divide us dissolve and shift.” It’s also a way to talk about the fact that in writing any memoir, we are stepping into a stream, a life story that might look very different from when it is written to when it finally arrives in a reader’s hands.

Yes! I mean, even stepping into the stream moves it around. Like, if I wrote “Chronology of Water” today? It would be a completely different story. Or I could STILL go back into the events of “Reading the Waves” and just stand in a different place from which to tell the story. This idea haunts me, fascinates me, mesmerizes me. I’m still thinking about it. I’m still willing to travel this idea.

Q. So much of your writing feels like an incantation. When you are writing, do you read aloud to yourself? What helps you fall into the rhythm?

That makes me blush. For some reason, that makes me shy and happy to hear. Thank you. What helps me fall into the rhythm is that I can hear it and see it. If I turn the volume down on my rational, logical, sense-making thinking, and turn the volume up on my sensory perceptions, imagination, and subconscious creative processes. So, of course, art, music, animals, the natural world all help me achieve the right volume … also sleeping. Because dreams.

Q. Hey, are you reading anything now that you’d recommend? Are you always reading as you write or do you take breaks when you’re in the process of a book?

I’m always reading something or other, or I’m looking at art or listening to music … art forms are pretty interchangeable to me. Doesn’t have to be books. When I was writing “Reading the Waves,” I turned to “Meghann Riepenhoff: Ice.” [A photo book of frozen landscapes with a foreword by Rebecca Solnit.]

Q. Last thing: Are these questions making any sense?

All of them!

Rep. Gerry Connolly steps down as top Oversight Democrat and won’t seek reelection as cancer returns

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By LEAH ASKARINAM

WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Gerry Connolly of Virginia announced on Monday he is stepping down as the top Democrat on the powerful House Oversight Committee and will not be seeking reelection next year due to his cancer returning, ending his long career in public life.

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“The sun is setting on my time in public service,” Connolly said in a statement. “With no rancor and a full heart, I move into this final chapter full of pride in what we’ve accomplished together over 30 years.”

Connolly, 75, has served in Congress since 2009 and represents northern Virginia, including Fairfax County. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said in a statement that Connolly has been a “relentless advocate for the incredible civil servants” in his district during the Trump administration’s “unprecedented attacks on federal employees.”

Sen. Mark Warner, a fellow Virginia Democrat, lauded Connolly for his toughness.

“Whether it’s standing up for federal workers, advocating for good governance, or now confronting cancer with the same resilience and grit that have defined his life of public service, Gerry is one of the toughest fighters I know,” Warner said in a statement.

Connolly announced late last year that he had been diagnosed with esophageal cancer and would undergo chemotherapy and immunotherapy. He said that after “grueling treatments,” he learned that the cancer has returned.

Concerns about Connolly’s health were a factor late last year as he ran for the top ranking position on Oversight, one of the most prominent committees in Congress.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., ran against Connolly for the job but was defeated as the majority of Democrats opted to stick with the seniority system. Connolly has served on the Oversight Committee for more than 16 years.