I think if I had the music glaring right close to my ear I may not hear sounds someone else would especially if the sound came from the water in the middle of the night. If I am doing housework I either turn the radio on or tv and it is louder than usual so I can hear it pretty much in whatever room I am in. I do not hear outside noises though.
The woman who heard cries for help is in the police report back in 1981. I don't think she is making up what she heard. If she no longer heard the cries she could have assumed that the boat owner got the person that had 'fallen' in the water.
Walken says he was asleep. Was he? Who really knows but Walken.
I don't know what kind of person who would do something like this. If it had been my husband missing no matter the circumstances I would have immediately called the Coast Guard and alert them to be on the look out. Why did Kennedy save himself instead of the passenger in his car?
I suspect if Wagner pushed her in while drunk and angry or even slapped her causing her to lose her balance and fall overboard he knew it would be hell to pay when Natalie got back on board the boat. Natalie didn't seem to be a wilted wallflower. She would not have let him get away with committing domestic violence against her. He was more interested in keeping his own reputation in tact.
Every photo I have seen of Natalie on that boat she was dressed very well. I will never believe she was going to leave that yacht in her socks, nightgown and a down jacket. Wagner told them she was probably screwing around on some other boat. Really RJ? In her socks?
I don't know why some seem to be so afraid for this case to be re-investigated. Nothing about her death made sense even when it happened. This has nothing to do with the internet. The questions started 30 years ago when she died.
Let the chips fall where they may.
IMO
No, but he states he saw them on the back deck arguing and then did not see her again. And she was NOT wearing the jacket. When did she put on the jacket and why? During the violent argument, he says he turned up his music to drown out the noise. He attempts to calm them once in the stateroom and RJ orders him away and not to interfere. When apparent NW was not on board, the captain is ordered, in effect, to do nothing and plied with booze. I think it is quite possible CW was passed out --booze, qualuudes and pot -- nuff said. The other boat did NOT "do nothing," they made two calls -- including the harbor patrol and they were told a helicoptor was being sent, but it never came. They heard the man's voice saying "Hold on, we're coming to get you," or similar and shortly after the cries ceased. They went to bed "disturbed" but must have believed the man did "get" the person who was crying out and probably believed (or wanted to) that the helicoptor not coming, backed that up.
I have followed this case, and never wanted to believe it was other than an accident. The 17-page document cited in this thread is very compelling reading indeed, however. Taken as a whole, I am hard-pressed to not suspect RJ. His behavior and statements afterward are very suspicious also, including dating St John just a few months after NW's death, and not devoting any loving words to NW in his autobiography, while devoting many such words to others. Other suspcious details about RJ: his financially supporting the captain after her death, getting him acting jobs and so on, the threatening note to the nearby boat's "ear witness," the harbor rescue man being demoted suddenly, and the report that RJ said "Get the f off my boat!" ---???
Most damning to me though are NW's own words for years prior to this -- that she was deathly afraid of water. I do not believe she would have undertaken leaving the boat in the dinghy (which had a broken light), fight or no fight. She didn't even want RJ to move the boat earlier in the day to a more secluded spot because of fear. I have sailed, it is not that easy to get into a dinghy. Not after drinking, not in the dark, not in a bulky jacket, nightgown and socks. Just doesn't fit with her fears.
Why and when did she put the coat on? Was she trying to get RJ to settle down during the argument on the back deck, got cold so went in and put it on and then went back out because he continued making a late-night scene on the deck and wouldn't come back into the stateroom?
Eve
There's also the testimony from the captain that the argument was very loud...shouting, things hitting the walls and things hitting the ceiling of the W's statesroom (or salon, don't recall). And the autopsy showed so many new bruises on NW.
I could see if RW was raging, Natalie may have tried to get away from him. Since I'm not her, I don't know what would be more frightening...a violent, raging man (husband) who may have hit me already and/or thrown things at me, or getting into a dinghy in dark ocean water. It's been stated (her family or she herself) that she was the most fearful of dark ocean water. If it were me, I might have preferred to take my chances in the dinghy, so close to shore and other boats. It seems like depending on the level of danger, she would more likely have tried to run, if she could have, and tried to lock herself into the bathroom or statesroom, or run to the captain's quarters or even CW's statesroom for help. JMO.
If RW did push her overboard, that might explain many of the new bruises on the Natalie's arms and legs. But he wouldn't have had to push her over the sides of the boat. The swim step at the stern has a door/doors that were said to usually be open. Even if it/they was closed at nite, it probably isn't very difficult to open it and then do whatever. And if that was the case, then maybe the new bruises were from the fight (being pushed into furniture or the sides of the boat, objects hitting her, or, well, a beating).
I could easily see a hypothetical scenario where RW told Natalie to leave the boat and physically intimidated her, opened the door(s) to the swim step and pushed/placed her onto it (with her still standing up). She may have been resisting and he pushed her hands off him and closed the door(s). RW may have walked away after untying the dinghy and never looked back (kinda like "off you go, into the dinghy, the shore's not far or go to another boat"). She may have sat down and slipped while getting up or into the dinghy, or trying to climb over the door(s), and slipped (not fell) into the water. Just speculating. The other boat witness said they heard no big splash but would have (I question this, due to the distance between the boats, and the loud music from the Splendour).
It doesn't seem likely that CW did directly cause Natalie's death, or I'm sure that RW would have been all over him, physically that nite/next day, and legally at the time and since...maybe. Unless they were all trying to hide something(s) else or just too concerned about a "scandal" and their reputations. It's interesting that CW lawyered up recently (no link, someone else posted this upthread).
Was all of the above complicated by 4 people being under the heavy influence of alcohol and/or drugs? If so, there were most likely more than a few poor decisions made (not the least of which were to not call Harbor Patrol/Coast Guard and not turn on the search lite immediately). Apparently only Natalie's BAC was measured.
I don't recall whether the other boat witness turned on their searchlight. I'm not judging anyone but wouldn't someone take their dinghy out to look, if they heard someone calling for help ("someone help me, I'm drowning") in addition to calling Harbor Patrol/Coast Guard? I know they said they called HP twice.
It seems to me, in the captain's recent interviews, that he clearly does not want to tell all the details to the media, but prefers to tell only LE. Can't say I blame him for that, altho it could be argued that he may be saving info for a follow-up book. The 2009 one is supposedly out of print.