Police Give New Details on Ledger Death

Updated, 9:17 p.m. | The masseuse who discovered the body of Heath Ledger in a Manhattan apartment on Tuesday twice called a friend of his, the actress Mary-Kate Olsen, before calling 911, New York City police officials said on Wednesday. The officials, who provided new details about Mr. Ledger’s death, emphasized that no illegal drugs were found in the apartment and that there were no obvious signs of suicide. Tests on a rolled-up $20 bill that was found in the apartment found no evidence that the bill had been used to handle drugs, they said.

According to the police, around 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday, a housekeeper, Teresa Solomon, arrived at the apartment, at 421 Broome Street in SoHo, to do household chores. At about 1 p.m., she went into Mr. Ledger’s bedroom to change a light bulb in an adjacent bathroom; she found him on the bed face down, with the sheet pulled up to his shoulders, and heard him snoring.

A masseuse, Diana Wolozin, arrived to give Mr. Ledger a massage about 2:45 p.m. At 3 p.m., after Mr. Ledger did not emerge from his bedroom, with the door closed, the masseuse called him on his cellphone but got no answer. She entered the bedroom and saw him lying in bed. She took a massage table out of the closet and began to set it up near his bed. She then went over to him and shook him, but got no response. Using his cellphone, she used a speed-dial button to call Ms. Olsen in California to seek her guidance, knowing Ms. Olsen to be a friend of Mr. Ledger’s.

According to the authorities, Ms. Wolozin told Ms. Olsen that Mr. Ledger was unconscious. Ms. Olsen said she would call some private security people she knew in New York, and hung up. Ms. Wolozin again shook Mr. Ledger, called Ms. Olsen a second time, and said she believed the situation was grave and would call 911.

Ms. Wolozin called 911 at 3:26 p.m. to say that Mr. Ledger was not breathing. The call occurred less than 15 minutes since she had first seen him in bed and only a few moments after the first call to Ms. Olsen. The 911 operator urged Ms. Wolozin to try to revive Mr. Ledger, but Ms. Wolozin’s efforts were not successful.

Emergency medical workers arrived at 3:33 p.m., at almost exactly the same moment as a private security guard summoned by Ms. Olsen. The medical workers moved his body to the floor and then used a defibrillator and CPR, to no avail. Mr. Ledger was pronounced dead at 3:36 p.m. By that point, two other private security guards summoned by Ms. Olsen had arrived, as had police officers.

“I’m not going to speculate on why 911 was not called first,” said Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman.

The police said that all five witnesses — Ms. Solomon, the housekeeper; Ms. Wolozin, the masseuse; and the three private security guards summoned by Ms. Olsen — were fully cooperating with the authorities. (On Tuesday, the police at first mistakenly stated that Ms. Olsen owned the apartment; she does not. They later corrected the error.)

The police conducted tests on a rolled-up $20 bill found in Mr. Ledger’s apartment, but found no evidence that the bill had been used for anything improper. No illegal narcotics or alcohol was found in the apartment. Two types of prescription medication — sleeping pills and an anti-anxiety medication — were found in the apartment, but it is not known if the medications played a role in his death.

Detectives from the Police Department’s 5th Precinct were looking to examine any surveillance videos from the apartment building and the surrounding area but were also awaiting the results of an investigation by the New York City chief medical examiner’s office. That office conducted an autopsy early Wednesday morning but said that the results were inconclusive and that additional testing was needed.

The death of Mr. Ledger, 28, the Australian-born actor whose breakthrough role as a gay cowboy in the 2005 movie “Brokeback Mountain” earned him a nomination for an Academy Award, has attracted international attention.

Sewell Chan contributed reporting.

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How awful for the family that the housekeeper didn’t call 911 immediately. What use was an Olsen twin ever going to be to her?

thank you for taking the time to get the facts straight. although they may be dull to the fantasy struggles we would all like to see Mr. Ledger in, we appreciate the truth. sometimes people die and there is no real rhyme or reason. just a matter of death and timing. i think it would easier for us to accept his death if we could tie it to a life of substance abuse and an extreme alternative lifestyle. but i don’t think his case was so. my ‘assumption’ is a misuse of prescriptions. just a man trying to get a real nights rest and having a bad reaction. buts its only an assumption.

i appreciate that you Sir chose not to assume about Mr. Ledger’s death. thank you for the facts.

It’s nice to see that the EMTs arrived in seven minutes. Seems like a good response time in NYC.

Already we have the People Magazine editor going on the air and saying that Ledger was known to be a substance abuser (and where are his sources?) when no direct evidence has been found to link his death to illegal drugs. Modern media coverage of celebrity, especially celebrity misfortune, is indeed a sad and sickening sight.

Was it really necessary to release the detail about the rolled up $20 bill? If it ends up being determined to be relevant to the cause of death, I can see it. As it is, it seems a needless injury to his name and anyone who cared about him.

She called Mary-Kate Olsen TWICE? What on earth for? I realize she was probably in shock and blah blah blah but how flipping hard is it to dial 911? I can only hope that poor Heath was already dead and her ridiculous actions and time wasting did not contribute to his death.

Good God.

Perley J. Thibodeau January 23, 2008 · 6:01 pm

More concerned with the public image than the health of the celebrity: nothing ever changes.
I’m glad I dropped out of show business 47 years ago. Believe me my health vastly improved.
My sincere prayers are with you, cowboy. Rest in Peace!

Re #1: It was the masseuse, not the housekeeper, who called Mary-Kate Olsen, TWICE, before dialing 911. The housekeeper heard him snoring when she was last in the room.

It seems a bit macabre to speculate on the death of a stranger but I wonder if, lying face down after taking sleeping pills, he could have simply suffocated.

Any way you look at it, it’s a life cut short and a terrible burden for his family and friends to bear. And maybe the housekeeper is thinking, “If only I had woken him up . . . “.

Something doesn’t seem right about this story. Why would the housekeeper call Mary Kate Olsen rather than 911. And why would Mary Kate Olsen send her security person rather than instruct the housekeeper to call for medical help? The actions of the masseuse seem a little strange. She gets no answer on his cell phone, enters his room and sees him lying in bed but instead of saying hello or trying to rouse him her first step is to set up the massage table and only then does she bother to approach the bed. Lots of questions about this and I don’t think we have yet to hear the full story.

Regarding the above comment: I suspect she will ask herself that every day for a great many days to come.

Great update. It’s a shame he wasn’t woken earlier when the housekeeper went into his room at 1pm.

Mauj don’t be so quick to judge, you have no idea how you would react in such a shocking situation! RIP Heath Shuler. Very sad indeed.

Yeah, it’s a shame that the masseuse thought it best to dial an Olsen twin instead of the paramedics. Those few moments of time may have changed the outcome of the situation. The minute someone’s life seems to be in danger, you call 911 not a friend of the victim. Alas, may he rest in peace.

It appears that the first line Diana Wolozin’s obituary has been written.

How many soldiers die in Iraq and Afghanistan each and every day. Their names are known to no one except their families. This story is sad, but in the grand movie of our lives, does it rate total two day coverage? He’s young, he died, So many have, and that’s pity. You have to ask, who is more important, and why haven’t we told their stories?

My favorite part was in the initial aftermath of the death — Mary-Kate Olsen denies sub-letting the apartment, denies knowing why Ledger was there and all through a publicist. God forbid. That’s the ridiculousness of Hollywood today. Your friend is dead and your publicist tells you to hold back from saying anything until all is known. Great. And then she gets a call (twice) and says she’ll call some private firm. What the heck is wrong with these people?

I could not agree with LHN more. What kind of complete moron calls MK before EMT. What is wrong with people???? And why would MK not TELL her to dial 911 instead of calling “private security”. At that point his life was much more important than any possible bad press. It just gets sadder and sadder.

Yes, I meant the masseuse, not the housekeeper, thanks Al Cyone. And it wasn’t really my intention to judge- like Bigeeta, it’s awful to think that those couple of minutes could have made a difference. But this is just morbid speculation now. A sad loss.

Truly bizarre that he was friends with an Olsen twin. I’m sorry he was living alone and not with loved ones. Michelle would have called 911 immediately.

Thank you for getting the facts straight as there was so much confusion on what Ms. Olsen had to do with this. I agree with everyone who has asked why on earth would you call Ms. Olsen instead of 911? That I dont think I wil ever understand.

I also agree about the housekeeper. If she heard him snoring..I bet you she wonders no what if she would have woken him up.

#2 – your comment is well put and I agree.

RIP Heath

Why call a celebrity friend? Because she’d know how to deal with what might have been only a minor emergency and keep it out of the press–and she did, by sending private security people who got there the same time as the EMTs. When she became more concerned, minutes later, she called 911. It all makes sense to me.

I’m sure she called Bob Saget first but got sent to voicemail. With Uncle Jesse on the road touring, of course help from that imbecile Uncle Joey would have been worse than no help at all…so I think she did the right thing under the circumstances.

The police can tell us where DJ and Stephanie were throughout all this after their investigation concludes.

Al,

This is Heath Ledger we’re talking about, not Heath Shuler, who is still alive and well and serving in Congress, I hope.

minutes/seconds are vital in emergency situations…failure to call 911 immediately or attempt in any way to revive him, but instead phoning another celebrity friend (!!) speaks volumes about “spin control” and less about pure common sense. while clearly not responsible for any ingestion of pills, the inability of those present to help by taking significant action is just so utterly tragic.

This is complete speculation on my part, but as a former drug user AND cop’s daughter, one idea came to mind: Perhaps the masseuse phoned celebrity/ friend Mary-Kate Olsen instead of authorities was because she came across some illegal drug evidence & wanted to ask her advice on what to do with it. It could also answer the question of why Ms. Olsen would phone private security people instead recommending immediately that 911 be called. The responses by both women seem suspicious and/or unbelievably stupid. RIP Heath.