From the archive, 16 July 1997: Fashion designer Versace shot dead
Miami police believe contract killer was hired to carry out murder. Fashion world mourns death of one of their icons.
The fashion guru and tycoon Gianni Versace,
founder of one of haute couture's most flamboyant and renowned empires,
was shot dead outside his villa in Miami Beach yesterday morning in
what police believe was a carefully planned murder.
The chief of
Miami Beach police, Richard Barreto, said: "I believe that he was
targeted," but refused to confirm a rumour that a contract had been put
out on Versace's life.
By last night, the FBI had launched a huge
manhunt for the killer, a white male in his twenties who walked up and
shot Versace twice in the head at point-blank range. The designer was
opening the gate to the villa after returning from buying an Italian
newspaper at a favourite local restaurant, the News Cafe.
Only
days ago, Versace, aged 50, was being showered with praise for his
latest collection at the Paris show, acknowledging applause from the
catwalk flanked by supermodels.
Yesterday, there were pools of blood on the pavement outside his elegant villa after the shooting at 9am.
Mr
. Barreto indicated that the handgun used in the murder had been sent for
examination. Asked if there was anyone else in the villa at the time of
the murder, he said: "My information is that he was alone." He refused
to comment on a local rumour that there had been an unspecified
"incident" involving Versace outside his home two nights ago.
An
eyewitness, Eddie Biachi, said: "There were two shots fired in his head.
The police came very fast; they were trying to help him, revive him."
A surgeon, Phillip Villanueva, said Versace had been shot in the back of the head.
Al
Boza, a police spokesman, said Versace had been opening the gate to his
home on Ocean Drive when he was approached by a "white male, aged about
25, wearing a grey T-shirt, black backpack and black shorts, and a
white hat ... who shot him at point-blank range".
Local television
reports said the man's clothing had been dumped in a nearby garage and
had been recovered for analysis by police.
Witnesses said the killer got into a vehicle which looked like a taxi. The driver has not been found.
There
were three theories last night: a killing by a jealous, obsessed
maniac; a contract killing, either the result of a love affair or
professional relationship turned sour; or by the Mafia or some other
criminal mob.
There had been no sign of any overt threat to Versace, at least none that was recorded by police in the United States or Italy.
The nature of the murder suggests that the killer either knew Versace personally or had "staked him out".
Versace,
the first of Italy's leading designers to confirm that he was gay, went
into the fashion business 25 years ago, setting up his own house with
his sister Donatella. There had been tensions recently over succession
within the vast company.
Despite becoming more reclusive, Versace
was a popular figure on the social circuit of Ocean Drive's "beautiful
people" and entertained his friends frequently and in style.
His
elegant, three-storey mock-Spanish villa was a landmark on the fashion
circuit, although in a quiet stretch of Ocean Drive, away from the
hotels and the famous Art Deco strip.
Versace had clothed the
world's best-known women, including Princess Diana, who "relaunched"
herself recently as a glamour queen in Vanity Fair magazine wearing a
dress from his latest collection. She said yesterday she was
"devastated" by the news of his death.
In Versace's native Italy,
the news provoked disbelief and concern over what could emerge from the
police inquiry. The Milan fashion business is pivotal to the success of
one of the world's biggest textile industries and its good name has been
sullied twice recently.
Last May, Versace's brother, Santo, was
convicted of bribery along with two of Italy's leading designers.
In
1995, Maurizio Gucci, of the luggage-to-frocks luxury goods dynasty, was
shot dead outside his office in Milan. His wife, Patrizia Reggiani
Martinelli, was arrested and charged with ordering his murder earlier
this year. As Versace acknowledged in an interview two years ago, there
have been rumours - vigorously denied by the family - that the company
founded to market his creations had underworld links. In 1995, the
Independent on Sunday paid substantial damages for what it admitted were
libels about his business practices.
Yesterday, many Italians noted privately that the shots to the back of Versace's neck were typical of an underworld hit.
Fellow
designers expressed incredulity. "The news of Gianni Versace's death
has left me in a state of shock," said Giorgio Armani. "My reaction is
one of revolt against such an unnatural and violent death."
Versace's murderer, Andrew Cunanan,
shot himself in the head when cornered by Miami police in a houseboat
three miles from the murder scene. The gun he used was the same he shot
Versace with eight days earlier. He had killed four other men in a
killing spree which had started in April 1997.
There is something wrong with this whole thing, Cunanan allegedly used a .40 caliber gun and there is little to no blood splatter (he's right handed). Impossible. This is a set-up and a possible mafia type hit on Gianni Versace. They got rid of that house boat with the quickness. Nice and clean...
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