Defendant takes cyanide after guilty verdict

PHOENIX (AP) — A former Wall Street trader who collapsed in court after being found guilty of arson and later died committed suicide by taking cyanide, according to an autopsy released Friday.
The Maricopa County medical examiner's office toxicology tests showed that Michael Marin had the poison in his system.
After he was found guilty of arson in June, Marin put his head in his hands and appeared to put something in his mouth. He then drank from a sports bottle.
It was a bizarre ending to a case that began in 2009 when he emerged from his burning Phoenix-area mansion in scuba gear.
Prosecutors said he torched his home when he couldn't keep up with the payments. Marin faced seven to 21 years in prison.
Marin had summited Everest and wrote on his Facebook page that he had scaled six of the world's seven tallest mountains. He also was an art collector who had original Picassos.
Prosecutors painted him as a desperate man who had $50 in his bank account in July 2009, down from $900,000 a year earlier. He also had a monthly mortgage payment on the mansion of $17,250 and an upcoming balloon payment of $2.3 million.
Marin also owed $2,500 a month on a different home and owed $34,000 in taxes, prosecutors said.
On July 5, 2009, Marin told investigators that he escaped a blaze in his 10,000-square-foot mansion using a rope ladder and wearing scuba gear to avoid inhaling smoke.
Fire investigators later determined that the blaze was intentionally set.
The Maricopa County medical examiner's office toxicology tests showed that Michael Marin had the poison in his system.
After he was found guilty of arson in June, Marin put his head in his hands and appeared to put something in his mouth. He then drank from a sports bottle.
It was a bizarre ending to a case that began in 2009 when he emerged from his burning Phoenix-area mansion in scuba gear.
Prosecutors said he torched his home when he couldn't keep up with the payments. Marin faced seven to 21 years in prison.
Marin had summited Everest and wrote on his Facebook page that he had scaled six of the world's seven tallest mountains. He also was an art collector who had original Picassos.
Prosecutors painted him as a desperate man who had $50 in his bank account in July 2009, down from $900,000 a year earlier. He also had a monthly mortgage payment on the mansion of $17,250 and an upcoming balloon payment of $2.3 million.
Marin also owed $2,500 a month on a different home and owed $34,000 in taxes, prosecutors said.
On July 5, 2009, Marin told investigators that he escaped a blaze in his 10,000-square-foot mansion using a rope ladder and wearing scuba gear to avoid inhaling smoke.
Fire investigators later determined that the blaze was intentionally set.
How come no one is blaming the "Predatory Lender" here?
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"Oh, and you'll have just a token balloon payment in 2009 of (hand covering mouth) $2.3 million. (cough)"
One down, thousands more to go.
So no one see the human being and the tragedy behind the "former Wall street trader" description.
Nice people, you all should be ashamed of yourselves.
@Larry*X*K I don't he should died-yet, he did commit suicide. He was a wall street trader and it dosen't like he was an honest one, how many people lost thier saving because of him-how do we know someone else did not take thier live because of him. There were alot of wall street people buying big thinking they would make the money to pay those purchases off.
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It is an all around sad story.
 @Larry*X*K Nope
 @DarkParty I'm so glad I'm not like you
 @Larry*X*K You and me both
Start of a trend.
And nothing of value was lost.
Wasn't sure cyanide worked on snakes. Now I know.
Maybe judges should have a candy dish of cyanide pills on the bench..Don't want to the time for the crime? Have a candy.
Old news, VERY old news.
I guess a Chapter 7 was out of the question, eh?