Coronado Mansion Death: Zahau Family to Petition ME's Office to Reclassify Cause of Death

Authorities determined Rebeca Zahau's 2011 death to be a suicide, a conclusion her family has vehemently contested over the years

Rebecca Zahau
NBC 7

The family of Rebecca Zahau, whose bound and nude body was found hanging from a balcony at a historic Coronado mansion more than a decade ago, will petition the San Diego County Medical Examiner's Office to reclassify her cause of death, an attorney representing the family announced Thursday.

Authorities determined Zahau's 2011 death to be a suicide, a conclusion Zahau's family has vehemently contested over the years.

New York Times best-selling author Caitlin Rother -- who lives in San Diego -- just released a book about called β€œDeath on Ocean Boulevard: Inside the Coronado Mansion Case," reports NBC 7's Mark Mullen.

Zahau, 32, was found July 13, 2011, hanging by her neck above a rear courtyard at her boyfriend's beachfront summer home. She was gagged, with her ankles bound, her wrists tied behind her back, and a cryptic message scrawled on a nearby door: "She saved him, can you save her."

Though never criminally charged, Adam Shacknai, the brother of Zahau's boyfriend, was found liable in her death by a San Diego civil jury, which awarded Zahau's family more than $5 million in damages.

WARNING GRAPHIC LANGUAGE: Outside the courtroom and following the announcement that the civil case was dismissed with prejudice, Adam Shacknai responds to NBC 7’s question. “Did you kill Rebecca Zahau?” he was asked. 

Despite the civil victory, the family has continued to push for a criminal case to be filed and later announced it would offer a cash reward for anyone offering new information that could lead to Shacknai's arrest and conviction.

Zahau's family also sued the sheriff's department for the release of its records into the death investigation, but that suit was dropped earlier this year.

The Zahau family's attorney, Keith Greer, said he will file a petition to have the cause of death reclassified from suicide to either homicide or undetermined. The petition will be served on the M.E.'s Office and Jonathan Lucas, who was the San Diego Chief Medical Examiner at the time of Zahau's death, Greer said.

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