/ Stars that died in 2023

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Charles B. Pierce died he was 71

Charles B. Pierce[4] was an American film director, screenwriter, producer, set decorator, cinematographer and actor. Pierce is best known for the minor cult hits The Legend of Boggy Creek and The Town That Dreaded Sundown. [5]
(June 16, 1938[3] – March 5, 2010)

A former Texarkana, Arkansas advertising salesman, Pierce began making low budget films in the early 1970s. His first film, The Legend of Boggy Creek, became a modest hit and grossed approximately $20 million.[6] Pierce continued to make regional films, including a sequel to Boggy Creek entitled Boggy Creek II: And the Legend Continues in 1985.[7]

In addition to directing, Pierce has starred in several of his own films, including The Town That Dreaded Sundown and Boggy Creek II. He also served as a writer on the 1983 Clint Eastwood film, Sudden Impact.[8]

Pierce fell from the movie industry's public eye shortly after 1985's Boggy Creek II, slipping into relative obscurity until his 1997 interview with Fangoria magazine.[9] Ten years later, in an interview with the The Austin Chronicle, film directors Duane Graves and Justin Meeks revealed they were in talks with Pierce to bring him aboard as a co-producer of The Wild Man of the Navidad, their homage to 70's drive-in creature features.[10] He reportedly turned them down because he instead wanted to direct the project, which was later released by IFC Films in 2009.[11][12]

Pierce died on March 5, 2010, at a Dover, Arkansas nursing home. He was 71. A cause of death was not immediately available.[13]


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Daisey Bailey has died she was 113

Ms Bailey was an American super centenarian, she was the second-oldest person in U.S. and fourth-oldest in world.

Daisey Bailey,  113

Daisey Bailey was born on March 30, 1896 in Tennessee but currently lives in Detroit, MI. Click on the photo for more details about her 113th Birthday; however, the GRG doesn't agree with the alleged year of birth being 1895 instead of 1896.

Daisey Bailey, 113

March 11, 2010 Mrs. Daisy Bailey passed away on March 7, 2010 at age 113 years, 342 days.
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Mary Josephine Ray died she was 113

Mary Josephine Ray[1][2] died she was 113. Ray was the world's second-oldest verified living person at the time of her death.[3] Following the death of Gertrude Baines on 11 September 2009, Ray became the oldest person living in the United States.

(née Arsenault; May 17, 1895 – March 7, 2010)

She was the oldest recorded person ever to live in New Hampshire, although the oldest person born in New Hampshire was Nellie Spencer (1869–1982), who lived to age 113 years 81 days. Ray was also the oldest person ever recorded born in Prince Edward Island and the third-oldest person ever born in Canada. Since the death of Maria de Jesus from Portugal, she was also the oldest person of European descent in the world. She also ranked as one of the 30 oldest verified supercentenarians in history.


Born in Bloomfield, Prince Edward Island, Canada to French Canadian (Acadian) parents, Sabin Arsenault and Lydie Anne Blanchard, Mary Josephine moved to the United States at age three. Her father died when she was 7 and her mother also died when she was 15. Mary went out on her own, working in factories in Maine. Later she married Walter Ray (in the 1920s; he died in 1967) and moved to New Hampshire. Later, Mary Jo retired to Florida at age 80. She lived there on her own until 100, when her family brought her back to New Hampshire. At age 102, she moved into a nursing home when the family felt they could no longer care for her at home. Her paternal grandmother, Agnès Arsenault, died at the age of 97 in 1909.

Mary Josephine Arsenault married Walter Ray circa 1923. The 1930 census listing for Walter Ray lists him as age 36, married at 28; and Mary Josephine as age 34 (it was in April), married at 27. Ray had two sons, both living: Robert, 86, of Pensacola, Florida and Donald, 85, of Hinsdale, New Hampshire. Her eight grandchildren are also still alive.[citation needed] In all, Ray has two sons, eight grandchildren, 13 great-grandchildren, and five great-great-grandchildren.

Ray followed, as much as possible, the Red Sox baseball team. After watching baseball games, she often had cake and ice cream. At her 108th birthday celebration, she was greeted with the song "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" and a cake with the Red Sox symbol on it. Ray continued to buy Red Sox merchandise, and commented that she intended to continue doing so.[4] Fred Hale, who lived to be 113 years 354 days old, was also a fan of the team.[5]


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Angelo Poffo died he was 84,

John Angelo Poffo died he was 84. Poffo was a former professional wrestler and wrestling promoter. He ran International Championship Wrestling for a number of years, holding cards in Tennessee, Kentucky and Arkansas. He is most noted for being the father of "Macho Man" Randy Savage and "Leaping" Lanny Poffo.

(April 10, 1925 – March 4, 2010)

Poffo started wrestling in 1948 at Karl Pojello's gym in Illinois.[2] His first match was in 1949 against Ruffy Silverstein.[2] He sometimes wrestled as The Masked Miser and managed other wrestlers as the Miser.[2] He became a villainous character for the first time in 1950.[2] In the mid-1950s, Bronco Lubich acted as his manager.[2] He won the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship (Chicago version) in 1958.[2]
He formed a villainous tag team with Chris Markoff called "The Devil's Duo" in 1966, and they were managed by Bobby Heenan.[2] In 1973, he formed the team "The Graduates" with Ken Dillinger.[2]
Poffo wrestled in the 1970s and 1980s under a mask as "The Carpet Bagger" for Emile Dupre's Atlantic Grand Prix Wrestling in the Maritime Provinces of Canada. He also bought into the promotion, when his sons were old enough to join.[2] He wrestled under a yellow mask with a dollar sign on the forehead and a blue sequined ring jacket with a big dollar sign on the back. In addition, Poffo ran International Championship Wrestling from 1979 to 1983 in Kentucky.[2]
His last match was in 1991 against Luis Martinez.[2]
He made a few appearances in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in 1995 managing his son, Randy Savage. He was once attacked by "The Nature Boy" Ric Flair, who put him in a figure four leglock. In 1995, he was inducted into the WCW Hall of Fame.[2]
Poffo's parents were Italian immigrants.[3][1] Poffo was a catcher for the DePaul University baseball team.[2] In college, he studied physical education and was a competitive chess player.[2] While serving in the US Navy in 1945, he set a world record for sit-ups.[2] He completed 6,033 sit-ups in four hours and ten minutes.[2][4]
In college he met his future wife Judy,[2] whom he married on June 6, 1949. They were married for more than sixty years, and together they had two sons, Randy and Lanny.[2]
After retiring from professional wrestling, Poffo taught physical education in Illinois.[2]

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David Brown died he was 93

David Brown, an urbane New Yorker whose publishing background was the foundation of a producing career in Hollywood, with films like “The Sting,” “Jaws,” and “The Verdict,” and on Broadway, died Monday at home in Manhattan. He was 93.


The cause was kidney failure after a long illness, said a friend, Alexandra Mayes Birnbaum.

A bon vivant, Mr. Brown was known equally for his mannerliness, his fine wardrobe, his distinctive mustache and his wife — Helen Gurley Brown, the editor of Cosmopolitan magazine. He was said to be an unusually courtly presence in the film business and a fan of writers.

“He had a great story sense,” said Richard D. Zanuck, his producing partner from 1972 to 1988, “and great connections with publishers and agents.”

Mr. Brown began his professional career as a journalist, contributing to magazines like The Saturday Evening Post, Harper’s and Collier’s before becoming an editor himself. Before his wife landed there, he was the managing editor of Cosmopolitan. During the 1940s, he was also editor in chief of Liberty magazine.

In 1951, Richard Zanuck’s father, the producer Darryl F. Zanuck, hired Mr. Brown to head the story department at Zanuck’s studio, 20th Century-Fox, and Mr. Brown eventually rose to become executive vice president of creative operations. He and the younger Mr. Zanuck left Fox in 1971 for Warner Brothers, but the following year they set out to form their own production company.

“The Sting” (1973), was among their first films, and with George Roy Hill directing and Paul Newman and Robert Redford in leading roles, it won seven Academy Awards, including best picture. (The film was identified as “a Richard D. Zanuck-David Brown presentation,” though the two were not credited as producers.)

The following year they produced an early Steven Spielberg feature, “The Sugarland Express,” and hired Mr. Spielberg to direct a thriller about a predatory shark, adapted from a Peter Benchley novel, “Jaws.” It was a megahit in 1975 and is often cited as the movie that begat the idea of the summer blockbuster.

Together, Mr. Brown and Mr. Zanuck were the producers or executive producers of more than a dozen other films, including “The Verdict,” a legal drama directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Paul Newman; “Cocoon,” a fantasy directed by Ron Howard about senior citizens who stumble upon evidence of an alien visitation that functions as a fountain of youth; and “Driving Miss Daisy,” the adaptation of Alfred Uhry’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play, set in the South of the 1950s, about an elderly Jewish woman and the black chauffeur who becomes her friend and confidant. Starring Jessica Tandy and Morgan Freeman and directed by Bruce Beresford, it won four Oscars, including best picture.

Even after the partnership dissolved and Mr. Brown started his own company, The Manhattan Project Ltd., he and Mr. Zanuck remained close. Mr. Brown’s other credits include “Chocolat,” “Angela’s Ashes,” “Kiss the Girls” and “Along Came a Spider.”

“He always said his job as a producer was to get the project to the point where it could attract a director,” said Kit Golden, a producer who worked with Mr. Brown at the Manhattan Project. “Once the director came aboard it was the director’s picture.”

Mr. Brown was born in Manhattan on July 28, 1916. His parents divorced when he was very young, and he was raised by his mother. He graduated from Stanford, where he intended to study physics but ended up in journalism. He earned a master’s degree from Columbia and worked for The Wall Street Journal and Women’s Wear Daily. He served in the Army during World War II.

Mr. Brown’s first two marriages ended in divorce. He met Helen Gurley in Los Angeles, where she was an advertising copywriter. They married in 1959; over the years he continued to use his journalism skills at Cosmopolitan, where his wife enlisted him to write the saucy cover blurbs. In addition to her, he is survived by a half-brother, Edward, of Montecito, Calif.

Mr. Brown’s stage credits came late in his career. Among them, on Broadway he produced “Tru,” a one-actor play about Truman Capote starring Robert Morse, and the musicals “Sweet Smell of Success” (2002), based on the Hollywood film about a press agent and a powerful columnist, and “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels” (2005), adapted from a movie with Steve Martin.

Mr. Brown became involved in the theater serendipitously. He had just finished making “The Verdict” and was interested in doing another courtroom film when an agent sent him “A Few Good Men,” a play about a military trial by a young, unknown playwright, Aaron Sorkin. Mr. Brown tried to buy the film rights, but Mr. Sorkin demurred, saying that that would make the stage rights less attractive for another producer. So Mr. Brown bought the stage rights, too.

The play, which starred Tom Hulce, opened in November 1989 and ran for nearly 500 performances. The film version, with Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson, was released in 1992,

“He was the last great gentleman producer,” Mr. Sorkin said in an interview Monday. “You’re not going to see his kind again.”


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Andrew Koenig took his own life he was 41

Joshua Andrew Koenig ,[1] also known as Josh Andrew Koenig or Andrew Koenig, has died he was 41, it is believe that the actor took his own life. Koenig was an American character actor, film director, editor, writer, and human rights activist. He was the son of actor Walter Koenig.[2]
(August 17, 1968 – c. February 2010)

From 1985 to 1989, Koenig played a recurring role as Richard "Boner" Stabone, best friend to Kirk Cameron's character Mike Seaver in the first four seasons of the ABC sitcom Growing Pains.[3] During the same period, he guest starred on episodes of the sitcoms My Sister Sam and My Two Dads as well as the drama 21 Jump Street. In the early 1990s he provided a voice for the animated series G.I. Joe as Ambush and Night Creeper Leader,[4] and had a minor role as Tumak in the 1993 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Sanctuary".[5]


Koenig played the role of The Joker in the critically successful 2003 fan film Batman: Dead End.[6] Directed by commercial director Sandy Collora, the short received its first screening at the San Diego Comic-Con International.[7][8] Director Kevin Smith called it "possibly the truest, best Batman movie ever made".[9]
Onstage, he starred as the M.C. in the 2007 interactive theater play The Boomerang Kid[10] and performed with the improv group Charles Whitman Reilly and Friends.
Though he continued his performing career in the 2006 independent film The Theory of Everything (2006), Koenig worked increasingly behind the scenes. He wrote, produced and/or directed the shorts Good Boy (2003) and Woman in a Green Dress and Instinct vs. Reason (2004). Most recently he was working as an editor on a number of films and had been a video producer for the podcast Never Not Funny (2006-2010). His final role was in the film DaZe: Vol. Too — NonSeNse, in post-production at the time of his death, with Koenig portraying the role of Vice Chancellor.[6]
Andrew Koenig was the son of actor Walter Koenig and Judy Levitt.[11] Andrew's sister Danielle Koenig is married to stand-up comedian Jimmy Pardo.
Writer Harlan Ellison spoke of the young Andrew — by his given first name of Josh — as being the inspiration for his story Jeffty Is Five.
...I had been awed and delighted by Josh Koenig, and I instantly thought of just such a child who was arrested in time at the age of five. Jeffty, in no small measure, is Josh: the sweetness of Josh, the intelligence of Josh, the questioning nature of Josh.[12]
The story went on to win the 1977 Nebula Award and the 1978 Hugo Award for Best Short Story.
Koenig traveled to Burma in July 2007 and visited Burmese refugee camps in Thailand with his father as part of the U.S. Campaign for Burma. The following January, he protested the Communist Party of China's political and financial support of the military dictatorship in Burma during the 119th Tournament of Roses Parade, entering the parade and standing in front of a Chinese float promoting the 2008 Beijing Olympics after a pre-parade human rights march agreed to by parade officials was allegedly stifled by them. Koenig, who carried a sign reading "China: Free Burma" in both English and Chinese, was arrested and briefly held for his act of civil disobedience. Koenig's defense attorney was Bill Paparian, a fellow protester and former mayor of Pasadena, California, where the parade is held.[13]
"China sits on the UN Security Council and they have refused to condemn Burma. China purchases gas from Burma and sells them weapons that the military uses on the Burmese people. So they are really quite complicit, and that was the whole point of protesting the China float," Koenig explained.[14] Koenig also noted the Chinese government's implicit support of genocidal forces in Sudan, sweatshops and tainted export products, saying of the float, "China is putting on a good face because of the Olympics, but [it’s time to] send a message to the Chinese government that they have to not just change their face, but change the way they do things.”[15] The Pasadena Weekly quoted Koenig as stating, "Their free speech rights have been totally censored. As a country with a Constitution and a Bill of Rights, we need to continue to support and enforce ours, and [use it to] recognize the rights of human beings all over the world."[13]
In February 2010, Koenig was reported missing by friends and family.[16] He was last seen near a bakery in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada on February 14, and missed a scheduled flight back to the US on February 16.[17] According to his parents, Koenig left evidence that he was depressed prior to his disappearance.[18] On February 25, 2010, it was reported by CNN that his body was found by friends searching for him in Stanley Park in Vancouver.[19] Police later confirmed Koenig's body was found earlier in the day, and Koenig's father told reporters at an evening press conference that his son took his own life.[20] 

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Lionel Jeffries died he was 83

Lionel Charles Jeffries died he was a British actor, screenwriter and film director.[2][3][4][5] Who died after after a long illness.


(10 June 1926 – 19 February 2010)


Jeffries attended the Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Wimborne Minster, Dorset. In 1945, he received a commission in the Oxford and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry.[6] After his World War II service, for which he was awarded the Burma Star, he trained at RADA.[7] He entered repertory at the David Garrick Theatre, Lichfield for two years and appeared in early British television plays.
He built a successful career in British films mainly in comic character roles and as he was prematurely bald he often played characters older than himself, such as the role of father to Caractacus Potts (played by Dick Van Dyke) in the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968), although Jeffries was actually six months younger than Van Dyke, who was born on 13 December 1925. His acting career reached a peak in the 1960s with leading roles in other films like Two-Way Stretch (1960), The Trials of Oscar Wilde (1960), First Men in the Moon (1964) and Camelot (1967).
In the 1970s Jeffries turned to writing and directing children's films, including the celebrated 1970 version of The Railway Children and The Amazing Mr Blunden. He was a member of the British Catholic Stage Guild.[3]
Jeffries had a dislike of television and its production values and shunned the medium for many years.[citation needed] Since the 1980s, however, he did appear on television, including Inspector Morse. He retired from acting in 2001.
Following a long illness, Jeffries died in a nursing home in Poole, Dorset, on 19 February 2010 at the age of 83. He was married to Eileen Mary Walsh from 1951 until his death. Their son and two daughters survive him.[6]

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Jamie Gillis died he was 66

Jamie Gillis, the controversial but very popular 1970's adult film actor has died at the age of 66. Gillis was best known for numerous appearances with his then girlfriend, Serena, in many adult films, often with very extreme and hard content such as BDSM themes, playing dominant roles.

Gillis was actually trained to be a mainstream actor, and certainly was a powerful on-screen presence in any movie in which he appeared, but by the 1970's he seemed drawn to the world of adult films, although Gillis had made some film appearances in a few mainstream movies as well.


Gillis was born in New York, NY, and was a graduate of Columbia University. He once worked as a cab driver while trying to find work as an actor. He answered an ad in THE VILLAGE VOICE for a nude model once, and slowly began to find work in the adult entertainment industry.

Recently, Gillis had been suffering from cancer and finally died of the disease. Some reports claim that Gillis was actually bisexual, and he had starred in at least one all male film as well. While never as popular as either John Holmes or Ron Jeremy ever were, Gillis was still a highly recognizable star in many films, both adult and mainstream.


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Jason Wood died he was 38

Jason Wood died he was 38. Woods was a British comedian. A regular performer at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, he was best known for his comic musical impersonations of performers including Cher and Morrissey. He frequently headlined comedy clubs.[1]

(1972 – 20 February 2010)



In 2004 he took part in the first series of Strictly Come Dancing. He and his partner, professional dancer Kylie Jones, were the first to leave the competition.[1] He was a contestant on the second series of The Underdog Show.
Wood was gay. His show "My Anus Horribilis," its name a play on Queen Elizabeth's 1992 "Annus Horribilis" Christmas message, was about how "[The Christian right is] pushing the country backwards, and I wanted to point that out. It’s insane when they’re quoting Leviticus to outlaw gay sex, yet most people, who have never read the Bible, won’t know that book also threatens punishment for people who wear shirts of mixed fibre."[2] His Fringe show in 2006 attracted a damning one-star review by The Scotsman newspaper. He referred to this on subsequent posters, quoting, "A star – The Scotsman".[3]
Wood died on 20 February 2010 aged 38.[1] Initial reports suggested he died in his sleep .[4]

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Alexander Haig died he was 85,

Alexander_HaigAlexander Meigs Haig, Jr. died he was 85. Haig was a retired United States Army general who served as the United States Secretary of State under President Ronald Reagan and White House Chief of Staff under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.[1] In 1973 Haig served as Vice Chief of Staff of the Army, the number-two ranking officer in the Army.[2] Haig served as the Supreme Allied Commander Europe, commanding all U.S. and NATO forces in Europe.

(December 2, 1924 – February 20, 2010)

Haig, a veteran of the Korean War and Vietnam War, was a recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross, the Silver Star with oak leaf cluster, and the Purple Heart.[3]
On February 20, 2010, Haig died from complications from an infection after being hospitalized in critical condition at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore on January 28, 2010.[4][5][6][7]
Haig was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Regina Anne (née Murphy) and Alexander Meigs Haig, Sr., a Republican lawyer.[8] He was raised in his Irish American mother's Catholic religion,[9] and attended Saint Joseph's Preparatory School in Philadelphia. He graduated from Lower Merion High School in Ardmore, Pennsylvania and then went to the University of Notre Dame for two years, before transferring to the United States Military Academy, where he graduated in 1947. He received a master's degree in business administration from Columbia Business School in 1954 and 1955. He also received a master's degree in international relations from Georgetown University in 1961, where his thesis focused on the role of the military officer in the making of national policy.

Alexander_Haig1Haig unsuccessfully ran for the Republican Party nomination for President in 1988. He was a fierce critic of the more moderate George H. W. Bush, and speculation was that he sought the Presidency in part because of that. When he withdrew from the race, he gave his support to the presidential campaign of Senator Bob Dole of Kansas.
Haig has been portrayed by the following actors in film and television productions:[29]


Haig was the host for several years of the television program World Business Review. At the time of his death he was the host of 21st Century Business, with each program a weekly business education forum that included business solutions, expert interview, commentary and field reports.[24] Haig served as a founding member of the advisory board of Newsmax Media, which publishes the nation's leading conservative web site, Newsmax.com. [25] Haig was co-chairman of the American Committee for Peace in the Caucasus, along with Zbigniew Brzezinski and Stephen J. Solarz. Haig was a member of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP) Board of Advisors. Haig was a founding Board Member of America Online.[26]
Alexander_Haig2On January 5, 2006, Haig participated in a meeting at the White House of former Secretaries of Defense and State to discuss United States foreign policy with Bush administration officials.[27] On May 12, 2006, Haig participated in a second White House meeting with 10 former Secretaries of State and Defense. The meeting including briefings by Donald Rumsfeld and Condoleezza Rice, and was followed by a discussion with President George W. Bush.[28] Haig published his memoirs, entitled Inner Circles: How America Changed The World, in 1992.
On February 19, 2010, a hospital spokesman revealed that the 85-year-old Haig had been hospitalized at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore since January 28 and remained in critical condition [4]. On February 20, Haig died at the age of 85 from complications from an infection.[5]

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Justin Mentell died he was 27

Justin Michael Mentell[2] [1] died he was 27. Mentell was an American artist and actor. Who tragically,died young in a fatal car accident in Iowa County, Wisconsin.

(December 16, 1982 – February 1, 2010)

Mentell was born in Austin, Texas. He made his stage debut at three years of age as an orphan in Miss Liberty, and went on to appear in local theater productions, among them the musical Peter Pan, in which he portrayed one of the Lost Boys. After the family moved to Waukegan, Illinois, Mentell joined the Northbrook Children's Theater, where he continued to perform on stage. He also took up speed skating, placing third at the Junior Olympics and eventually becoming a member of the U.S. Speedskating's junior national long track team.
Mentell attended Northern Illinois University (NIU), where he majored in acting. He appeared in several plays there, including Balm in Gilead, The Play's the Thing and Never the Sinner. During his sophomore year, he trained at the Moscow Art Theatre, as part of a summer exchange program sponsored by NIU's School of Theater and Dance.
At NIU he also appeared in several independent films, including At the Still Point, for which he received the Golden Reel Award for Best Actor at its 2005 Film Festival. He also appeared in "Gotham III" in 2004 and used his speed-skating skills to land a role in the 2004 roller derby comedy Roll Bounce.
Mentell was a member of the cast of television dramedy Boston Legal as Garrett Wells. He played the role from the end of the first season through February 2006. His 2009 projects included Death Walks the Streets and the Jerry Bruckheimer-produced live-action/CGI family feature G-Force for Walt Disney Pictures, which was released in theaters July 24, 2009.
On February 1, 2010, Mentell died in a car crash near Hollandale, Wisconsin. According to the Iowa County Sheriff's Department, Mentell, 27, was pronounced dead at the scene around 9 a.m. The accident was said to have taken place around 3:30 a.m. after his 2005 Jeep left the roadway on Highway 39, went down an embankment and struck two trees.[1] One unconfirmed possibility is that he had fallen asleep at the wheel,[3] though his Jeep was not discovered until later in the day by a passing farmer who alerted authorities. He was not wearing a seat belt and was ejected from the vehicle.[4][5]


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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Charles Wilson died he was 76

Charles Nesbitt Wilson , died he was 76. Wilson was a former United States naval officer and former 12-term Democratic United States Representative from the 2nd congressional district in Texas.

(June 1, 1933 – February 10, 2010)

He was best known for leading Congress into supporting Operation Cyclone, the largest-ever CIA covert operation, which supplied military supplies and arms including anti-aircraft weaponary including stinger missles (which provided dramataic and effective results against the Soviet Air Force)to the Afghan Mujahideen during the Soviet war in Afghanistan. His behind-the-scenes campaign was the subject of the non-fiction book Charlie Wilson's War and a subsequent film adaptation.
Charlie Wilson was born in the small town of Trinity, Texas, where he attended public schools and graduated from Trinity High School in 1951. While a student at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas, he was appointed to the United States Naval Academy, where he received a B.S. and graduated eighth from the bottom of his class in 1956.[1] He received the second-highest number of demerits in the Academy's history.[2]
Between 1956 and 1960, Wilson served in the United States Navy, attaining the rank of lieutenant. Following four years as a surface fleet officer, he was assigned to the Pentagon as part of an intelligence unit that evaluated the Soviet Union’s nuclear forces.

It is speculated that Wilson first entered politics as a teenager by running a campaign against his next-door neighbor, city council incumbent Charles Hazard. When Wilson was 13, his dog entered Hazard's yard. Hazard retaliated by mixing crushed glass into the dog's food, causing fatal internal bleeding. Being a farmer's son, Wilson was able to get a driving permit at age 13, which enabled him to drive 96 voters, mainly black citizens from poor neighborhoods, to the polls. As they left the car,it is speculated that, he told each of them that he didn't want to influence their vote, but that the incumbent Hazard had purposely killed his dog. After Hazard was defeated by a margin of 16 votes, Wilson went to his house to tell him he shouldn't poison any more dogs.[3] Wilson cited this as "the day [he] fell in love with America." This event was retold in the 2007 film Charlie Wilson's War.

As an adult, Wilson stayed out of politics until he was moved to volunteer for the John F. Kennedy presidential campaign. In 1960, after taking 30 days' leave from the Navy, Wilson entered his name into the race for Texas state representative from his home district. This action was against the regulations of the Navy, as service members are prohibited from holding a public office while on active duty. While Wilson was back on duty, his family and friends went door to door campaigning. In 1961, at age 27, he was sworn into office in Austin, Texas.
For the next 12 years, Wilson made his reputation in the Texas legislature as the "liberal from Lufkin", viewed with suspicion by business interests. He battled for the regulation of utilities, fought for Medicaid, tax exemptions for the elderly, the Equal Rights Amendment, and a minimum wage bill. He was also one of the few prominent Texas politicians to be pro-choice. Wilson was notorious for his personal life, particularly drinking, cocaine use, womanizing, and picked up the nickname "Good Time Charlie".
In 1972, Wilson was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from the Second District of Texas, taking office the following January. He was re-elected 11 times, but was not a candidate for reelection to the One Hundred Fifth Congress and resigned October 8, 1996.
In 1980 Wilson was accused of using cocaine at the Caesars Palace in Las Vegas however the investigation by Justice Department attorney Rudolph Giuliani was dropped due to lack of evidence.[14] Liz Wickersham told investigators that she saw Charlie use cocaine only once in the Cayman Islands, however this was outside US jurisdiction.[15] In "The Charlie Wilson real story" Wilson reveals he traveled to Las Vegas in the summer of 1980, and recalls an experience with two strippers in a hot tub.
The girls had cocaine, and the music was loud. It was total happiness. And both of them had ten long, red fingernails with an endless supply of beautiful white powder....The feds spent a million bucks trying to figure out whether, when those fingernails passed under my nose, did I inhale or exhale, and I ain't telling.
Charile Wilson[1]
When questioned about his alleged cocaine use in 2007 Wilson reaffirmed "Nobody knows the answer to that and I ain't telling".[16]
Wilson was involved in a drunken hit-and-run accident on the Washington DC's Key Bridge just before his first visit to Pakistan. A witness stated she saw Wilson's Lincoln Continental hit a Mazda and she took down his license plate however Wilson was never convicted.[15]
One time I had barely gotten out of a DUI. They made me go to a class, at 7:30 on Saturday mornings, about not drinking whiskey.
Charlie Wilson[17]
Wilson's admirers defended him in the History Channel documentary, The True Story of Charlie Wilson, stating he drank that night to ease the pain he felt for the plight of the Afghan people. After noting the incident was not portrayed in the film Charlie Wilson's War, Wilson stated "I got off easy".[15]


Wilson retired from Congress in 1997 to live in Lufkin, Texas.[18] In February 1999, Wilson married Barbara Alberstadt, a ballerina he met at a party in Washington in 1980.


In September 2007, after two months on an organ transplantation waiting list, Wilson received the heart of a 35-year-old donor. Years of heavy drinking may have put a strain on his heart; in 1985, he had been told by a doctor that he had 18 months to live.[19]
Wilson died on February 10, 2010 in the Memorial Health System in Texas. He suffered from cardiopulmonary arrest. He was pronounced dead at 12:16 P.M. Central Time.[20]
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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...