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Claus Von Bulow was accused of injecting his wife with insulin first in December of 1979, causing a coma from which she revived. Prosecutors said he tried again a year later, on Dec. 21, 1980, and the 49-year-old heiress fell into an irreversible coma. Her world was reduced to a private, guarded room in the Harkness Pavilion and later the McKeen Pavilion of Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center. She died at the Mary Manning Walsh Nursing Home, her family said. Her doctor testified that the cost of maintaining her was $375,000 the first year, 1981. No figures were available for the years that followed, but by the early 1990s room charges were up to about $1,500 a day
-- $547,000 a year -- plus $200,000 to $300,000 for round-the-clock private nursing. She was born Martha Sharp Crawford in Pittsburgh on Sept. 1, 1931, daughter of utilities tycoon George Crawford, who died when she was 4. "Sunny," nicknamed for her disposition, was raised by her mother in New York City. While touring Europe with her mother, she met Prince Alfred von Auersperg, who was younger, penniless and working as the tennis pro at an Austrian resort catering to rich Americans. They were married in 1957 and divorced eight years later after she returned alone to New York with their young son and daughter. On June 6, 1966, she married von Bulow, who then quit his job as an aide to oilman J. Paul Getty.
[Associated
Press;
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