Gas line tampered with in collapsed NY house: police
By Jeanne King
NEW YORK (Reuters) – A gas pipe in the basement of a posh
Manhattan mansion that collapsed in a possible suicide attempt
had been tampered with prior to the explosion, police said on
Tuesday.
The owner of the house, Dr. Nicholas Bartha, who was
critically injured in the explosion, may face criminal charges,
and the Manhattan District Attorney has assigned a prosecutor
to the case, authorities said.
Officials suspect Bartha may have destroyed the
multi-million-dollar building on Monday rather than lose it in
a nasty divorce battle with his wife.
“The gas pipe in the basement had been tampered with,” said
Mike Collins, a spokesman for the New York Police Department.
The explosion and collapse of the four-story building
injured 15 people.
Bartha, 66, remained in critical condition at a New York
hospital with burns on more than 70 percent of his body. He was
using a respirator to breathe but was improving, said a police
source.
If he were charged with and convicted of arson, Bartha
could face a sentence of life in prison.
He also could face charges of reckless endangerment or
reckless assault.
Bartha, has worked since 1979 as an emergency room doctor
at Phelps Memorial Hospital Center in the suburb of Sleepy
Hollow. The couple has two grown daughters.
A Fire Department of New York spokesman said the tampering
involved a connection near the gas meter.
Bartha and his wife, Cordula, have been involved in
rancorous divorce proceedings since 2001.
Court documents showed that Bartha subjected his wife, a
Jewish woman born in Nazi-occupied Holland, to cruelty and
placed “swastika-adorned articles and notes affixed around
their home, and became enraged when she removed them.”
In a court filing earlier this year, Bartha’s wife said he
would probably refuse to leave the home if it were auctioned
and that he had said “many times” that he hoped to “die in my
house.”
Last Friday he was served with court documents indicating
the townhouse would be sold at auction in October and that he
would have to vacate his home.
