Robert Bierenbaum
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Robert Bierenbaum is a plastic surgeon who has been convicted in October 2000 of murder in the strangulation death of his wife, Gail Katz-Bierenbaum. The death occurred in their Manhattan apartment on July 7, 1985.
Bierenbaum, a licensed pilot, took a two-hour flight in a Cessna 172 from Essex County, New Jersey over the Atlantic Ocean on the day that Gail had vanished. He failed to mention this fact to authorities during their initial questioning. The prosecution stated that Bierenbaum discarded his wife's dismembered body in the ocean. The victim's body has never been recovered.
Despite a witness testimony for the defense who stated that he saw the victim in a Manhattan bagel shop during the time that Bierenbaum took his airplane flight,[1] Bierenbaum was sentenced to twenty years to life in prison in New York. He appealed, but the conviction was upheld in the New York state Supreme Court 2002.[2]
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[edit] Notoriety
The Bierenbaum case was the subject of the 2001 New York Times non-fiction bestseller book The Surgeon's Wife.[1] It was also one of the stories in the television show Dominick Dunne: Power, Privilege, & Justice on Court TV.
In the ISBN database [2], the summary of the book includes:[3]
- "...Robert Bierenbaum, a prominent surgeon and certified genius... Gail's parents had been thrilled to learn she was marrying Robert Bierenbaum. He seemed to be the perfect match for their daughter. he was from a well-to-do family, a medical student who spoke five languages fluently, a skier, and he even flew an airplane."
- "...Robert had tried to choke Gail because he caught her smoking, she filed a police report. She also alleged that he tried to kill her cat because he was jealous of it."
Bierenbaum has been referred to as The Lady Killer. It has been said in Vanity Fair and New York magazine, that women still find him attractive, even though he has been convicted of murdering his first wife. [4]
[edit] Legal precedent
People of the State of New York v. Robert Bierenbaum was a landmark case, setting precedent on upholding Physician-patient privilege even when a Tarasoff warning is invoked: "Neither a psychiatrist issuing a Tarasoff warning nor a patient telling his friends he's in treatment constitutes a waiver of a patient's psychiatrist-patient privilege."[5][6]
The case was also used as precedent in the California case of Glyn Sharf, where the accused was charged of murdering his wife, even though the victim's body was never found. [7]
[edit] Medical status
As a result of the New York state Medical Licensing Board's misconduct review following the court case, Bierenbaum surrendered his License to Practice medicine in November, 2000.[8] In September 2002, New Jersey also revoked his medical practice license. [9]
[edit] References
- ^ Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism
- ^ New York Post
- ^ The Surgeon's Wife, by Kiernan Crowley, published by St. Martin's True Crime Library, Paperback; 2001-09-17, ISBN 0312976410.
- ^ New York magazine
- ^ Psychology News
- ^ NY Times
- ^ Court TV
- ^ NY State Department of Health
- ^ NJ State website
[edit] External links
- "Doctor Gets 20 Years to Life For the Murder of His Wife" (New York Times)
- "A man saw surgeon’s wife the day she disappeared"
- "Patient Confidentiality at Issue in 1985 Murder Case"
- "Dr. Bierenbaum's Missing Wife" (Crime Library)
- Las Vegas Review Journal Nov. 30, 2000
- Las Vegas Review Journal Nov. 25, 2000