Saturday, March 1, 2008

Troubles Leads Suzanne Pagella to Suicide

DETROIT (AP) - To class fellow* at Beaver Area High School in the hills of western Pennsylvania, Suzanne Pagella was a celebrity.
made it big in Detroit. She was abided as that," Tom Dowlin told. "That's just however we thought of her. She was the 1st to go away and do what she told she would act."
As a wedded Suzanne Wangler, she looked to have it all: a career as a hot TV news anchorperson, a husband who was a previous college field general, 4 kids.
But at a few point, Wangler's living came in free fall, with a disjoint, debt and numerous arrests, including matchless last calendar week about an misapplication charge. It finished on a crash last weekend when Wangler's mother found her hanging from a beam in the cellar of her Royal Oak home, just north of Detroit.
Wangler's defense attorney, Carl Marlinga, told he was concerned when they spoke at her arraignment.
"I said `Are you depressed? Are you suicidal?'" Marlinga told. "She just kind of laughed it off and told `do not be dizzy.'"
But Wangler's living was nothing to make light of. Courtroom and additional paperses reveal about $166,000 in financial judgments against her, multiple hits citations and driving license suspensions.
On February. 20, she was arraigned on charges that she defalcated more than $149,000 all over 4 months from a adult male she in brief dated. The 43-year-old also was accused with larceny by changeover.
The charges stemmed by checks cashed in 2006 at a check-cashing business concern. Whenever guilty, Wangler faced up decade yrs in prison house for each one charge.
Police told it was 32 degrees at bottom of her home when she was arrested. The house was in foreclosure.
"As I read about all of the badness, it's so sad because people do not acknowledge her. She had such a vast heart," previous class fellow Jenni Wilson told. "She was fantastic, perfectly the life of the party. She was so full of joy, funny and smart and so ambitious, one of those people who was going to make it in life."
Suzanne Pagella was a extremity of the cheer team and wrote for the high school newspaper. She graduated in 1982 and left the small community about 25 miles northwest of Pittsburgh for Ohio State University.
Wangler became a familiar face in the Detroit area in the 1990s at UPN 50 and WDIV-TV.
She married former University of Michigan quarterback John Wangler and compiled a cookbook, "A-Maize-Ing Tailgating: Wolverine Cuisine.

NEWS SOURCE

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