-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.post-gazette.com/regionstate/19990314suicide1.asp
<A HREF="http://www.post-gazette.com/regionstate/19990314suicide1.asp">Death
sparks conspiracy theory </A>
-----
Death sparks conspiracy theory

Sunday, March 14, 1999

By Dennis B. Roddy, Post-Gazette Staff Writer

A former Army intelligence officer shot himself to death last month in a
restroom outside conservative philanthropist and publisher Richard
Mellon Scaife's Downtown offices, and Scaife has assigned a private
investigator to determine whether the incident was a bungled
assassination attempt.

<pix>
 Steven R. Kangas

Steven R. Kangas died in the late hours of Monday, Feb. 8, on the 39th
floor of One Oxford Centre.

The shooting of the 37-year-old Las Vegas man attracted little attention
at the time, and Pittsburgh police and the Allegheny County coroner's
office quickly ruled it a suicide.

Since then, though, the Internet has churned with speculation about
Kangas. Some Web theorists have drawn parallels to the 1993 death of
White House Deputy Counsel Vincent Foster, whose apparent suicide Scaife
has openly questioned, calling it "the Rosetta Stone" of the Clinton
administration.

For the past month, according to Kangas' friends and family, Mississippi
private investigator Rex Armistead has traveled the country, trying to
learn what interest Kangas might have had in Scaife.

Kangas had recently sold his share of a gambling business in Las Vegas,
and he ran the "Liberalism Resurgent" page on the World Wide Web. The
page published extensive criticism of conservatives, and some of its
writings asserted that Scaife was the financier of a right-wing
conspiracy to topple President Clinton.

According to a city police report, One Oxford Centre building engineer
Don Adams was making a routine check of electrical circuit breakers in
the men's room down the hall from the Scaife foundation offices when he
found Kangas lying face up, his head protruding from beneath a toilet
stall.

Police said Adams left the restroom to radio for help, and when he
returned with a colleague a minute later, they found Kangas seated on
the toilet, slumped over after apparently shooting himself in the head.
Police and security guards found a 9 mm pistol Kangas had bought two
weeks earlier in Las Vegas, along with at least 47 rounds of ammunition
in his backpack and one of his pockets.

Police also found a nearly empty bottle of Jack Daniels whiskey and
three books, including "Mein Kampf" by Adolf Hitler.

An autopsy by the Allegheny County coroner's office determined that
Kangas died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. A toxicology
test set his blood-alcohol level at 0.14 - above the state's threshold
of 0.1 for being too intoxicated to drive.

Kangas' parents say they have attempted to figure out why their son,
whose military career included stints in Central America and Berlin
during the latter days of the Cold War, would have gone to Pittsburgh,
apparently with no credit cards and only $14.63 in his pocket, to kill
himself.

Scaife is one of three tenants on the 39th floor, a location he
specifically requested when he moved his family foundations and personal
offices there several years ago. Also on the floor are Staley Capital
Advisers and the law offices of T.W. Henderson.

Henderson yesterday said he heard nothing further about the suicide
after it was reported and knew nothing about Kangas. Receptionists at
Staley Capital referred all inquiries to One Oxford Centre management.

"We're as baffled as anybody else," said Robert Esh, Kangas' father, who
said his son had changed his name six years ago from Esh to Kangas, his
mother's maiden name.

  <pix>
  Richard Mellon Scaife

"We have no earthly idea why he would be up there."

Esh and Kangas' mother, Jan Lankheet, are divorced. He lives in South
Carolina, and she resides in a small town in Michigan.

Both said they had no idea their son had bought a gun and learned of it
only after his suicide. Then they discovered he had ordered a burglar
alarm for his Las Vegas apartment.

"Steve was totally nonviolent. He didn't even believe in guns. It looks
like he was running scared, and we don't know why," Esh said.

Scaife hired Armistead to find out whether Kangas had gone to One Oxford
Centre with plans to confront or attack the billionaire because of
Scaife's financial backing of conservative groups that have attacked
Clinton.

One of those organizations, The American Spectator magazine, received
more than $1.8 million for the so-called "Arkansas Project," which
sought to find evidence linking Clinton to drugs and also looked into
the Foster suicide.

The magazine also uncovered allegations concerning Paula Corbin Jones.
It was Jones' sex-harassment lawsuit against Clinton that eventually led
to revelations of the president's sexual liaison with former White House
intern Monica Lewinsky.

Published reports have said Armistead played a role in the Arkansas
Project, and a federal grand jury in Little Rock last year began looking
into the matter.

Scaife, who publishes the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, also assigned one
of his reporters, Richard Gazarik, to dig into Kangas' background.

Kangas' family and friends who have talked with Armistead and Gazarik
say the men have explored theories linking Kangas and associates to the
CIA and the intelligence communities.

Kangas' mother said she has tried, without success, to find out whether
her son attempted to visit Scaife.

"We still don't know if Steve was running or if he was after somebody,"
Lankheet said.

She and her current husband, Roger, traveled to Pittsburgh several days
after Kangas was found dead and attempted to trace his final movements.

She said police and officials at One Oxford Centre did not directly
answer her when she asked whether her son might have had contact with
Scaife. It could not be determined whether Scaife was even in his office
Feb. 8. He could not be reached for comment.

"We said, 'Did Steve actually try to see him?' Nobody talks. You get a
shrug of the shoulders," Lankheet said.

On the day she visited, Lankheet said, One Oxford Centre officials
showed her a building surveillance tape that indicated Kangas was in the
building at 2:45 p.m. Feb. 8. Neither the police nor the coroner's
report indicates his movements between then and 11:30 p.m., the
approximate time the building engineer reported finding Kangas in the
men's room.

According to the police report, Kangas made eye contact with Adams, who
asked him, "Are you OK?" The report said Kangas mumbled something and
Adams told him to stay put and he would get help.

Adams told police he went outside to radio for a colleague. When the men
returned, they found Kangas fully clothed, sitting on the toilet,
covered with blood.

One of the building engineers who responded to Adams' call, Don
Oberdick, said it appeared Kangas shot himself after he was discovered,
but no one seemed to have heard the gun go off.

"That was a hell of a way to start the evening off," he said.

Adams declined to give details, saying, "It's over, it's history.
There's nothing I want to say about it."

Paramedics declared Kangas dead at the scene at 11:53 p.m.

A county pathologist concluded that Kangas was shot through the roof of
his mouth. Two pieces of a 9 mm bullet were recovered from the back of
his brain.

One Oxford Centre officials said Scaife's staff immediately asked for
upgraded security on the floor. Keypad locks were installed on the men's
and women's restrooms, which are along a wall facing Scaife's office
suite.

In the autobiography he posted on his web site, Kangas called his move
to Las Vegas in 1997 "a big mistake" and said he was planning to move
back to Santa Cruz, Calif., where he spent nearly a decade after
attending the University of California's campus there.

Instead, according to family and friends, he placed ads in the Las Vegas
newspaper to sell his car and his camera, then bought the gun, which he
registered with Las Vegas police Jan. 26,. Precisely when he left Las
Vegas, no one seems to know.

Word of Kangas' death raced through the Internet community, where he was
known as a participant in liberal, conspiracy and left-wing news
discussion groups, and where his Web site was gaining in reputation.

"Steve Kangas Found Shot To Death in Richard Mellon Scaife's Bathroom,"
reads one posting on the alt.current-events.clinton.whitewater
discussion group.

On the alt.conspiracy.jfk discussion group, an independent television
producer named Jerry Trowbridge picks away at the Tribune-Review's
suggestions that Foster, the White House deputy counsel, might have been
murdered.

"There's a lot wrong with the Foster suicide investigation, and now
there's the Steve Kangas suicide that has some very interesting
connections to the Foster case," Trowbridge wrote.

Kangas' death, the Scaife connection and its possible meanings quickly
formed the basis for several heated exchanges as the Internet rumor mill
went into full throttle in the weeks after Feb. 8.

Several writers pointedly drew attention to Kangas' previous
declarations against handgun ownership and the fact that he ended his
life with one in his hand.

Compounding the controversy is his family's dissatisfaction with the
account of his death.

Whatever trail Kangas might have left on the home computer from which he
worked were lost after his roommate returned from Hong Kong, where the
firm was selling its horse-racing computer software.

Denise Waddell, wife of one of Kangas' co-workers at the business, said
the firm's president, Peter Wagner, had shared an apartment with Kangas.
When Wagner returned from the extended trip to discover that Kangas had
not paid his share of the rent for several months, Wagner was stuck for
the money.

To reimburse himself, she said, Wagner sold Kangas' computer to the
building's maintenance man, who then erased its hard drive.

About the same time, Robert Esh, the dead man's father, gave Armistead
permission to collect Kangas' mail and examine any other records, which
were later passed along to the family. The investigation, Esh said,
yielded no conclusive evidence about what Kangas was doing in
Pittsburgh.

Two discrepancies between the coroner's report and the police report
filed in the case have intensified family speculation about Kangas'
death.

First, his parents point out, the police report says, in the heading
"nature of injuries," that Kangas suffered a "gunshot wound/left head."

The autopsy report clearly states that Kangas shot himself through the
roof of the mouth.

"Things are a little confusing," Esh said.

Then, the initial coroner's report said that when Adams, the building
engineer, found Kangas lying face up on the floor of the bathroom stall,
he also spotted blood around him, something that would suggest he had
already been shot.

The narrative in the police report makes no mention of blood until after
Adams re-entered the bathroom and found Kangas on the toilet seat.

Kangas' body was cremated, his mother said, to save costs in returning
his remains to South Carolina, where he was raised.

Esh said the family was still struggling to understand why their son
would have traveled so far to hide in a bathroom outside the offices of
a man he had criticized.

"That's how it started out, the theory that Steve was there to do some
damage to someone else. But Steve was totally nonviolent. He didn't even
believe in guns."
=====
from:
http://www.post-gazette.com/regionstate/19990314Kangas3.asp
<A HREF="http://www.post-gazette.com/regionstate/19990314Kangas3.asp">Suicide
leaves more questions than answers </A>
-----
Suicide leaves more questions than answers


Sunday, March 14, 1999

By Dennis B. Roddy, Post-Gazette Staff Writer


After he set up a Web site championing the political left, Steve Kangas
posted his photograph alongside the story of his transformation from the
son of conservative Christians to free-thinking leftist.

"I left religion at age 12, and conservatism at age 26, to become the
godless pinko commie lying socialist weasel that conservatives find at
right," he said in the text beside a photo showing a bearded,
bespectacled man who looked like an artifact of the 1960s.

"I'm sure that liberals will recognize something of the kindly, gentle,
good-humored progressive student I actually am in this photo, which
makes this a political Rorschach ink-blot test."

A Rorschach blot, indeed.

Among those who knew him, Kangas, who left the world in a sudden,
inexplicable moment of self-directed violence, is now a cipher.

A man of professed nonviolence who argued against gun ownership, Kangas
bought a gun, left Las Vegas and hid out in a restroom near the offices
of conservative publisher Richard Mellon Scaife, against whom he had
written. Moments after a building engineer stumbled across him around
11:30 p.m. Feb. 8, Kangas shot himself.

He left no suicide note. There was no manifesto. Police found $14.63 in
his pockets and a nearly empty whiskey bottle nearby. He had three
books, a few magazines, socks and toilet paper in his backpack. What was
in his head is anybody's guess.

Who was Steve Kangas, and what was he doing on the 39th floor of One
Oxford Centre in the dying hours of that Monday night? Scaife's
organization hired a private detective to try to find out.

Ask those who knew him and the perceptions become as distant as the two
political poles between which he traveled during his 37 years of life.

"He always seemed like a gentle soul," recalled Vince Winkel, for whom
Kangas wrote free-lance articles on politics for an Internet magazine.
"He was probably one of the most mellow persons I've met. A really,
really mellow guy. Laid back."

"He was a little fat guy who was lonely and geeky," said Denise Waddell,
whose husband, Tom, worked with Kangas at a Las Vegas company that
specializes in gambling software. "I think he was a little man trying to
make a big life for himself."

"He was a happy guy. He had plans for this summer," said his mother, Jan
Lankheet, who lives in Michigan and whose Christmas card inviting her
son to visit last year was in his backpack when he was found dead.

"I probably was the closest sibling to him, but that's not saying much,"
said his sister, Sharise Esh, who lives in suburban Washington, D.C. "He
was a very competitive person who wanted to do well in life and felt he
didn't have the tools needed to do that."

Kangas, who changed his name several years ago from Steven Robert Esh,
gave varying accounts of his life.

On the Internet, he was read by an assortment of people who love to
debate politics. His online biography tells of a guy who joined the Army
after high school and wound up working in military intelligence, both in
Central America and Germany, during the waning days of the Cold War.

To friends in Santa Cruz, the easygoing California town where he
attended college from 1987 to 1994 without completing his degree, Kangas
was a masterful chess player and former president of the local chess
club.

One acquaintance described him as a gambler. Another remembered him as
living just one step from homelessness as he eked out a marginal living
selling free-lance writings to a Colorado Web site.

Flash ahead a few years to 1997 and it was Steve Kangas the swell.

He joined P.W. Enterprises, a Las Vegas firm developing software that
combines assorted factors on racehorses and, its creators hope, comes up
with consistent winners. The company currently is marketing the software
in Hong Kong.

He told his sister he made as much as $200,000 in one year. When she
mentioned, in passing, that she needed to save some money, Kangas sent
her six $100 bills in the fall of 1997.

"He took great pride in that," she said.

But Tom Waddell, who found Kangas his job at P.W. Enterprises at a
moment when Kangas was about to become homeless, remembers a guy with
talent who still screwed up the books at his new job and who squandered
thousands of dollars on Las Vegas escorts.

"He seemed very mild-mannered, but he was always very conscious of how
he presented himself to people," Waddell said. "I'm shocked he would be
in the same room with a gun."

Steven Robert Esh was born May 11, 1961, the son of a graphic artist and
a mother who went on to get a doctorate in religious studies. His
now-divorced parents are strongly conservative Christians, and he
attended private religious academies around Landrum, S.C.

He joined the Army three years after leaving high school in 1979, and
his resume includes time at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey,
Calif., where he studied Russian. Kangas then received intelligence
training at Goodfellow Air Force Base in Texas.

On his Web site Kangas writes that he was sent to Central America,
"doing things I am not at liberty to discuss," before he went to Berlin,
where he eavesdropped on Soviet military communications.

After the Army, Kangas returned to the United States in 1986. He settled
in Santa Cruz, a college community south of San Francisco, where coffee
shops buzz with politics from the nearby branch campus of the University
of California.

Kangas described the shift from the Army to Santa Cruz as "like going
from conservative heaven to liberal heaven at warp speed."

One Santa Cruz acquaintance remembered Kangas as a talented chess player
who seemed to also become involved in gambling, although Tom Waddell,
the former co-worker, said Kangas rarely had enough money to gamble to
any large extent.

What became clear, though, was that Kangas had veered sharply to the
left in his beliefs. At the same time, he briefly married, and for a
period of more than a year, was almost entirely out of touch with his
family during the late 1980s.

"He was unhappy with his childhood, and he didn't feel our parents
prepared us for life in the real world," explained Sharise Esh.

Then, two years ago, his siblings and father chipped in to fly Steve
home to South Carolina for Christmas.

"We all felt we'd had a huge reach-across," Robert Esh said. "It wasn't
that we were at odds with each other or fighting, but that he'd kept
some distance because his belief system was different than ours."

That Kangas' belief system had become different from his family's was
clear after his parents examined his Web page. Lankheet called some of
the writings "extreme."

One of Kangas' online essays, "Origins of the Overclass," purports to
show "why the richest 1 percent have exploded ahead since 1975, with the
help of the New Right, Corporate America and, surprisingly, the CIA."

Toward the end of the essay, he introduces Scaife and tells of the
billionaire's role - later confirmed - in running a London news agency
that was a CIA front.

The essay also discusses Scaife's donations to various right-wing think
tanks and other organizations.

Kangas went into greater detail on Scaife in another piece discussing
the "vast right-wing conspiracy" that first lady Hillary Clinton has
claimed was aligned against President Clinton.

The piece is largely a rehash of previously published accounts of
Scaife's involvement with think tanks and the American Spectator's
"Arkansas Project," to which Scaife contributed more than $1.8 million
in an effort to dig up dirt on Clinton.

While Kangas' Web site includes criticisms of Scaife, none of the pieces
published there reflects a singular obsession with him. Other
conservatives and right-wing foundations also are referred to in his
writings. In none of them does he make threats.

During the time he was gaining a reputation for his Web site, Kangas was
also, in some respects, falling apart in his personal life.

Both Tom and Denise Waddell said Kangas increasingly was spending time
and money on paid escorts in Las Vegas, and that while he seemed to
consider the women friends, they generally abandoned him after his money
ran out.

Kangas also was becoming unhappy with his work arrangements.

He quit a year ago and accepted a $30,000 buyout, even though company
officials tried to tell him his share was worth $100,000.

"He said, 'No, I don't want to be in that damn 1 percent I rail about in
my Web page,' " Jan Lankheet recalled.

In early January, he called his sister, Sharise. The man who had a few
months earlier turned down $100,000 now was pleading poverty.

A few weeks later, according to his family, Kangas bought a gun,
registered it on Jan. 26, and ordered a burglar alarm for his apartment.

No one seems to know precisely when he left Las Vegas or when he arrived
in Pittsburgh. He rented a locker at the Greyhound bus terminal,
Downtown, and also had a Pittsburgh street map, according to Lankheet,
who traveled to Pittsburgh last month to seek details about her son's
death.

Surveillance cameras at One Oxford Centre picked him up riding the
escalator in the building lobby Feb. 8 and also in the elevator lobby,
but the building lacks an extensive network of such cameras, so the last
sighting was at 2:45 p.m.

In nine hours, Steve Kangas, professed man of peace with a mission no
one has yet decoded, would be dead and a mystery begun.

Copyright© 1997, 1998. 1999. PG Publishing. All Rights Reserved
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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