Faked death

This article is about the legal term. For the natural biological behavior of apparent death or feigning death, see Apparent death.

A faked death, also called a pseudocide, is a case in which an individual leaves evidence to suggest that they are dead to mislead others. This is done for a variety of reasons, such as to fraudulently collect insurance money or to avoid capture by law enforcement for some other crime.

People who fake their own deaths sometimes do so by pretend drownings, because it provides a plausible reason for the absence of a body. According to one theory, sometimes credited to an unnamed study, as many as one quarter of suicides from San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge in which no body was found could have been faked.[1]

There are several how-to books on the subject of faking one's death, including How to Disappear Completely and Never Be Found.

Notable faked deaths

Faked Deaths in fiction

References

  1. Anne Applebaum. "Getting away from it all". Slate.com. Retrieved 2008-02-11.
  2. Todd, William Cleaves Timothy Dexter. Boston, Massachusetts: David Clapp & Son., 1886: 6.
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