|
'Why didn't we notice?'
14/03/2007 15:17 - (SA)
|
|
|
 |
|
| Trees damaged by hurricane Rita stand outside the home of Larry Euglon, whose body was discovered inside, 16 months after the storm. (Andrew Nenque, The Beaumont Enterprise, AP) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
Juan A Lozano
Beaumont, Texas - As his family and neighbours in Beaumont, Texas, focused on rebuilding homes and lives battered by hurricane Rita, few gave much thought to Larry Euglon's long absence.
"All the neighbours asked where Mr Larry was," said Osborne Johnson, who lived across the street from Euglon for more than 20 years. "We decided he had evacuated with other people and didn't have the chance to come back."
In fact, he never left. The skeletal, mummified remains of the 51-year-old recluse were recently discovered lying on his bed inside his home, which had no major storm damage but was still enveloped by thick branches from two splintered oak trees.
Now people wonder why it took 16 months for Euglon to be found in this southeast Texas city.
"I walked away with more questions than answers. You keep thinking why didn't someone notice this," said Jefferson County justice of the peace Vi McGinnis. "It has been the talk of the town."
Investigators believe Euglon died of natural causes, but cannot tell if it happened before or after Rita. He apparently had been ill for some time before his death and lost considerable weight, but the exact nature of his illness is not known.
Some neighbours remember him turning down an offer of evacuation in the days before the storm made landfall at nearby Sabine Pass on September 24, 2005.
'What did he die from?'
Dorothy Euglon remembered her nephew as a hard worker who told humorous stories about being a construction labourer and was nicknamed "Big Tank" because of his one-time weight problem.
"Knowing him, he thought he could ride the storm out," she said. "Now what did he die from? Could it have been fright? Could it have been a heart attack? With 120mph (193kph) winds tearing up your house, who knows. Only God knows."
Johnson, 73, said most people left the neighbourhood before Rita and stayed away for weeks. When they returned, their focus was on repairing their homes - not Euglon's whereabouts.
Police and fire officials concentrated on homes that sustained structural damage. Euglon's house had no such damage, so it was not checked.
His property gradually became an eyesore with overgrown grass and scattered trash, and was about to be sold for unpaid property taxes.
A potential buyer inspecting the property on January 27 discovered Euglon's fully clothed body on his bed, atop the covers.
The interior of the house appeared undisturbed, covered by a thick layer of dust. The living room was still neatly arranged, and china plates and wine glasses still sat on the dining room table.
Shunned human contact
Some wonder why Euglon's family did not check on him. He had a daughter, ex-wife and other relatives who lived in Beaumont.
But Dorothy Euglon, who lived less than a mile (1.6km) away on the same street, says criticism is unfair.
"You could have knocked on that door until hell freezes over and he was not going to let you in," she said. "He did it. Not the family. He disassociated himself and to this day I don't know why."
He shunned most human contact, only coming out of his home to walk around his neighbourhood, usually with his head down, and often ran away when he met relatives on the street.
Zenja Hughes, Euglon's former sister-in-law, recalled seeing him dressed in winter clothes during hot weather and saying people were out to get him.
Johnson says no one is at fault for Euglon's death.
"But we are at fault of him not being found," he said. "I fault myself because living this close to him, I should have called the police or somebody and had a search made for him."
|