Murder at the yacht club

A little bit defensive on the cover-up

Police Share Update After Martha Nolan-O’Slatarra Found Dead on Yacht
After Martha Nolan-O’Slatarra, a Manhattan-based fashion designer, was found dead at the Montauk Yacht Club on Long Island, authorities shared an update on her passing.

Healthy young women don't just "die" all of a sudden of natural causes, with no foul play suspected.

The Montauk Yacht Club, ..., emphasized its commitment to working with officials ..., "Our team is cooperating with law enforcement" ...

The role of "law enforcement officials" at the yacht club is mostly limited to that of bouncers, to keep non-club-members out of the place.

The staff acting so cooperative and at the same time oddly defensive is indicative of guilt. This isn't a woman (member of the club or not) that they were very happy with or wanted to let live.

If you see anything or know anything of a suspicious death at your workplace or any area of your responsibility, you would naturally in all likelihood make a statement or report of what you saw or witnessed — but no other cooperation or collaboration is to be expected of you, and you would have to stay out of it in order to remain impartial as a witness.

Yachts cost a lot of money, and I wouldn't want cops hanging out at the club boarding my yacht when I wasn't there without a warrant on a third-party murder investigation, if the dead body wasn't actually found on my boat. They could have asked. If I was there and I knew anything I would have told them, but otherwise they would need to get off my property if they're being dishonest and playing games with covert surveillance and service of process in court.

Overdose on drugs and poison are the possibilities, but drug dealers are drug dealers, and no police investigation is going to bring a drug dealer down with so many cops on the beat addicted to same drugs as their suspects.