Iranian’s Death Suicide, Not Lynching
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MOSCOW, Ida. — Police concluded Thursday that an Iranian-born University of Idaho student, found hanged from a tree Tuesday with his hands tied behind his back, committed suicide.
The announcement was a relief to people around town and at the university, who were hoping that the death on campus was not a racially motivated lynching.
The victim, Sharon Andrew Akhavan, 21, was dark-skinned. The Aryan Nation, a white supremacist group, is headquartered in Hayden Lake, Ida., about 130 miles north of here. It and other neo-Nazi organizations hold well-publicized annual gatherings in the state that Idahoans say give the state an unsavory and unearned reputation.
Akhavan, a junior majoring in architecture, recently had been depressed over his grades and discussed suicide with friends, police said. “He left a note in his room in which he gave his possessions to various friends,” Moscow Police Chief David Cameron said.
The specter of a lynching was heightened because Akhavan’s hands were tied behind his back with bailing twine. But the evidence indicated that Akhavan was in fact a suicide, police said.
“It’s humanly possible to do that (hang one’s self with hands tied behind the back),” Cameron said.
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