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Playboy employee's mystery death explored in shocking new documentary as ex-boyfriend maintains foul play

Playboy employee's mystery death explored in shocking new documentary as ex-boyfriend maintains foul play

Daily Mail​05-05-2025

The mysterious death of Playboy casting assistant Kimberly Fattorini is put under the spotlight in a shocking new documentary, in which her devastated ex-boyfriend expresses his belief that there was foul play.
Fattorini died on July 21, 2017, in West Hollywood, California, from an apparent overdose following a night out.
While the date rape drug GHB was found in her system – as well as cocaine and alcohol – the coroner did not perform a sexual assault exam and by the time the cops requested one 'in light of additional information he had received,' it was no longer possible.
There was not enough evidence to file a criminal case, and the investigation was closed with zero arrests.
The season three premiere of Investigation Discovery's The Playboy Murders takes a closer look at the case and lays bare the murky holes, while Fattorini's loved ones share their doubts over the official cause of death.
Hours before she passed, Fattorni had been partying with Monica Maass and Eli Wehbe.
In her interview with detectives, Monica claimed that the group had gone to Eli's residence to take drugs and party and at one point, NFL player Shawne Merriman arrived.
She alleged that Shawne ordered an Uber to take the women to Monica's apartment where they continued to drink.
The following day, Monica claimed she discovered Fattorni dead on the sofa. She claimed Shawne panicked and fled the scene.
There had been accusations that Shawne had drugged and raped Fattorni before her death. He denied those claims.
In his interview with detectives, Eli also denied that Shawne had brought GHB to his house. Shawne was never charged in connection with the death.
Many of Fattorini's loved ones refute the idea that she overdosed and believe there were much darker circumstances surrounding her death.
One of those sceptics include her ex-boyfriend, former Playboy casting director Sam Rhima, who describes the details surrounding her death as a 'coverup.'
Speaking in the Playboy Murders documentary, he said: 'I know Kim more than anybody else. The only thing she would have done that night was drink alcohol.'
'Nobody does GHB as a party drug,' he adds. 'Nobody does a drug that's meant to date rape people.'
'When I found out there was GHB in her system, I knew that she was drugged,' Fattorini's friend and former Playboy model Tawnie Jaclyn added.
'I knew that was somebody else's doing.'
Addressing his heartbreak over investigation being closed, Sam added: 'I was shocked. I don't know who else was involved in the coverup, but there was obviously a coverup of what happened to her.
'I think no one got arrested because they'd spread all these rumors to make it look like she'd OD'd, which she did not.'
He went on to add: 'And I don't know how high the cover up goes or who else helped them cover up but more happened to Kim than what they're saying.
'I still can't understand why the sheriffs department didn't do anything about it,' Sam adds.
'Knowing what happened and what is right there in their face.
'How do you close an investigation on a girl who was obviously drugged, raped and kill. Why would you close an investigation on something like that?'
Fattorini's parents filed a wrongful death lawsuit in July 2019 against Shawne, Monica, and Eli, in which they cited battery, drug dealer liability, and negligence.
The lawsuit states paramedics found Fattorini laying on the floor unresponsive.
'She was half-naked with her jeans unzipped and unbuttoned, as though someone had tried to pull her jeans on to her body before the police or paramedics arrived,' the filing reads.
'Her bra was twisted and her lips were blue. She was also not wearing any underwear despite.'
The lawsuit is still pending.
In the litigation, Shawne, Eli and Monica each filed answers denying each and every allegation in the action.
They also denied that the plaintiffs were entitled to any damages.
DailyMail.com contact Shawne, Monica and Eli for further comment. It is noted that the trio declined to discuss Fattorini's death for the series.
At the time of its filing, reps for Shawne called the lawsuit 'baseless.'
They added to TMZ: 'Shawne attended an after party more than two years ago where a young woman unfortunately overdosed... The police thoroughly investigated and found no wrongdoing whatsoever by Shawne.
'The fact that they are raising this now, two years after the fact, demonstrates the baseless nature of these allegations.'
DailyMail.com contact Shawne, Monica and Eli for further comment. It is noted that the trio declined to discuss Fattorini's death for the series.
They've previously denied accusations that were connected to Fattorini's death.
In an exclusive interview with DailyMail.com last week, Holly Madison, the host and executive producer of The Playboy Murders, revealed why Fattorni's case means so much to her.
'This season, the one we're opening up with the Kimberly Fattorini case,' she said. 'That one really sticks with me. It was a case that was brought to our attention.
'As season two was airing we kept getting all these messages on Instagram from people who were close friends of Kimberly and wanted us to cover her case because they feel like it wasn't getting enough attention and that there were so many unresolved questions.
'There's still a pending civil suit going on regarding that case, so it means a lot to me to be able to bring that case to the forefront again, hoping that it might help somebody get closure.'
The Playboy Murders premieres on Monday, May 5 at 9/8c on ID and streams on Max.

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These former college athletes were told a coach may have hacked into their private photos
These former college athletes were told a coach may have hacked into their private photos

NBC News

time18 hours ago

  • NBC News

These former college athletes were told a coach may have hacked into their private photos

Volleyball has been a source of joy for Aly Torline, shaping her from a kid in club leagues to collegiate athlete. The 30-year-old 'can't say enough good things' about her experience at the California State University in San Bernardino. She was recognized as an all-American by a national coaching organization and said the relationships with her teammates and coaches helped shape her into the woman she is today. For more on this story, watch 'NBC Nightly News with Tom Llamas' tonight at 6:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. CT. But nearly 10 years after graduation, Torline received a notice from federal authorities. The news it delivered, she said, was 'brutal.' The Justice Department informed her that her time on the team exposed her to a data breach: A football coach from across the country whom she had never met is alleged to have used student-athletes' personal information to access their email, cloud storage and social media accounts and download their private, intimate photos or videos. 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He kept notes on whose photos and videos he viewed, 'including notes commenting on their bodies and their sexual preferences,' the indictment said. Weiss pleaded not guilty to all charges in March. His attorney didn't respond to multiple requests for an interview and comment. Like Torline, many of the student-athletes who got the same notice don't know Weiss and have no idea what he might have taken. They said they aren't even sure which accounts might have been accessed or whether they're university accounts. Former student-athletes who got notices from the Justice Department that they may have been hacked, four of whom are coming forward publicly for the first time, detailed to NBC News the fear and uneasiness they say they've felt since they were identified as potential victims. They're calling for accountability — and answers. 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Everything we know about Trump's friendship with Epstein after Musk bombshell
Everything we know about Trump's friendship with Epstein after Musk bombshell

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

Everything we know about Trump's friendship with Epstein after Musk bombshell

With a single post, Elon Musk reignited scrutiny over Donald Trump's intimate association with Jeffrey Epstein who trafficked and raped underage girls - all while socialising with the world's elite Donald Trump's decades-long friendship with Jeffrey Epstein is today under a blazing spotlight after Elon Musk publicly claimed the president's name appears in the paedophile's government files. Musk's statement on X, where he commands an audience of over 185 million, was as brief as it was damning. "Time to drop the really big bomb,' the billionaire wrote, 'Trump's in the Epstein files', and 'that is the real reason they have not been made public.' He signed off: 'Have a nice day, DJT!' ‌ With his single post, the Tesla billionaire reignited scrutiny over Trump's intimate association with a man who allegedly trafficked and raped underage girls - and did so with impunity for years, while socialising with the world's elite. How Trump is allegedly mentioned in the files he vowed to release, only few know. ‌ But what is documented and undeniable is the US leader's closeness to Prince Andrew's paedophile pal for years. The Epstein flight logs, released by Trump's own attorney general in February, include his name seven times. The documents, reviewed by The Mirror, show him flying alongside Epstein as early as October 1993, with Ghislaine Maxwell - now a convicted sex trafficker herself - also listed aboard. Despite years of denials and deliberate distancing, the paper trail is growing, and with it, the pressure to answer one increasingly urgent question: What exactly did Donald Trump, if anything, know about Jeffrey Epstein? It is compounded by how the property mogul said six years before the sex offender was convicted in 200 for soliciting a minor for prostitution, how his pal liked women, ' many of them are on the younger side. To understand how deeply intertwined Trump and Epstein were, one only needs to look at the 1992 video footage from Mar-A-Lago. There, the two men, surrounded by young women, some reportedly NFL cheerleaders, can be seen laughing, pointing, whispering, and dancing. And not just any dance. The stiff, robotic shimmy Trump wheels out at campaign rallies - dubbed by his MAGA supporters the 'Trump Dance' - was on full display three decades ago while he partied with Epstein. 'It was only during last year's election campaign that the world saw Donald dance, but those at the club have seen it for years,' a Mar-A-Lago source said. ‌ 'He and Jeff would party up a storm in West Palm Beach. At times, they seemed joined at the hip… It is the exact same moves he honed back in the early nineties while partying with Jeff." It's not just their socialising that raises red flags. At the time the footage was taken, Epstein would describe Trump as his 'best friend.' 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He danced beside him while Epstein preyed on girls. Trump once claimed that if the truth about Epstein ever came out, 'a lot of very important people' would be taken down. What he never clarified was who those people are.

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