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The San Diego Union-Tribune

 
OBITUARY
Count Gottfried von Bismarck; his wild party life had some deadly outcomes

ASSOCIATED PRESS

July 8, 2007

Count Gottfried von Bismarck, whose life of privileged excess as a descendant of Germany's “Iron Chancellor” was clouded by two deaths at his decadent parties, has died. He was 44.

The Metropolitan Police said Wednesday that Count Bismarck, great-great-grandson of Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, who unified Germany, had been found dead at his $10 million apartment in London's Chelsea district Monday.

Police said they were treating the death as unexplained, and a coroner's inquest would be conducted to determine the cause.

Count Bismarck had a well-publicized history of drug use. His family in Germany said he had also been treated for epilepsy for many years.

“Count Gottfried was a wonderful person,” the family said in a statement.

Gottfried Alexander Leopold Graf von Bismarck-Schonhausen was born in 1962 and educated in Germany and Switzerland before attending Oxford University in England.

As an undergraduate, he was known for his extravagant appearance – which at times involved dressing in fishnet stockings or traditional Bavarian lederhosen – and his lavish parties. At one, guests were greeted by a pair of severed pigs' heads on the dinner table.

He was a member of the Bullingdon Club – a dining society known for its raucous upper-class membership – and the Piers Gaveston Society, a 12-member club with a reputation for drunken excess and sexual shenanigans.

In 1986, Olivia Channon, the 22-year-old daughter of a Conservative government minister, died of a drug overdose in Count Bismarck's bed at Oxford after an end-of-term party.

Count Bismarck – who was not in the bed at the time – was not implicated in the death, although he was charged and fined for possessing cocaine and amphetamine sulfate.

At his trial, his lawyer said Channon's death “is going to be a shadow over the head of Gottfried von Bismarck, probably for the rest of his life.” The count said years later that some had accused him of disgracing the Bismarck name.

Count Bismarck eventually settled in London, working in finance and the telecom business. He remained out of the headlines until last August, when a 38-year-old man, Anthony Casey, died after falling from a roof garden during a party at Count Bismarck's home.

Dr. Paul Knapman, presiding over an inquest at Westminster Coroner's Court, said one room of the apartment contained a “bizarre” assortment of items, including a large rubber tarpaulin on the floor, towels, lubricants, bottles of vodka and buckets of sex toys.

Police concluded Casey's death was an accident, and the coroner's verdict was “death by misadventure,” meaning no one was to blame.

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