StayBack500FT
05-26-2005, 02:18 PM
It gets uglier by the minute:
http://kdka.com/topstories/local_story_145184848.html
(Dr. Moonda was a doctor here in Mercer County)
EFD840
05-26-2005, 03:47 PM
Ouch. If they make arrests, that is going to be one nasty trial.
DaSharkie
05-26-2005, 06:47 PM
Just what we need. Another useless trial so people with no lives can wallow in enjoyment as another person's life is paraded for all to see.
I am so sick of these cases. I am glad I have a life. I think it's a life.
firenresq77
05-26-2005, 07:48 PM
It's sad, but some people LIVE to see cases like this som they can watch them on TV.......... OJ, Peterson, now this one.......
StayBack500FT
05-26-2005, 10:43 PM
I don't believe it has made the national news as of yet...but it has all the makings of a "Dateline Exclusive".
firenresq77
05-27-2005, 01:15 AM
Originally posted by StayBack500FT
I don't believe it has made the national news as of yet...but it has all the makings of a "Dateline Exclusive". I know we've heard all about it over here in NW OHio.........
NJFFSA16
05-27-2005, 03:24 AM
The national media is well aware of this incident...and I can assure you that "Good Morning America" is watching the developments...
By MIKE CRISSEY
Associated Press Writer
SHARON, Pa. (AP) - Gulam Moonda left his family behind about 40
years ago to come to the United States for the medical training he
couldn't get in India.
Settling in rural western Pennsylvania, he started a successful
urology practice and met and married a hometown woman more than 20
years his junior.
Small-town life seemed to be good to the doctor.
But last year, things started to unravel when his wife, Donna
Moonda, was convicted of stealing drugs from a hospital and ordered
into a rehabilitation program.
Two weeks ago, Moonda was shot dead in a roadside robbery in a
case that remains unsolved but has exposed a deeply troubled
marriage and his wife's relationship with an alleged drug dealer
she met while in treatment.
The Ohio State Highway Patrol has characterized the shooting of
Moonda, 69, along the Ohio Turnpike as a crime of opportunity.
Moonda, his wife and her mother had stopped their Jaguar along the
highway to change drivers when another car pulled up behind, and a
man got out and demanded money. After Moonda turned his wallet
over, the gunman shot the doctor in the head and fled.
One of Dr. Moonda's closest friends said he heard and saw
nothing out of the ordinary leading up to the doctor's death.
"The marriage seemed to be happy, like a regular marriage,"
said Dr. Ravindra Sachdeva, who has known Moonda for 21 years and
is an executor of his will. "He never told me about any problems.
But then again you try to keep it to yourself."
Moonda emigrated to the United States around 1965 to get the
training he couldn't in India, said Sachdeva, 60, of Sharon, who
also emigrated from India. After doing his residency at the Albert
Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia, Moonda moved west to begin
his medical career in 1971 and was the first urologist in Sharon, a
city of about 16,000.
Shortly after arriving in Sharon, he divorced his first wife
because she apparently didn't like small-town living, Sachdeva
said.
Then he met Donna Smouse, who grew up in nearby Hermitage, about
three years after she graduated from high school in 1977. She was
working in a doctor's office and the two dated for about 10 years
before marrying in December 1990, Sachdeva said.
The Moondas would have dinner with Sachdeva and his wife about
once a month. Dr. Moonda never mentioned any problems, but Sachdeva
said Moonda was a private man.
But there were some troubles. Last year, Donna Moonda, a nurse
anesthetist, pleaded no contest to stealing the painkiller fentanyl
from UPMC Horizon Hospital in nearby Greenville, where she was
working.
According to police records, Donna Moonda admitted she was
abusing the painkiller.
"I have a problem and I need help," she told police.
As part of her sentence, Donna Moonda was ordered to go to drug
rehab near Pittsburgh where police say she met 23-year-old Damian
Bradford.
Two confidential informants have told authorities in Ohio and
Pennsylvania that Donna Moonda began having an affair with Bradford
and that she bought him clothes, shoes and other expensive gifts
and rented an apartment for him, according to police records.
His mother, Sharon Bradford, told WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh, "She's
just a nice girl and my son's just in love with her and she's in
love with my son."
One of the informants told police that Bradford said Donna
Moonda was trying to divorce her husband and that she would receive
as much as $4 million as part of a divorce settlement.
In his will, Dr. Moonda left his wife 20 percent of his estate,
the car of her choice and allowed her to live in the couple's
palatial home with manicured shrubs and trees on 1.5 acres in
Hermitage, about 60 miles northwest of Pittsburgh.
Donna Moonda has been interviewed at least twice by authorities,
while Bradford has been interviewed once, Ohio police said. No one
has been charged in connection with Dr. Moonda's death.
Police last week searched Bradford's apartment looking for Dr.
Moonda's wallet, blood or other tissue as well as any evidence
showing a sexual or financial relationship between Donna Moonda and
Bradford, according to police records. They haven't said if they
found anything linking Bradford to the murder.
Bradford has been jailed for a probation violation; police said
they found steroids, hypodermic needles and equipment used to
package drugs in his apartment. He admitted he was selling cocaine
"to make ends meet," police said in court documents.
No one answered the door at Donna Moonda's home this week and
calls went unanswered. Both her attorney and Bradford's attorney
have said the couple's alleged relationship doesn't implicate them
in Moonda's killing.
"There are all too many Americans who have troubled marriages,
who have affairs, but extraordinarily few of them kill their
spouses," Niki Schwartz, a Cleveland attorney representing Donna
Moonda, told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
Schwartz did not return phone calls for comment to The
Associated Press on Thursday.
(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
StayBack500FT
05-27-2005, 09:53 AM
Mrs. Moonda seems very "Kathy Lee Giffordish" in her mannerisms...it won't be difficult for segments of the public to villify her.
StayBack500FT
05-27-2005, 09:59 AM
The latest...
http://kdka.com/local/local_story_146173223.html
StayBack500FT
06-01-2005, 02:02 PM
http://kdka.com/topstories/local_story_152112503.html
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