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d-26607House OversightOther

Obituary listings of notable figures with no apparent investigative leads

The passage is a simple list of recent deaths of public figures and contains no allegations, financial transactions, or connections to controversial actions. It offers no actionable investigative lead Lists deaths of various notable individuals across sports, journalism, politics, and business. Mentions Barbara Piasecka Johnson's legal battle over a J&J heir's estate. Includes former Canadian prem

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #013282
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a simple list of recent deaths of public figures and contains no allegations, financial transactions, or connections to controversial actions. It offers no actionable investigative lead Lists deaths of various notable individuals across sports, journalism, politics, and business. Mentions Barbara Piasecka Johnson's legal battle over a J&J heir's estate. Includes former Canadian prem

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obituariesdeathspublic-figureshouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Virgil “Fire” Trucks, 95. Hurled two no-hitters in 1952 for Major League Baseball’s Detroit Tigers. Died March 23. Anthony Lewis, 85. Former New York Times reporter and columnist, who won two Pulitzer Prizes and transformed coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court. Died March 25 of renal and heart failure. Guillermo Luksic Craig, 57. Chairman of Chilean holding company Quinenco SA, and a member of Chile’s richest family. Died March 27 of lung cancer. Ralph Klein, 70. The premier of Alberta, Canada’s oil-rich province, from 1992 to 2006. Died March 29 of dementia and lung disease. Mal Moore, 73. He was part of 10 national championship college football teams as a player, coach and athletic director at the University of Alabama. Died March 30 of pulmonary disease. April Jack Pardee, 76. The All-American linebacker at Texas A&M University, who played in the NFL and then coached the league’s Chicago Bears, Washington Redskins and Houston Oilers. Died April 1 of gall bladder cancer. Barbara Piasecka Johnson, 76. The Polish-born cook and chambermaid who married Johnson & Johnson heir J. Seward Johnson, won $350 million in a legal battle with his children over his will, and wound up a billionaire art collector and philanthropist living in Monaco. Died April 1 in Poland. Calvert Crary, 69. A Wall Street lawyer whose newsletter, “Litigation Notes,” predicted the outcome of corporate court battles for an audience of hedge fund managers and institutional investors. Died April 6. Margaret Thatcher, 87. The U.K. prime minister from 1979 to 1990, known as the “lron Lady” for her strong will, who helped end the Cold War and revived Britain’s economy by deregulating

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