Vast wealth didn't shield the Rausings from drugs
London, Jul 11: When Eva Rausing approached the heavily-guarded U.S. Embassy in London's Grosvenor Square four years ago to deal with a routine passport matter, she had to pass through British security, then face an
India TV News Desk
July 11, 2012 21:55 IST
London, Jul 11: When Eva Rausing approached the heavily-guarded U.S. Embassy in London's Grosvenor Square four years ago to deal with a routine passport matter, she had to pass through British security, then face an airport-style metal detector so she and her handbag could be scanned for weapons and contraband.
The wealthy American didn't leave her stash at home. She tried to pass the security scan with small amounts of crack cocaine, heroin and a banned stimulant in her purse.
The subsequent arrest led police to search the multimillion-dollar property she shared with her husband, Tetra Pak heir Hans Kristian Rausing. Police found still more drugs, including a sizeable amount of cocaine.
Charges were quietly dropped in exchange for a formal police warning, but the arrest made public what close family and friends already knew: The golden couple, with untold riches, were deeply mired in drug addiction even as they gave millions to numerous anti-addiction charities.
Their sad tale reached its climax this week when the 48-year-old Eva Rausing was found dead in their home and her husband arrested for questioning about drug use and placed in hospital care. The cause of Eva Rausing's death has not yet been established.
Drugs. A scourge for the poor, for the middle class and even for the super-rich, those who, like the Rausings, measure their net worth in the billions.
“Addiction doesn't know any class boundaries,” said Amanda Thomson, spokeswoman for Action on Addiction, one of many charities the Rausings supported even as they swooned toward drugged-out oblivion.
Eva Rausing was born into a wealthy American family, and her husband was heir to the formidable Tetra Pak fortune, earning them a spot on Britain's “Rich List” with a net worth estimated at 4.3 billion pounds ($6.7 billion).
Before the embassy arrest, Eva Rausing's good looks and beautiful clothes—along with her billionaire husband and his friendly, bear-like countenance—had made the Rausings welcome participants on the London philanthropic scene.
She was on several charity boards, focusing on those that helped fight drug addiction, but also serving on Prince Charles' Foundation for the Built Environment.
Charles, no stranger to second chances, stood behind her after the embassy scandal, backing a decision to keep her on board as a trustee. A spokeswoman, who declined to be identified because of palace policy, said Charles believes people can recover from serious missteps.
But evidence suggests that Eva Rausing's drug use only intensified in the years since the embassy arrest was quietly papered over.
Recent photographs showed that Eva Rausing had become quite gaunt, and her once stocky husband also recently appeared thin and furtive, bearing only a slight resemblance to his former self, when he would attend galas looking like an elegant, bearded, tuxedoed European swain from an earlier era.
Liz Brewer, a friend of Eva Rausing, told Sky News that Rausing's problem had been “pushed under the carpet” for too long.
“She was totally addicted, obviously, and was trying to get off it,” she said.
It has become common for celebrities like Elton John and Eric Clapton to use their fundraising power to help anti-addiction charities after they get off drugs, but experts say it is not unusual for people like the Rausings to work hard to help anti-addiction groups even as they struggle, sometimes unsuccessfully, to get clean.
In Eva Rausing's case, she served as a trustee of the anti-addiction charities Chemical Dependency Center and Clouds beginning in the late 1990s, long before her embassy arrest.
Those organizations merged with Action on Addiction, a charity supported by Eva Rausing until her death that also has a strong link to the royal family: the former Kate Middleton is a patron.
CEO Neil Barton said that over the years, the Rausings contributed tens of millions of pounds to the anti-addiction crusade, remaining committed even after Eva Rausing stepped down as a trustee.
He said he never discussed Rausing's addiction with her.
“I didn't want to go there unless she wanted to talk about it,” he said, describing Rausing as a charming woman with an easy smile. “I don't remember ever having that sort of conversation with her, but it was understood that that was partly why she was interested.”
The wealthy American didn't leave her stash at home. She tried to pass the security scan with small amounts of crack cocaine, heroin and a banned stimulant in her purse.
The subsequent arrest led police to search the multimillion-dollar property she shared with her husband, Tetra Pak heir Hans Kristian Rausing. Police found still more drugs, including a sizeable amount of cocaine.
Charges were quietly dropped in exchange for a formal police warning, but the arrest made public what close family and friends already knew: The golden couple, with untold riches, were deeply mired in drug addiction even as they gave millions to numerous anti-addiction charities.
Their sad tale reached its climax this week when the 48-year-old Eva Rausing was found dead in their home and her husband arrested for questioning about drug use and placed in hospital care. The cause of Eva Rausing's death has not yet been established.
Drugs. A scourge for the poor, for the middle class and even for the super-rich, those who, like the Rausings, measure their net worth in the billions.
“Addiction doesn't know any class boundaries,” said Amanda Thomson, spokeswoman for Action on Addiction, one of many charities the Rausings supported even as they swooned toward drugged-out oblivion.
Eva Rausing was born into a wealthy American family, and her husband was heir to the formidable Tetra Pak fortune, earning them a spot on Britain's “Rich List” with a net worth estimated at 4.3 billion pounds ($6.7 billion).
Before the embassy arrest, Eva Rausing's good looks and beautiful clothes—along with her billionaire husband and his friendly, bear-like countenance—had made the Rausings welcome participants on the London philanthropic scene.
She was on several charity boards, focusing on those that helped fight drug addiction, but also serving on Prince Charles' Foundation for the Built Environment.
Charles, no stranger to second chances, stood behind her after the embassy scandal, backing a decision to keep her on board as a trustee. A spokeswoman, who declined to be identified because of palace policy, said Charles believes people can recover from serious missteps.
But evidence suggests that Eva Rausing's drug use only intensified in the years since the embassy arrest was quietly papered over.
Recent photographs showed that Eva Rausing had become quite gaunt, and her once stocky husband also recently appeared thin and furtive, bearing only a slight resemblance to his former self, when he would attend galas looking like an elegant, bearded, tuxedoed European swain from an earlier era.
Liz Brewer, a friend of Eva Rausing, told Sky News that Rausing's problem had been “pushed under the carpet” for too long.
“She was totally addicted, obviously, and was trying to get off it,” she said.
It has become common for celebrities like Elton John and Eric Clapton to use their fundraising power to help anti-addiction charities after they get off drugs, but experts say it is not unusual for people like the Rausings to work hard to help anti-addiction groups even as they struggle, sometimes unsuccessfully, to get clean.
In Eva Rausing's case, she served as a trustee of the anti-addiction charities Chemical Dependency Center and Clouds beginning in the late 1990s, long before her embassy arrest.
Those organizations merged with Action on Addiction, a charity supported by Eva Rausing until her death that also has a strong link to the royal family: the former Kate Middleton is a patron.
CEO Neil Barton said that over the years, the Rausings contributed tens of millions of pounds to the anti-addiction crusade, remaining committed even after Eva Rausing stepped down as a trustee.
He said he never discussed Rausing's addiction with her.
“I didn't want to go there unless she wanted to talk about it,” he said, describing Rausing as a charming woman with an easy smile. “I don't remember ever having that sort of conversation with her, but it was understood that that was partly why she was interested.”