Alan Jay Abrahamson died on January 25, 2018. His death, which was initially thought to be a murder, was later concluded to be a suicide. The Real CSI: Miami episode five will focus on this spine-chilling murder mystery. The fifth episode of the first installment, titled Out Of Thin Air, airs on July 24, 2024, on CBS.
Alan died because a bullet that entered his body impacted his heart and lungs and broke a rib.
The detectives and crime officers did not find concrete evidence from the crime scene. The Plam Beach Gardens police were initially clueless about how to solve this crime until they found Alan's browsing records, his phone, and his email. Everything hinted at a suicide. On March 5, 2018, the detectives confirmed that this was not a homicide but a suicide. The same was reported by CNN.
Alan took his own life and made this crime look like a murder by plotting, planning, and being a mastermind. He planned to kill himself so that his family could benefit from his life insurance money.
Five chilling details about Alan Jay Abrahamson's murder
1) No weapon has been found to date
Alan Jay Abrahamson killed himself with a gun. The bullet pierced his heart and other organs, one bullet was enough to take his life. There were no bullet casings found on the scene, nor was the gun ever recovered.
Detective Bryan Broehm and other detectives who concluded this Palm Beach mystery to be a suicide speculate that the helium-filled balloon, which the victim had purchased previously, must have helped Alan get rid of the gun after he shot himself to death.
2) Alan's internet records were scarring
Alan had googled how to commit suicide, life insurance suicide, undetectable suicide methods, and also just suicide, as revealed by his voice and manual internet history, which was reported by CNN.
Alan thought he would plan the entire thing with the help of the internet, and he never planned on getting caught. Post-death, however, the records helped the detectives easily unravel the case and also showed his suicidal intentions, turning the homicide into a suicide.
3) Alan Jay Abrahamson plotted his own death from scratch
After Alan Jay Abrahamson goggled about how to kill himself, he even purchased a weather balloon and a helium tank to fuel the balloon, to help it carry the gun away from the scene into no man's land. He purchased every piece of equipment that was needed to help him stage this crime.
As the investigators speculated, Alan pulled the trigger himself, demonstrating the devastating effect financial burden can have on a person and the likelihood that it may drive them to kill themselves.
4) A painful death
Alan's autopsy report didn't show any sign of struggle, as reported by CNN. It was just one bullet that took his life by impacting the heart and lungs. One of his ribs was also broken.
This hints at how gruesome and painful his last moments were. Alan probably gathered the courage to shoot himself; however, we do not know if the bullet killed him at once or if he died sometime after he was shot. Whatever the case and timeline, breaking a rib and getting shot in the heart hints at a painful death.
5) Killed himself for the family's financial freedom
According to several media houses reports, Alan did not have enough savings left to support his family. This financial burden seemingly made him shoot himself, thinking his life insurance money could save them from bankruptcy.
Alan had started researching about his death many years before he killed himself. It may be possible that he tried other ways to raise money but most likely failed.
No one ever thought that a jovial individual like Alan would kill himself to give his family the financial freedom they need. Alan's case shows how it is difficult to determine what an individual is going through by looking at them. The same was the case with Alan Jay Abrahamson, who killed himself in January 2018.
As reported by The Palm Beach Post, his obituary reads:
"Alan was an avid golfer, enjoyed traveling and had a zest for life. He was known for his extraordinary smile, contagious laugh and the twinkle in his eyes."
To know more about this case, watch season one, episode five of The Real CSI: Miami on CBS.