Mark Lombardi (never heard of?)
(Look carefully his drawings: huge info in)
Mark Lombardi was an American neo-conceptual artist who specialized in drawings that document the uses and abuses of power. He is known for the type of drawings he specialised in towards the end of his life, which connected people, events and places. Just as his work started to become popular, he was found hanged. A 'sketchy' NYPD investigation concluded he had committed suicide.
In the early 1990s, Lombardi began researching the conspiracies, including the BCCI, the Harken Energy scandal and the Savings and Loan fraud. He accumulated thousands of index cards that began to overwhelm his ability to deal with them, so to cope, he began assembling them into physical outlines, and then into hand-written diagrams, which he called Narrative Structures.[2] They are structurally similar to sociograms – a type of graph drawing used in the field of social network analysis. His works include:
Chicago Outfit
Meyer Lansky
The P2 conspiracy, Michele Sindona, Roberto Calvi
World Finance Corporation
Nugan Hand Ltd.
Gerald Bull, Project Babylon, Space Research Corporation
Iran–Contra, Lake Resources of Panama and Oliver North
The Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and the arming of Saddam Hussein
Charles Keating, Lincoln Savings (a subsidiary of American Continental Corporation)
BCCI and ICIC
Harken Energy Scandal, George W. Bush, James R. Bath and Jackson T. Stephens
Hans Kopp, Shakarchi Trading AG
United Press International, and its attempted takeover by Pat Robertson with the aid of Beurt Servaas
Jackson T. Stephens, the Lippo Group, and Bill Clinton
Clinton, the Lippo Group, and China Ocean Shipping Co.
In early 2000, there was a suspicious flood in his flat after the sprinkler systems were turned on. This nearly destroyed his major work - which connected all his earlier works, and gave a timeline of the conspiracies. He was however able to restore it and exhibit is successfully. On 21 March 2000, Lombardi moved all his work to a new studio. He was found hanged the next day, which was ruled a suicide.
His biographer, Patricia Goldstone is doubtful about this, not least because his work was finally starting to become popular. She describes the NYPD investigation as 'sketchy', noting that they never established the time of death and closed the case withing just two days, ruling it a suicide on the testimony of one witness of dubious reliability.
Goldstone notes that he had no history of mental illness or depression and reports that Lombardi's mother described him as absolutely jubilant about the success which his work was just starting to bring him.
http:// whowhatwhy.org/2015/12/04/the-mysterious-death-of-an-artist-whose-drawings-were-too-revealing
Hobbs, Robert Carleton; Richards, Judith (2003). Mark Lombardi: Global Networks. Independent Curators International.