The Los Angeles County coroner has amended the 30-year-old death certificate of
actress Natalie Wood to change the official cause of her demise to "drowning and
other undetermined factors" from accidental drowning, authorities said on
Wednesday.
The change was made a couple of weeks ago, and comes nine
months after homicide detectives for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department
said they were reopening the investigation into the death of the actress at age
43, sheriff's spokesperson Steve Whitmore said.
Wood's body was found
floating in a Santa Catalina Island cove off the coast of Southern California in
1981 after she had spent a night of dining and drinking on the island and on a
yacht with her husband, television star Robert Wagner, and actor Christopher
Walken.
Security hold on the case
The coroner originally
ruled the death of the Oscar-nominated actress, who starred in West Side
Story and Splendor in the Grass, as an accidental
drowning.
The revised record reflects unanswered questions about the
death and the fact that authorities regard the matter as an open
case.
Whitmore declined to discuss any new evidence that may have been
uncovered but said the investigation was continuing, adding there are "active
stages and there are passive stages" of such inquiries.
A spokesperson
for the county coroner said he could not comment because the sheriff's
department has placed a "security hold" on the case. Whitmore said the
restriction was imposed because "we don't want misinformation going
out".
New findings
Last November, when it was announced
that two homicide detectives had been assigned to reexamine new tips, the
sheriff's department said investigators had received information substantial
enough to warrant a fresh look at the case.
But the department said
Wagner, now 82, was not a suspect. The reopening of the investigation coincided
with the broadcast of a special edition of the CBS news magazine 48 Hours about
the mystery in partnership with Vanity Fair magazine that purported to present
new findings in the case.
Wood, who was born Natalia Nikolaevna
Zakharenko to Russian immigrant parents in San Francisco, appeared as a child in
such films as the Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street and The
Ghost and Mrs. Muir.
She was nominated as best supporting actress as
a teenager for her role opposite James Dean in the classic 1955 film Rebel
Without a Cause. Wood later earned two best-actress Oscar nominations - for
her work in the 1961 film Splendor in the Grass and Love with the
Proper Stranger two years later.
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