Thomas Gannon, the suspect in Sabina Rosas’ murder at the Hamptons resort, was discovered dead in Pennsylvania. According to authorities, the suspect in the horrifying murder of an artist at a high-end health resort in New York was discovered dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound at his Pennsylvania home.
In relation to the death of Sabina Rosas, a 33-year-old Brooklyn artist who was found dead in a guest room at the Shou Sugi Ban House in Water Mill, New York, Suffolk County Police were searching for Thomas Gannon, 56.
According to a school spokeswoman, Rosas was an artist who attended Purchase College in New York to study new media, graduating in 2020.
She came to the United States in 2009 to study art after fleeing the old Soviet Union as a kid, according to an online biography under her name.
Recently, Gannon, a divorcee, offered his house in Pennsylvania where he was discovered dead for $550,000.
According to his LinkedIn page, Gannon has a small business. When Gannon sold his shares more than a year ago, his ex-partner informed Fox News Digital that the two had split up.
“I’m not sure what he’s been up to,” he said. “This was a surprise.”
Authorities said that at around 12:30 p.m. on Monday, Southampton Town Police were the first to arrive on the scene.
They requested help from the county when they suspected foul play.
For hours on Monday, a mobile crime lab operated by the Suffolk County Police was visible outside the main structure on the three-acre compound, next to a famous Buddha statue outside the front door.
Suffolk Police said in a statement that the person died violently. Not much else was known.
A request for comment was not immediately answered by the spa.
At the Shou Sugi Ban House, rooms may cost up to $1,000 per night.
The fashion designer Stella McCartney and Hollywood A-listers Gwyneth Paltrow and Kate Hudson have attended previous festivities.
Condé Nast Traveler, whose readers have rated the place highly for the past four years, claims that Amy Cherry-Abitbol launched it in 2019 as the first upscale health resort in the Hamptons.
The Japanese idea of wabi-sabi, which is defined as appreciating nature and finding beauty in flaws, served as her inspiration.
According to the spa’s website, Cherry-Abitbol collaborated on the cuisine with Michelin-starred chef Mads Refslund, co-founder of Noma.