In a heartbreaking twist to an already tragic story, 76-year-old Linda Bigazzi, a Connecticut woman awaiting sentencing for the manslaughter of her husband, took her own life just hours before she was set to face the court.
The case has gripped the local community, leaving many to wonder what could have led to such a grim conclusion.
On July 24, Connecticut State Police were called to Bigazzi’s residence after someone reported being unable to reach her. When officers arrived, they found her dead. According to the Connecticut Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Bigazzi died from ethylene glycol toxicity—a clear sign that she had ingested antifreeze, a substance tragically known for its deadly effects when consumed.
Bigazzi’s suicide came on the heels of her guilty plea to first-degree manslaughter in March for the 2017 death of her 84-year-old husband, who was a professor and doctor at the University of Connecticut Health.
His body was discovered in the basement of their home during a welfare check in February 2018, a discovery that shocked those who knew the couple.
The circumstances surrounding the death of Bigazzi’s husband were as complex as they were tragic. In writings found at her home, Bigazzi claimed that she acted in self-defense. She wrote that her husband had come at her with a hammer, which she managed to wrestle away and use against him—fatally. “I just wanted to slow him down,” she wrote, describing how she sat next to his body in their kitchen for a long time afterward.
While the full truth of what happened between Linda and her husband may never be known, her decision to end her life with antifreeze just hours before her sentencing adds a tragic final chapter to this already heartbreaking story.
The case raises difficult questions about domestic violence, the pressures of impending legal consequences, and the mental health struggles that can accompany such traumatic events.