The recently launched body images reveal one of Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa who stays close to their body while the police surveyed their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where the couple was found dead at the end of February.

The video, published by the researchers and published by TMZ on Tuesday, shows an officer informing his colleague when they enter the residence.

“He is protecting it,” says the officer, referring to one of the three dogs of the Hackmans, seen sitting near Arakawa’s body.

The officer points out that the dog “seems quite friendly”, but informs his colleague that his team also found another dead canine inside a deeper box in the house.

The authorities noticed that they could listen to a third dog barking in the distance, but did not appear in the footage.

Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa in November 1999. On Tuesday, the investigators published images of the body of the body that shows the police inspecting the house where the couple was found dead in February.
Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa in November 1999. On Tuesday, the investigators published images of the body of the body that shows the police inspecting the house where the couple was found dead in February.

New York Daily News Archive through Getty Images

According to an incident report of the Sheriff obtained by NBC News, the authorities later found that the animal was released in the 12 -acre property of the couple.

A report by the New Mexico Department of Agriculture, detailed by the New York Post last month, revealed that the deceased dog, called Zinnia, was found in a “mummified” state when the authorities initially revasted the house on February 26, almost two weeks after it is believed that Arakawa died.

The authorities suspect Hackman, who was 95 years old and lived with the advanced Alzheimer’s, was alone with his wife’s body until he died several days later.

The launch of Tuesday also included a document that showed Arakawa had investigated COVID-19 and symptoms similar to flu online before his death, which was then determined that it was from the pulmonary syndrome of Hantavirus, a rare disease transmitted by rodents.

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An environmental evaluation of Hackman property, also included in the records, showed that health officials found nests of rodents and feces in several peripheral buildings, but not in the main residence.

Hackman and Arakawa were recently buried in a private commemorative service for their family, according to People magazine.