Ramapo police Tuesday identified the 79-year-old man found dead outside his rural house as Konnight, who had lived alone since his sister's recent death on what once was the family farm.
Despite
having few possessions and a home with no indoor plumbing or heating, Konnight
had banked $3 million from the sale of about 31.5 acres of his family's
property in northern Ramapo to a New Jersey company, JIEM Properties, in
November. His sister, Alice, was listed as the seller.
Konnight's
skeletal remains were found at 3 p.m. Friday in the woods on his property off
West Maple Avenue near Smolley Drive and Viola Park, Ramapo Detective Lt. Mark
Emma said.
"He
lived a very simple life, hermit-like," Emma said. "He had his
attorney and another man looking in on him now and again. He was alone."
The Rockland
Medical Examiner's Office is doing an autopsy to determine Konnight's cause of
death, but it is not considered suspicious. Emma theorized he most likely died
of a medical condition as he walked the property. He said Konnight often walked
through the woods to the road, and sometimes traveled by taxi.
"He'd
wander through the paths and woods," Emma said. "It looks like he cut
his own firewood. He had one light. The house was in disarray. People could
have thought the house may have been abandoned."
Thomas
O'Connell, a Pearl River-based lawyer who worked with the family on and off for
the last 15 years, said the family had owned as many as 200 acres of land in
the area. He said Konnight and his sisters, Alice and Anna, lived in the home
since childhood and had never held real jobs. They lived "off the
grid," periodically selling portions of the property to stay afloat — just
as their parents had done, O'Connell said.
Though they
had no true expenses, the most recent sale was made, in large part, to pay off
more than $130,000 in taxes owed on the property, O'Connell said.
"They
wanted to stay where they were because they enjoyed their bucolic lifestyle,
being isolated and surrounded by trees with deer running through the yard,"
O'Connell said, later adding, "Their only overhead was taxes. They didn't
have a lawyer helping them out. They didn't want to get involved with the
government. They just couldn't keep up with the taxes."
O'Connell
said he had tried to get Konnight a reverse mortgage, but ran into trouble
because the home lacked both plumbing and heating. He was, however, able to get
Konnight a cellphone and health insurance, which had recently led the
79-year-old to his first doctor's visit in decades.
"The
guy had everything to live for. Under the Affordable Care Act, he was able to
get insurance so I had just gotten him an insurance card," O'Connell said.
"He had just gotten a clean bill of health. I brought him to the doctor in
May for the first time since he was 12 years old and had his tonsils taken
out."
O'Connell
said Konnight had never been to a dentist and that authorities would have had
trouble identifying him with dental records. He said police did not allow him
to see Konnight's remains, but showed him a picture of a cane found at the
scene that he believes belonged to the man.
Eugene
Erickson, 82, a neighbor since 1956 who had gone to school with Konnight and
one of his two sisters, said he knew the family but they didn't socialize or
speak much. Konnight and his siblings attended the old Brick Church School.
"They
lived like recluses," Erickson said. "Nobody knew them. They lived by
themselves. I'd say hello to George and maybe got a wave. You never got much in
return as far as answers from him."
Erickson, who
is active with Rockland Detachment Marine Corps League, said Konnight's brother
served with the Marines but died in a car accident on Route 202 while home on
leave in the early 1960s. O'Connell said Konnight's sisters had both died in
the last two years after suffering heart attacks.
Erickson
said he also remembers Konnight's parents — Sam and Anna — and how the father
would drive a gas-guzzling tractor into Spring Valley.
Konnight and
his sisters were tight-lipped when it came to family members, recalled Beverly
Moore, 75, a Suffern resident who said she's a distant cousin.
Moore said
the families date to the American Revolution. She said she hadn't seen Konnight
or his siblings since a funeral of her grandfather in 1973; she did not know
the two sisters had died or that George had died on Friday.
"They
ran a farm," Moore said. "They kept to themselves. They didn't ask
anyone for anything, as far as I know."
Moore
recalled visiting the Konnight farm as a girl. Her parents would drive up West
Maple Avenue to the two pillars in front of the road leading to the house. The
house was far off the road back in the woods and there always were props or
tree limbs blocking the dirt road, she said.
"You'd
scream for them to let them know you were there and they'd come out on the
porch, sometimes," she recalled. "We never made it to the
house."
"They
didn't have many friends or even a telephone," Moore said. "I used to
get calls asking about them. I told the caller they had to mail them a
letter."
Staff writer
James O'Rourke contributed to this report.
Editor's
note: The remains were found at 3 p.m. Friday. Police had begun searching at
11:52 a.m. Information on the time was incorrect in an earlier version of this
article.
Lohud.com

This man is a saddist
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