Crime | Samuel Israel With No Body, Cops Doubt NY Banker's Suicide 'He's dead as far as I can throw him,' skeptic says of fraudster By Jason Farago Posted Jun 11, 2008 11:31 AM CDT Copied Samuel Israel III, the former CEO of Bayou Group, arrives at Manhattan federal court for his sentencing, Monday, April 14, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano) An international manhunt is now under way for a former hedge-fund manager who disappeared the day he was to begin serving a prison sentence for defrauding investors. A car belonging to Samuel Israel III was found Monday at a bridge over New York's Hudson River, the Wall Street Journal reports; though bodies of suicide jumpers are normally found quickly, there's no sign of Israel. "No witnesses saw anybody jump from the bridge, and there's no evidence that he did," a police investigator said of Israel, 48, who was to begin serving a 20-year sentence for scamming investors out of $400 million. "He's dead as far as I can throw him," said one investor burned by the 2005 collapse of Bayou Management—a seemingly common sentiment. Read These Next A government shutdown could mean permanent layoffs. Judge demands answers from Trump administration on Mangione comments. Retirement savings catch-up plans are about to change. NYC woman accused of murdering three men in 10 months. Report an error