70-year-old woman found dead, throat slit, in the Upper West Side



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A 70-year-old woman was found dead Sunday morning in her apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, police said.

The investigators discovered the woman's body, identified by police as Susan Trott, after receiving a call from her business partner, who had not heard her for some time and asked the authorities to monitor her, police said.

Police said that there was no sign of forced entry and that she was investigating the murder.

Ms. Trott was found in her apartment on the 14th floor of West End Avenue, in a quiet residential red brick building, one block from Riverside Park.

The investigators entered the apartment shortly before 5 am with the help of a concierge. Once inside, they saw a trail of blood leading from the living room to the bedroom, where the body was found, dressed and lying on its back, police said. Police said they found no weapons.

Ms. Trott was a long-time writer, according to her personal website. She is a graduate of the Pratt Institute and has worked as a writer, as a freelancer and for a series of advertising agencies since at least the early 1980s, according to her LinkedIn profile.

More recently, she was a creative partner at Code Modern, a marketing group based in New York and London, that she ran with a partner, Eric Boscia.

Mr. Boscia testified that he was Ms. Trott's closest confidant and had been working with her for about 20 years, but would not have liked to know if he was the one who called the police. Mr. Boscia, who lives in London, said that he had spoken to Ms. Trott last Wednesday.

"It was a trouble-free conversation," Boscia said during a phone interview. "It's like my mother was dead. She was the tallest, most generous and kindest person I knew.

Ms. Trott was born and raised in New York, he said, and was passionate about animals. She created her own relief organization several years ago, he said.

"She did everything for dogs, pets, birds," said Boscia. "She would never hurt anyone."

Helen Stein, who lives on the 16th floor, also recalled that Mrs. Trott was a dog lover and a resident who had helped gardening in the building.

"I would not say she was an easy person, but I did not know she had enemies or anything like that," said Stein, 72. "I did not really know her well."

Another neighbor said that Mrs. Trott lived alone.

"It's totally shocking to me because I've never felt as safe in all my life as in this place," said Stein.

Martha Wetterhall Thomas was a colleague of Mrs. Trott about four decades ago, while they both worked for BBDO, an international advertising agency headquartered in New York.

"She was fun and a little crazy, and she was very smart and excellent in what she did," said Ms. Thomas, who lives in South Carolina, during a phone interview. "She was someone I admired."

Ms. Thomas stated that she had not spoken to Ms. Trott for about 25 years, but she remembered one afternoon when a man stole Ms. Thomas's handbag while the two friends were leaving. a bank in the garment district at lunch time. Ms. Trott chased the thief down Sixth Avenue and managed to pin him down with the help of workers in the area.

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