On 10 July 2012, she was found dead at her home in
Belgravia,
London. Her 49-year-old husband was arrested in connection with her death and on suspicion of drugs charges. On 17 July, he was charged with
delaying the burial of her body. Hans Kristian Rausing pleaded guilty, and was sentenced on 1 August to ten months' imprisonment, suspended for two years; the Judge required him to attend a two-year drug rehabilitation programme. The court heard that her
heart pacemaker indicated that Eva Rausing probably died on 7 May. On 29 August 2012, the British journalist Ben Quinn revealed in
The Guardian that in 2011 Eva Rausing had passed on information to Swedish prosecutors about the
unsolved 1986 murder of Swedish prime minister
Olof Palme.
Scotland Yard had confirmed the day before that it had given information to Swedish authorities, who wanted to question the widower,
Hans Kristian Rausing, as a possible witness about the information his wife claimed to have obtained. Gunnar Wall, a Swedish author who has written two books on the Palme killing, said that Rausing had contacted him in June 2011, claiming that she had learned that Palme had been killed by a Swedish businessman, who feared that Palme was a threat to his business. Wall had conducted an
email correspondence with Rausing, who told him that she had written to the businessman on three occasions about the allegations. In one e-mail to Wall, she wrote: "Don't forget to investigate if I should suddenly die! Just joking, I hope." Wall told the
Guardian: "When her e-mails stopped, I did not think too much about it, until I heard that she had died in circumstances that were unclear ... She also told me that she was going to inform the prosecutors in Sweden and it seemed like she had some arrangement to meet them." On 14 December 2012, a coroner said Rausing died as a result of her "dependent abuse" of drugs. ==References==