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Friday, December 18, 2009 - 1:20 PM
Abigail Folger, Sharon's friend was twenty-five years old when
she died. As heiress to the Folger coffee fortune, she had led a very
comfortable life. She made her debut in San Francisco in 1961. She
graduated from Radcliffe. Like many wealthy girls, she looked for
something meaningful to do with her time and became very involved in
social work.  Victims Folger and Frykowski
In
1968, she met her lover Voytek Frykowski who introduced her to Sharon
and Roman Polanski. She became an investor in Jay Sebring's men's
toiletries and hair styling business. Her social work in the ghettos of Los Angeles was beginning to get to her. She
started to feel that her contribution was futile in combatting the
enormous problems of ignorance and poverty. She told her friends that
she couldn't get away from her work at the end of the day. "The
suffering gets under your skin," she said. Her
relationship with Frykowski was also a source of concern to Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. The
two of them had become much too dependent upon drugs. Both the
frustrations of her social work and her problems with Voytek were the
subject of her almost daily conversations with a psychiatrist. She had
just about built up enough strength to break off her love affair and
try to get her life back on track when twenty-eight stab wounds
intervened. Voytek Frykowski was thirty-two when he
died. He had been a long-time friend of Roman's from Poland. He was,
according to Polanski, "a man of little talent but immense charm."
Always a playboy, he had no visible means of support, essentially
living off Abigail's money. While he told people he was a writer, there
was no evidence that he was anything but a very charming, extroverted
and entertaining "druggie." However dissipated his
life was or charming his personality, it came to an abrupt end with two
gunshot wounds, thirteen blows to the head and fifty-one stab wounds.
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