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Claudine Longet, singer and actor at center of a notorious manslaughter trial, dies at 84

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Claudine Longet, the French singer and actor who was at the center of a highly publicized manslaughter trial after she was charged with the fatal shooting of her boyfriend, Olympic Vladimir 鈥淪pider鈥 Sabich, has died at age 84.

Longet’s nephew, Bryan Longet, announced her death in a social media post on Thursday. 鈥淵ou have been a true inspiration in my life and you will always be,” he wrote. “Another star in the sky. Thank you for everything, my aunt.鈥

Reached by phone by The Associated Press, he confirmed Longet had died but did not reveal the cause of her death.

Longet was a native Parisian who had been acting since childhood. She appeared in numerous TV shows, recorded such hit albums as 鈥淐laudine鈥 and was widely known for the bossa nova-style ballad 鈥淣othing to Lose,鈥 a highlight of the 1968 movie 鈥淭he Party鈥 that starred Longet and Peter Sellers.

At the time, she was married to singer Andy Williams, whom she had met in the early ’60s while dancing in a Las Vegas revue. But by the mid-1970s, she and Williams were divorced and she was living near Aspen, Colorado, with Sabich, who had competed for the United States in the 1968 Olympics.

On a day that would long be scrutinized, she shot him at their home with a Luger pistol that she would contend he had been showing her and fired accidentally. Sabich, 31, died of a single shot to his abdomen; Longet had accompanied him in the ambulance to the hospital.

Her trial in Aspen attracted worldwide attention. Williams was among those present, escorting her to and from the courthouse, paying for her legal fees and otherwise supporting his former wife and the mother of their three children.

鈥淚 thought it was unfair, I thought she was innocent, I thought it was an accident,鈥 Williams told 鈥淐BS This Morning鈥 in 2009.

Longet had been charged with reckless manslaughter, but law enforcement officials made such critical errors as taking a blood sample from Longet without a warrant. After four days of deliberation in January 1977, the jury found her guilty of negligent homicide. She was given two years鈥 probation, fined $250 and sentenced to 30 days in jail, eventually served on dates of her choosing.

Longet’s career in entertainment was effectively over, though, and for a time she was the subject of mockery in popular culture, from a skit on 鈥淪aturday Night Live鈥 to the Rolling Stones rocker 鈥淐laudine,鈥 which featured a taunting refrain, 鈥淐laudine’s back in jail again.鈥 (The song was unreleased for decades).

Longet later married her defense attorney, Ron Austin, and lived with him in Aspen. After Sabich’s family filed a $1.3 million lawsuit in 1977 against her, the two sides reached a settlement that barred Longet from ever discussing Sabich or the trial.

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Associated Press writer Samuel Petrequin in London contributed to this report.

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