Winner’s body to be exhumed

Autopsy will be performed

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This June 2012 photo provided by WMAQ-TV in Chicago shows Urooj Khan (center) holding a ceremonial check in Chicago for $1 million as winner of an Illinois instant lottery game. At left is Khan's wife, Shabana Ansari. Khan, 46, who owned several dry cleaning operations and some real estate, died suddenly on July 20, just days before he was to collect his winnings. Khan's death has been ruled a homicide. (AP)
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CHICAGO (AP) – A judge Friday granted prosecutors permission to exhume the body of a Chicago lottery winner who was fatally poisoned with cyanide just as he was about to collect his $425,000 payout.

Authorities want to do a fuller autopsy on Urooj Khan to confirm earlier but less-thorough toxicology tests, as well as to rule out that natural causes contributed to the 46-year-old’s sudden death, according to documents filed with the motion for an exhumation.

Facing dozens of reporters and TV cameras crowded around her outside court after a judge signed off on the request, Khan’s sister said the thought of her brother’s body being unearthed and re-examined was disturbing – but that the procedure was essential.

“It’s very hard,” a tearful Meraj Khan said. “I wanted my brother to rest in peace, but we have to have justice served.” She added about the exhumation, “It has to be done.”

Khan’s July 20 death was initially ruled a result of natural causes. But a relative asked authorities to look deeper, triggering more exams that led to the conclusion in November that the businessman was intentionally poisoned.

Cook County’s Medical Examiner’s Office didn’t initially perform a comprehensive autopsy because there were no outward signs of physical trauma and it was thought he died of a cardiac arrest, the state’s attorney’s motion said.

Khan’s sister told reporters Friday that she had received a call from her brother’s phone number at 4 a.m. on the day he eventually died. The person on the line was so distraught that she isn’t sure who it was.

“I couldn’t understand what was happening,” she said. “I heard screaming. That’s all.”

A specific date wasn’t immediately set for the exhumation, though medical examiner spokeswoman Mary Paleologos said it should occur by the end of next week. The autopsy would most likely be done the next day, and results would be released two weeks later, she said.

The man’s wife, Shabana Ansari, has said she can’t believe her husband had any enemies, and she said that she was not involved in his death.

One of Ansari’s lawyers said before Friday’s hearing that she doesn’t oppose the exhumation. But Al-Haroon Husain said she wants to ensure Islamic religious practices are adhered to, though he didn’t elaborate.

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