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Brother says he raised suspicions in death of lottery winner

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — About a week after the unexpected death of his younger brother, Imtiaz Khan was visiting the grave at a Far North Side cemetery, grief-stricken and bewildered.

Khan was troubled that the Cook County, Ill., medical examiner’s office had determined his brother, Urooj, died of natural causes at 46. His death seemed far too coincidental to accept, especially because his brother’s $1 million lottery win weeks earlier had created some tension within his family, according to Khan.

On the day in July that he claimed the body at the morgue, Khan had pleaded with an employee there to take another look at his brother’s death. Several follow-up calls had gone unreturned. Now as Khan stood by his brother’s grave, his cellphone went off. On the line was a forensic pathologist familiar with his brother’s case.

“I said, ‘No, my brother cannot die like this. He was so healthy. I have suspicions about this. It cannot be natural. Please go and look into more details about it,’” Khan recalled last week of the approximately 20-minute conversation with the doctor. “I’m looking at the grave. I said, ‘He should not be here. Absolutely not. He cannot die like that.’ ”

Khan said — and the medical examiner’s office confirmed — that he never specifically mentioned fears of poisoning, but his concerns led the medical examiner to reopen the case. And in a shocking turnabout, comprehensive testing on a blood sample previously taken from the body uncovered lethal levels of cyanide. Late last year, Chicago police opened a homicide investigation. A court order allowed officials to exhume the body last month, and the results of that autopsy could be made public soon.

Since the Chicago Tribune broke the story last month, the identity of the relative whose concerns had led authorities to take another look at Urooj Khan’s death has been one of the bigger mysteries of a peculiar murder investigation that has captured international media interest.

By going public about his role for the first time in a series of interviews with the Tribune late last week, Imtiaz Khan, 56, said he had only one motive all along for his actions: justice for his brother, the co-owner of three dry cleaning stores who, with the lottery win, had assets approaching $2 million, according to court records.

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