London Falling by Patrick Radden Keefe is a solid work of nonfiction subtitled A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family's Search for Truth. Keefe details the story of Zac Brettler, a nineteen-year-old who in 2019 jumped to his death from a balcony overlooking the River Thames in London.
It's a deeply reported book that covers London, including it's wealth from both financial institutions in the city and foreigners, with the many empty luxury apartments owned largely as investments by those out of the country. Keefe delves into the influence of Russian oligarchs and their families on London, as well as the criminal underworld and how someone can get sucked into it all.
Zac in his early teens become enamored with money and status, it comes out that he at nineteen presented himself to strangers as Zac Ismailov, son of a wealth Russian oligarch and heir to his fortune. Zac had a connection with a man, Mark Foley, tied to oligarch Roman Abramovich, who owned Chelsea Football Club, and became close with two older men, Akbar Shamji and Verinder Sharma, known as Indian Dave.
Shamji was a hustler and Verinder a gangster, someone who made a living collecting debts owed to underworld characters. Zac purported to be in business with Shamji, including foreign cars and mining, and told his parents that he was staying in an apartment of Sharma's that was empty. At least Sharma appears to have viewed Zac as a mark, someone who could enrich him with Zac's family money.
Zac went missing and several days later his body was found in the Thames. It then came out that there was video footage from the Mi6 building of Zac alone on an apartment balcony, and then jumping. His hip clipped the embankment wall, nearly making it to the water from the fifth floor. Shamji and Sharma in between Zac going missing and his body being discovered expressed concern to Zac's parents about his well-being and purported to not know his whereabouts, but additional video revealed that as a lie. Cameras captured footage of Shamji leaving the apartment he was in with Zac and Sharma, Zac then jumping, Sharma returning to the apartment and leaving again, staring into the water below the balcony. From additional evidence, Sharma may have broken Zac's jaw before he jumped, and likely threatened his life. It appears that rather than a suicide, Zac jumped from the balcony hoping to land in the Thames and escape, but hit the embarkment on his way in.
Police knew that Shamji had lied to them, with Sharma answering no comment to all questions, but couldn't prove that a murder had been committed, especially after Sharma died of a drug overdose. The video of Zac jumping along with the death of the principle suspect caused the police to stop investigating. The book is a fascinating portrait of an underworld, including with a Russian oligarch connection, and somebody sucking themselves into it, playing a game that wasn't a game to the other parties. Zac's mom Rachelle noted in the inquest to his death that he "wanted money and power, fast." Zac got tied up with a charlatan and a gangster, and died quite possibly attempting to escape violence.
