Playboy playmate found floating in bathtub 'after overdose'
A former Playboy playmate, Cassandra Lynn Hensley, 34, was found dead floating in her friend's bathtub reportedly due to drug overdose. Cops are looking into the death of Hensley, best known as "Miss February" after she was found dead in a friend's bathtub.
Hensley had been residing in northern Virginia before she traveled to Los Angeles to visit an unidentified friend earlier in the week. According to TMZ, there was no sign of foul play after Hensley's friend found the playmate unresponsive in the tub. Paramedics were not able to revive the star when they arrived at the scene.
Hensley's high school pal, Aaron Arrington told of how Henley had a hard time growing up, being expelled from various schools. "Cassandra was a nice, outgoing girl, who was a little wild," Arrington said. He said that while she was nice, he really didn't think she had a stable childhood. "She was a bit rowdy," he said.
Hensley moved to the famous Playboy mansion where she was dubbed as "Miss February," but she always insisted that was not the end of her glamorous celebrity and modeling career. "Yes, there's life after Playboy. I've been a part of many great experiences: magazine covers, travel shows, and of course offering advice to impressionable young girls who believe they need to act a particular way for a chance to be a model - not slutty but classy," Cassandra said Metropolis Nights.
On Hensley's biography in Playboy's archives, Cassandra described herself as a hopeless romantic. "I love Valentine's Day and candy, especially conversation hearts," she said. In an odd twist, Cassandra's Twitter account was scheduled to regularly update her daily horoscope.
The last message posted on her Twitter account the day after she was found dead was: "Unspoken obligations prevent you from doing what you wish today, but your guilt may drive your inaction more than any real responsibilities," read the horoscope. "No matter what you do now, you might not feel completely fulfilled. Working harder isn't the answer, but neither is escape. Do what is required, but don't take on additional tasks for the wrong reasons. Ultimately, satisfaction will be yours as long as you direct your energy toward obtaining tangible results."