Maxwell's mysterious death comes as the S2 billion (U.S.) global publishing empire he personally ran, which includes the struggling New York News, is burdened with debt. Maxwell had been selling assets to raise money to meet a $750 million payment due in October 1992. In addition Maxwell had political troubles. He was suing U.S. journalist Seymour Hersh for alleging in a new book that lie had ties to Israel's Mossad spy agency. In London, Charles Wilson, director of the Mirror Group. said there had been no suggestion of foul play in the death: "We can only asswne that Mr. Maxwell slipped and fell overboard." Wilson also ruled out suicide, saying: "He had too much of the arrogance of his own ability to conceive of such a thing." Maxwell was a big man with a powerful basso voice who browbeat his editors, fought a titanic running battle with rival publisher Rupert Murdoch, and jetted about the world visiting presidents and prime ministers. "My primary duty is to hire and fire editors," he said recently. Born Labji Hoch to Jewish peasants in Czechoslovakia Maxwell lost his parents in the Nazi Holocaust and escaped to Britain in 1940. He was a highly decorated Second World War veteran. "He was larger than life," British Conservative party legislator Anthony Beaumont-Dark said of Maxwell. "He was the Citizen Kane of his time." His death raised questions about the future of his holdings. In addition to the New York News, which he rescued from the brink of collapse in March Maxwell owns several British tabloids and the European, an English-language weekly he founded in May 1990. This year, Maxwell sold 49 per cent of the Mirror Group of newspapers in a public offering and his Pergamon Press publishing house to a Dutch company. He also sold part of his U.S. publishing house, Macmillan, to a British publisher. Maxwell's oldest son, Phillip. flew to the Canary Islands with Maxwell's widow, Elizabeth. to identify the body. The yacht's captain, Gus Rankin, s