Julia
As of Tuesday night, officials still hadn't figured out exactly how she died, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported. A prescription bottle with her name was found in the house, but it's not clear what kind of medication was in it, the Philadelphia Daily News reported.
Police are investigating her death as a possible homicide.
Peruto, 58, was in Avalon, N.J. when a maintenance worker found Law's body. Law had a key to Peruto's place and "loved his big bathtub," Richard DeSipio, a lawyer in Peruto's firm, told the Philadelphia Daily News.
Law and Peruto had been dating for less than two months. The staff at his law office was tight-knit, and employees there could barely concentrate Tuesday, the Inquirer reported.
Peruto, who lived on a street filled with multimillion-dollar homes, had worked on a number of high-profile cases. He has represented notorious mobsters and Gary Heidnik, who was found guilty of holding six women prisoner in his Philadelphia basement before killing them.
Peruto hasn't been named as a suspect in the case. The Daily News reported that he called Law his "soulmate hippie" and was distraught after her death.