SERIALously - 187: Stabbed 20x to Head, Neck & Torso - But She Did It Herself? | The Disturbing Case of Ellen Greenberg

Episode Date: August 26, 2024

In 2011, 27-year-old Ellen Greenberg was found dead in her apartment after sustaining 20 stab wounds. Her cause of death according to law enforcement? Self-inflicted. But was this really self-inflicte...d, or is there more to the story, as her family believes? A very special thank you to Ellen’s parents Joshua and Sandee Greenberg for joining us on today’s episode. Justice for Ellen! Today’s Episode: We're going on TOUR!! Come see one of our episodes LIVE in a city near you! Head to https://annieelise.com/blogs/events for dates and ticket info! Beam:  Head to https://www.shopbeam.com/ANNIEELISE  and use code ANNIEELISE for an additional 40% off. Don’t forget supplies are limited and you can only shop it through my link. RoBody  Go to https://www.ro.co/ae and get your first month for just $99!  Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to $15 a month at https://www.mintmobile.com/ae Liquid IV Get 20% off your first order when you go to https://www.liquidiv.com and use code AE at checkout. Shop the Merch: www.annieelise.com Follow the podcast on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@serialouslypodcast   Follow the podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/serialouslypod/       Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/annieelise     All Social Media Links: https://www.flowcode.com/page/annieelise_    SERIALously FB Page: https://www.facebook.com/SERIALouslyAnnieElise/    About Me: https://annieelise.com/   For Business Inquiries: 10toLife@WMEAgency.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey guys, it's me, your true crime bestie Annie, and I am so excited to share with you that Serialistly is officially hitting the road and coming to you live in a city near you. That's right, we are going on tour. We've got shows planned in Orange County, California, San Diego, California, Salt Lake City, Denver, Colorado, Phoenix, Arizona, and more. We're going to be discussing all new exclusive cases. I have some surprise guest plan, but I can't tell you who, it's a surprise. At the end we'll do a meet and greet so I finally get to meet so many of you. We've got exclusive merch and just so much more. It is going to be a show that you definitely do not want to miss. But space and tickets are very very limited, so grab your friends,
Starting point is 00:00:39 grab your co-workers, or come on your own and hang with me while we talk all things true crime together. All of the information including dates, cities and links to purchase tickets can be found at annielies.com and then just toggle over to the events page. So grab them now before they're gone. I can't wait to meet all of you and I will see you on the stage. A case surrounding the death of a young Philadelphia teacher. Ellen Greenberg died back in 2011 after being stabbed 20 times.
Starting point is 00:01:08 Her death was initially ruled a suicide and then a homicide, and then back to a suicide. Now Guy DeAndrea, a former assistant district attorney who worked on the case, has doubts about her death. Greenberg's family believes she was murdered. Hey true crime besties, welcome back to an an all new episode of Serialistly. Hey everybody, welcome back to an all new episode of Serialistly with me, Annie Elise. Boy oh boy, do we have a mega crazy case to talk about today guys. It is one that is extremely controversial. There are a lot of opinions on both sides of this. It's one where there's allegations of conspiracy,
Starting point is 00:02:09 corruption, cover-ups, all sorts of different things. And it's a case I've actually been covering for quite a few years and researching for quite a few years to where I feel like even in all of the information that I have dug up and gathered, I feel like it's pretty clear what information that I have dug up and gathered, I feel like it's pretty clear what the truth really is in this case.
Starting point is 00:02:28 So I don't understand how there is so much division, yet there is, and you'll understand why as we get into the details. And it's the case of Ellen Rae Greenberg. Now Ellen Greenberg was a 27-year-old first grade teacher living in Philadelphia. She was well loved by all of her students her friends her family her colleagues She was really just known for her caring nature and also for her dedication to teaching now Ellen was also engaged to Sam Goldberg their wedding was planned for August 2011 So by all accounts Ellen at just 27 seemed to have a really bright future ahead, one full of love, marriage, a
Starting point is 00:03:05 professional career that was just on the upswing, all sorts of great things happening in her life. However, beneath the surface something darker was brewing, something that would ultimately lead to one of the most perplexing and controversial cases in recent history. What's the truth of what happened to Ellen Greenberg? As a reminder, everything in this episode is either sourced from court documents, footage, testimony of family members, or it's my opinion only, so as always, please form your own opinions and do your own research. We also interviewed Ellen's parents, Joshua and Sandy Greenberg, and we're going to be including key points of that conversation we had with them in this episode so that it can provide deeper insight into their experience throughout
Starting point is 00:03:48 this entire ordeal. On January 26, 2011, Ellen started her morning like any other morning. As I said, she was a first grade local school teacher in Philadelphia, so she got ready for work and she headed off to school. Now, on her way to work, she called her mom. This was at approximately 7 a.m., and it's something that she routinely did. Her mom would be on the way into work for the morning as well so they would use that period of driving in to just talk, catch up, things like that. You know, a hard worker. She had a vivacious personality. She was enthusiastic with her children, with the teaching.
Starting point is 00:04:27 She loved her, she did love her career. She put a lot into it, but it came, a lot of it came very naturally to her. As a child, she was, you know, fun-loving, normal. She was athletic. She was artistic. She, you know, loved fashion. She loved sports. She loved school. And she just had a knack of bringing, you know, her friends from different parts of her life together and never thought twice about, you know, just because they didn't know each other. She says to me, Mom, I can make them be friends. Nothing was out of the norm and it seemed like it was just going to be a standard day like every other day.
Starting point is 00:05:13 However, that afternoon a blizzard hit Philadelphia and this wasn't just a small blizzard or a tiny little snow day. This was like one of those like nor'eastern blizzards, like the massive snowfall to where work is shut down, schools are shut down, everything closes. So because of that, Ellen ended up leaving school early. It was a snow day. And if you've ever lived on the East Coast or if you're familiar, you definitely know how that goes. I remember when I was living in New York, it happened at least once a season, usually even more than that. But in any event, around 1.30 p.m., Ellen was on her way back to the apartment that she shared with her fiance, Sam. The two of them lived in this stunning two
Starting point is 00:05:50 bedroom apartment in a luxury building called the Venice Lofts, and she was heading home for the day. It was nice. It was going to be a shorter day. On the way, she decided to stop for gas, and then after filling up her tank, she headed directly to the apartment. When Ellen arrived home, she entered the apartment. She started working on grading papers, homework, things like that. She also made a fruit salad for lunch and just started to unwind from her day. Her fiance, Sam, was home, but he ended up leaving to go work out in the building gym downstairs. They lived on the sixth floor and the gym of the building was on the first floor. So he heads out to the gym at around 4.45 pm.
Starting point is 00:06:25 He returned to their apartment about 45 minutes later at 5.30 pm. However, when he returned, the apartment was locked from the inside. It had been locked using the swing bar latch, you know the kind that pulls over and has like the barbell that hangs out and it's just that extra interior lock. So he shouted for Ellen, you know, come unlock the door, let me in. He also texted her nine times. Now these text messages start with just asking her to open the door, but then they start increasingly
Starting point is 00:06:54 becoming more panicked, also a little bit aggressive. These messages read, hello, open the door. What are you doing? You better have an excuse. I'm getting pissed. Hello, in the door. What are you doing? You better have an excuse. I'm getting pissed. Hello in all caps." Then another one that said, you have no idea. So she wasn't responding to these text messages.
Starting point is 00:07:15 She also wasn't answering his phone calls. And that made him increasingly irritated. So then he started shouting through the door opening because if you're familiar with this lock then you know you can open the door but there's like a two to three inch little gap where you can kind of see inside, kind of not, but you still can't get through. So he opens that and he's shouting, let me in, let me in, Ellen, where are you, where are you? He also says that he went down to the doorman of the building to see if maybe he could help him access the apartment. However, for whatever reason, the doorman refused. He said he couldn't. I don't know if it was a restriction of the building, maybe a privacy issue. I'm not entirely
Starting point is 00:07:47 sure. But finally, after there was still no answer, Sam ended up forcing his way through the door, breaking that swing bar lock. And what he found inside was his absolute worst nightmare. Ellen, his fiance, just 27 years old, was lying in a pool of blood in the kitchen, and she had a knife plunged inside her chest. It was an absolute nightmarish scene that really seemed to come directly out of a horror movie. Now quickly before we move on, I want to talk about the timeline of events and Ellen's movements that day, starting from when she left school to then when she was found dead in her kitchen. I feel like it's something we need to go through so that we can understand what could have
Starting point is 00:08:28 happened in that window of time and what the events were leading up to her being found dead on her kitchen floor. So as I said, she got gas at around 1.30pm. At 2.30pm, she called a restaurant which was located about 30 minutes away from her apartment. It's unclear if she was calling this restaurant to make a reservation, to order food for pickup, to perhaps cancel an existing reservation. It's unclear. But it is possible that she was calling to make a dinner reservation since now she was getting home for the day much earlier than she normally did. It's also possible she was trying to order food for pickup later.
Starting point is 00:09:03 But regardless, we know that she did make that call. At 3.47pm, she sends a text message from her phone. And then at 4.45pm, there's activity on her computer. A few minutes after that activity on her computer, at 4.50pm, is when her fiancé Sam went to the gym downstairs of the building. Then at 5.26pm, Sam leaves leaves the gym and as I said their apartment was on the sixth floor and the gym was on the first floor so that would allow him just a few minutes to get upstairs. So if he left at 5 26 p.m. let's say he
Starting point is 00:09:33 arrives to the apartment and starts knocking around 5 30 p.m. give or take a few minutes. So he tries texting her and gaining access for 22 minutes putting it somewhere around 5 50 p.m. to 6 p.m. He's also seen on camera entering the first floor elevator for the last time at 6.28 p.m. And then a 911 call is placed three minutes later at 6.31 p.m. So going off of that timeline, it indicates that he's downstairs talking to the doorman trying to get him to, you know, come and open the door, gain access to the apartment. He goes up the elevator at 628, breaks down the door, finds Ellen, and then calls 911 three minutes later.
Starting point is 00:10:13 However, if we go back to that timeline, there's a window from when the texting stops after 22 minutes, around 550 to 6 p.m., and then when he is seen on the elevator at 628 p.m. So what was going on in that 20 to 30 minute window? Was he trying to get the doorman's attention for 20 or 30 minutes? There are some reports that he had tried to get the doorman's attention three different times going up and down, up and down, maybe going back and forth. The only thing that we actually do know about that window of time is that Sam called his cousin, Cayman Schwartzman, at 614 p.m. This was 17 minutes before the 911 call. Camian's dad, Sam's uncle, James Schwartzman, also allegedly called Sam at 626 p.m. This incoming call was before the 911 call was made, but after Sam had called his
Starting point is 00:11:02 cousin earlier. Now a little interesting detail, both came in and his father James our lawyers When Sam called 9-1-1 he was instructed to start CPR until he noticed that knife that was plunged in Ellen's chest Then he was instructed to stop 4601 flat rock Road, please hurry. 4601 flat. Yes, my I just my I went downstairs to go work out. I came back up. The door was latched. Mike's fiance is inside. She wasn't. She wasn't answering. So after about a half hour, I decided to break it down. I see her now just on the floor blood. She's not. She's not decided to break it down. I see her now just on the floor with blood. She's not, she's not responding. Okay, is she breathing?
Starting point is 00:11:46 I... Look at her chest. I need you to calm down and I need you to look at her chest. It's really... I don't think she... I really don't think she is. Listen to me. Someone's on the way. Look at her chest. Is she flat on her back? She's on her back. Do I bring her... Look at her chest and tell me if it's going up and down, up and down. I don't see her moving. Okay, do you know how to do CPR?
Starting point is 00:12:07 I don't. Okay, I can tell you what to do, okay, until they get there. I want you to keep her fed on her back. Oh, God. Hello? Yeah, hi, okay. Are you willing to do CPR with me over the phone until they get there? I have to, right?
Starting point is 00:12:18 Okay, so get her fed on her back, bear her chest. Okay, you want to rip her shirt off? Oh, shit. Okay, you need to feel down by her side. Oh, my God.. Okay, you want to rip her shirt off? Shit. Feel down by her side. Oh my god. Ellie, please. Listen, listen, you can't freak out, sir. Okay, I'm trying to not go trying that her shirt won't come off. It's a zipper. Oh my god, she stabbed herself. Where? She's selling a knife. Well, no, her knife stick it out. What? There's a knife sticking out of her heart. Oh, she stabbed herself. I guess so. Her what? There's a knife sticking out of her heart.
Starting point is 00:12:45 Oh, she stabbed herself? I guess so. I don't know where she fell on it. I don't know. OK, well, don't touch it. OK, so I'm just about to let her down. Here now. I mean, what do I do?
Starting point is 00:12:55 I mean, you can't. If the knife is in her chest, it's going to be kind of hard for you to do CPR at this time. Oh, no. Oh, my goodness. OK. Police, which operator? 277.
Starting point is 00:13:05 Is someone coming here? Yes, they are. You said 4601 Flat Rock, right? Yes. Okay, someone's on the way. And the knife is still inside? Wait, is there what? The knife is still inside of her?
Starting point is 00:13:16 Yes, I didn't take it out. Was it her chest or where is it? It's in her chest. It looks like it's right in her heart. Okay, someone's on their way out here. Oh my God, oh my God. How old is she? She's 27.
Starting point is 00:13:32 27. And there's no sign of life at all? No, no, please don't be. What? Venture under her arm and tell me she responds to pain. She's... Ellie! me if she responds to pain? Ellie. She's not her arm. Her hands are still warm. I don't know if that means but his blood every I mean, I know, but you can't.
Starting point is 00:13:51 And the knife is still inside of her. How far can you see how far it went in? It looks pretty deep. OK, it looks three and it's a long knife. Don't touch anything. Yeah, don't touch anything. OK, I'm not touching anything. This is I can't believe this.
Starting point is 00:14:04 So wait, it was just you there with her. We Yeah, we're the only ones here and she ran in the door. You said, let's be shut. No, no, I went downstairs to work out and when I came back up, the door was latched. I like it was, you know, it wasn't like, you know, it was like locked from the inside and I'm yelling and I was always from here yelling and I'm yelling. Were your house broken into?
Starting point is 00:14:27 No, no, no, no, no. So there was no sign of a break in? No, no sign of a break in at all. I mean there will be when you get here because I had to break the latch but to get in. Okay, 4601 Flat Rock and this is a house right? It's an apartment, flat rock apartment 603. Okay, that'll help. Apartment 603. Oh my god, apartment 603. Okay, I hope.
Starting point is 00:14:45 Oh my God, oh my God, all right, thank you. Bye. What I do find interesting about this call is that Sam says that she was on her back, that he can't get her shirt off. But if that's the case, he didn't notice the knife that was sticking out of her chest. Now, in another detail just referencing the timeline,
Starting point is 00:15:04 Kamian arrived at the apartment three minutes after that 911 call was made at approximately 634 p.m. So the EMTs arrived pretty much immediately, just five minutes after the 911 call was made, and they discovered that not only did Ellen have this knife in her chest, but she had been stabbed 20 times. That wound in her chest was just one of 20 different stab wounds that were discovered on her head, her neck, her back, and her torso. One of the stab wounds to the back of her head
Starting point is 00:15:34 was actually so deep that it penetrated her brain. There were also 11 bruises on her body all in various stages of healing. They were located on her right arm, her abdomen, and her right leg. There was clearly nothing that the EMTs could do to save Ellen at this point. So at approximately 6 40 p.m. that evening, just a few minutes after arriving, Ellen was pronounced dead. The EMS, who pronounced Ellen as dead, made a comment on the scene about needing to get back to the station,
Starting point is 00:16:02 knowing that they would need to be interviewed by the homicide team, given this horrific crime scene. So as the police began investigating the crime scene, they ended up finding no evidence of an intruder. The six-story apartment could only be accessed from the front door and from the exterior balcony, but there was a complete fresh layer of snow outside from that snowstorm, and it was completely undisturbed. No footprints, no movement, nothing. Officers also noted that there was nothing to suggest that a robbery had taken place. There were plenty of valuables still visible all around the home. So the question that immediately arose, of course, was who could have committed such
Starting point is 00:16:40 a heinous, horrific murder? But as the investigators began to piece together the scene, the case took a very strange and unexpected turn. Alright guys, do you ever wake up in the middle of the night and have trouble falling back asleep? You start staring at the ceiling, your mind is like racing, you're thinking about all the things you need to do during the day, and before you know it, hours have passed, you're still not back asleep? That used to happen to me all the things you need to do during the day, and before you know it, hours have passed, you're still not back asleep.
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Starting point is 00:18:06 I drink it 30 minutes before I want to be asleep, like lights out, and like magic, I am poof off into dreamland. Plus, when I wake up there's no grogginess the next morning like other sleep aids because they use all natural ingredients. And today I have got a very special offer for my listeners. For a limited time, you can get up to 40% off when you try my limited edition flavor. Just head to shopbeam.com slash Annie Elise where you will get an additional 40% off your first order with code ANNIEELISE. That's shopbeam.com slash Annie Elise and use code ANNIEELISE for an additional 40% off. But supplies are limited, so grab it now before it is gone,
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Starting point is 00:19:51 turned toward homicide. However, that locked door presented a very complex and bizarre situation. Because how could someone have murdered Ellen, but then locked the door from the inside, leaving absolutely no trace of them leaving, no trace of their escape. Now my initial thought, I'll be honest, when I heard this was, okay, obviously it was the fiancé, right? He had access to the apartment, she had bruises, were they new, were they old? The amount of wounds would indicate a crime of passion and possibly even overkill, right? It must have been someone close to Ellen, surely, right?
Starting point is 00:20:25 So the police took her fiance, Sam, away from the scene in handcuffs, and they questioned him some more. However, Ellen's parents told the police they had absolutely no reason to suspect her fiance. And Ellen's psychiatrist, who she had been seeing for anxiety, said that Ellen was happy in the relationship.
Starting point is 00:20:41 She had denied that any abuse ever happened in the relationship. She was happy, she was in love. They were planning their wedding. I mean, they were just happy. So as investigators went deeper into the evidence, they were faced with many conflicting signs. To start, there were no signs of forced entry or a struggle happening within the apartment. However, the brutality of how Ellen died and having that many stab wounds, it surely suggested either a frenzied murder or, what I said earlier, a crime of passion. Although the knife wounds, though severe and numerous, they didn't appear to be consistent
Starting point is 00:21:16 with a typical homicide pattern. There was also that locked door, a detail that really seemed to suggest that nobody else could have entered or left the apartment. So with no suggestion that another person had been inside the apartment at the time of her death, police at the scene suspected that the death was actually a suicide, particularly because there was a lack of defensive wounds. Also, no sign of an intruder at all ever entering. So despite there being no suicide note left behind and despite the barbaric, horrific 20 stab wounds, the crime was treated as a suicide. However, the very next day, the medical examiner reached a different conclusion. This was upon seeing just how many stab wounds there truly were.
Starting point is 00:21:58 In his report, the medical examiner classified the death as a homicide. But then, there was allegedly this secret meeting that took place. In the meeting, there were members of the ME's office, the police department, also the DA's office, and allegedly in this meeting, they had somehow convinced the medical examiner to change the manner of death to a suicide. The Philadelphia Police Department stated, quote, the death of Ellen Greenberg has not been ruled a homicide. Homicide investigators are considering the manner of death
Starting point is 00:22:28 as suspicious at this time. So nevertheless, the investigation continued. But after learning about Ellen seeing her therapist for anxiety and her being on anxiety medication, police said that they were leaning toward the determination of suicide. Her psychiatrist had prescribed her colonapin for anxiety, also ambient for sleep,
Starting point is 00:22:47 both of which medications do list suicidal ideations as possible side effects. However, nobody close to Ellen had heard her express any thoughts of harming herself, never. For five weeks, investigators went back and forth on what happened. Upon the first review, there were no suspects. Ellen was alone inside the apartment, which had been locked from the inside with that interior swing bar.
Starting point is 00:23:13 Neighbors didn't hear reporting any sort of disturbance. There was also no security footage or stolen property to suggest that there had been an intruder. And what's more were those defensive wounds or lack thereof. And in another piece of evidence, there was no DNA but Ellen's found on the knife. No DNA from anybody else found on her clothing either. So on March 3rd, armed now with more information, the medical examiner changed the death certificate to reflect that Ellen's death was in fact a suicide. As you can imagine, Ellen's family was devastated
Starting point is 00:23:44 by her death, but they were also deeply skeptical of the suicide ruling. How could their loving, kind-hearted daughter have done this to herself? The sheer number of stab wounds alone seemed absolutely implausible as a self-inflicted act. So Ellen's parents, Josh and Sandy Greenberg, began their own investigation. They were determined to find the truth behind their daughter's death. They hired private investigators, forensic experts, they even hired a renowned pathologist to review the case. The experts that they consulted were all unanimous in their findings. Ellen's wounds were inconsistent with suicide. The angle and the depth of the stab wounds,
Starting point is 00:24:23 particularly those to the back of her neck, were nearly impossible for somebody to inflict on themselves. And remember that EMS who declared Ellen as dead and mentioned how they needed to get back to the station because they knew that the homicide team would need to question them regarding the scene? Get this, they were never questioned. Which let that just sink in, the first responders, the ones who saw the scene and declared Ellen as dead, were never even questioned. Ellen's parents also uncovered new disturbing details about this investigation.
Starting point is 00:24:55 Crucial evidence, like Ellen's computer and cell phone, had not been thoroughly analyzed. Blood spatter patterns, which could have provided vital clues, were also just overlooked. The locked door, once considered definitive proof of suicide, was also re-examined, and it revealed that it could have been tampered with, or it could have even been locked after the fact. And perhaps the most glaringly obvious issue of all was that Ellen had shown absolutely no signs of mental duress leading up to her death. Yes, she had been seeking help for anxiety, but nothing indicated that she was suicidal. I had asked, like, was there a flight or anything? He said no, she was just really stressed with work. And so he left. When he came back, he said it was about a half hour later and he, you know, went to
Starting point is 00:25:46 use his key to open and he said that the door was latched. I actually had written all this down, so I just looked back, you know, through my notes to refresh my memory. So it was latched. He said that he, you know, called her, called her name, you know, thought maybe she was napping or in the shower. He said he called her mom then to see if, you know, she mentioned anything to her mom
Starting point is 00:26:11 and she hadn't heard anything. Then he said at that point he went downstairs to the front door or to the security and asked if maintenance was there and could help them get into the apartment. And they said, you know, maintenance is gone for the day. And he said the advice he was given was to use his shoulder. You know, if he's going to try to break open the door, use his shoulder.
Starting point is 00:26:39 So then he went back up and he said he used his shoulder. He said it took one, maybe two times. He doesn't didn't remember. And the force that he used swung open the door and he spun around and was facing the kitchen and saw her. And he said her, you know, her, her back and shoulders were were kind of up against the lower cabinets. And he said her little fingers were blue.
Starting point is 00:27:09 I remember him saying that her little fingers were blue. And he said he called 911 immediately and they were going to instruct him to do CPR so he moved her to the floor and at that time he saw the knife. You were questioned by the police at one point? Yeah, so the week of February 7th, I was back in town, I had been in New Orleans for work, I came back and I was asked by the homicide unit to come down to Philadelphia,
Starting point is 00:27:42 I believe it was the Ray Street location, so that they could question me, obviously, just as more of a, you know, what information could they get as a friend? And I was interviewed by there. It was the strangest feeling to be in there. So I'm like, this is not my life. What am I doing here? I remember just feeling like they were, they didn't care what I was saying.
Starting point is 00:28:06 It was almost like they were checking the box that they had me there. And at one point he even said, are you trying to point fingers here? And I said, no, I'm just answering your questions and giving you the information that I know. I'm only giving you fact. So, yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:22 Did you feel like they already had their mind made up about what happened? Yeah, yeah. Did you feel like they already had their mind made up about what happened? Yeah, yeah. This was like, oh, I have to just do this. Let me get this over with. Like I didn't feel like they were interested in what I had to say. And again, not that I wasn't there that day.
Starting point is 00:28:38 So I have no information of what happened, but I knew what he had told me and I knew who, you know, Ellen was and I knew a little bit about the apartment. I knew a little bit about their routines, but they had no interest in hearing from me. Yeah, so now records are coming out. Is there any documentation of your conversation with police? Nope. There's no police report? Right, apparently the, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:06 the last that I've heard of the 5,000 page document that lawyers have gone through, there's no report in there of my interview with police. And I know for a fact, I was there at homicide headquarters talking to Detective Harris. But there's no document. Did you see him write something down? Yes, I saw him write something down and I was there.
Starting point is 00:29:31 So whether or not he was writing, what he did with that paper, it should have still been documented that I was there. Let's also talk about the scene of the crime for a moment because new forensic evidence suggested that the scene may have been staged. Blood evidence that was found in the kitchen did not align with the official narrative. Something that I don't think is talked about enough in this case, and I could totally be
Starting point is 00:29:54 wrong, this is just my opinion and I'm not an expert, but remember how I mentioned when Ellen got home that day and she made that fruit salad whether it was for lunch or for a snack? In the crime scene photos, you can still see remnants of that fruit salad and scattered parts of it on the kitchen counter, right above Ellen's dead body. Now I understand people who are suicidal may not always be thinking rationally, but in all of the cases that I've covered, I have never seen or heard of somebody making a meal before taking their own life and not eating the meal.
Starting point is 00:30:26 So believing that Ellen committed suicide would also mean that you believe that she made herself lunch in the kitchen, chose not to eat it, and instead chose to grab a knife and stab herself 20 times. Stabbing herself in the torso, the back of her head, the neck, her spine. Such deep stab wounds too that it penetrated her brain. I mean, it doesn of her head, the neck, her spine. Such deep stab wounds too that it penetrated her brain. I mean, it doesn't really align, right? I'm not a detective, and this is me just theorizing here, guys, but doesn't that scene feel more in line with somebody either catching Ellen by surprise, or maybe even perhaps blitz-attacking her, and say, grabbing a knife because it's nearby from maybe cutting a fruit salad
Starting point is 00:31:06 and the perpetrator grabbing that as a weapon to murder her in this overkill crime of passion type of way. Which by the way, if you look at the knife that was used and that was plunged into Ellen's chest, it certainly aligns with a knife that would be used to cut this fruit salad, the one that she made for herself to eat. So was the knife conveniently on the counter
Starting point is 00:31:26 for whoever used this, or did Ellen just have a change of heart and instead of eating the snack that she had just cut up, she decided to plunge the knife into herself 20 times? Despite the growing body of evidence suggesting that Ellen could not have killed herself, authorities remained firm on their conclusion. The case was closed as a suicide, leaving the Greenbergs
Starting point is 00:31:48 in a state of just extreme frustration and anger. And for over the past decade, Ellen's parents have spearheaded their own investigation, even hiring an attorney to help them file a lawsuit against the medical examiner's office, all so that they will change the cause of death to homicide. She was afraid of pain and she was afraid of blood, so to try to accuse her of committing suicide with a serrated knife and there were straight edge wounds that were
Starting point is 00:32:17 also found, which means there may have been more than one knife involved and there may have been more than one person involved and there may have been more than one person involved in her murder but we haven't had an investigation a legitimate one so the jury's still out on what really happened to Ellen. They found two neuropathologists to review the autopsy report, also to examine the brain tissue samples from Ellen that were retained by the doctor who did the autopsy, and both of these doctors agree that the evidence shows that suicide is not even a possibility. Fast forward nearly eight years and on March 15th 2019 the Philadelphia Inquirer released a front-page investigative report
Starting point is 00:33:03 reviewing the suspicious circumstances surrounding Ellen's death. A well-known Pittsburgh forensic pathologist also reviewed the case and determined that it was, quote, strongly suspicious of homicide. They also stated, quote, I don't know how they wrote this off as a suicide. Similarly, a forensic scientist reviewed the case files and concluded, quote, The number and types of wounds and bloodstain patterns observed are consistent with a homicide scene. Now, one significant point of contention was the stab wounds that penetrated Ellen's brain. One of the doctors who examined the file wrote that the stab wounds to the brain and the spinal cord would have caused such severe pain, also cranial nerve dysfunction,
Starting point is 00:33:46 and traumatic brain injuries. The original medical report stated that a neuropathologist determined that there was no such wound, though. However, later when they were interviewed by the Philadelphia Inquirer, that same pathologist revealed that she didn't even observe Ellen's body, and she confirmed that she has no records, no bills, no invoices, no reports of any examination ever even taking place, which, how does that happen? That's a pretty big detail to miss, right? A pretty big discrepancy. As I mentioned, Ellen's parents filed a civil suit against the Philadelphia Medical Examiners Office and the pathologist who conducted the autopsy.
Starting point is 00:34:21 The suit seeks to change the manner of death, citing new information, and the fact that the doctor who did the original autopsy admitted to changing the manner of death at the insistence of the police. A new technology called photogrammetry unavailable at the time of Ellen's death also created a 3D recreation of Ellen's wounds, demonstrating that not all 20 wounds could have possibly been self-inflicted. And the circumstances and the details about Ellen's death were about to get a lot more mysterious. I love a great deal as much as the next guy, but I'm also not going to crawl through fire just to save a few bucks. It has to be like easy, no red tape.
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Starting point is 00:37:24 Get 20% off your first order of Liquid IV when you go to liquidiv.com and use code AE at checkout. That's 20% off your first order when you shop better hydration today using promo code AE at liquidiv.com. With us again this morning, Sandy and Josh. Welcome again. And their investigator, Tom Brennan, is here as well. Tom, thank you for coming in. I know it's 10 years later, but it doesn't get any easier, does it? No, it doesn't.
Starting point is 00:37:56 The pain never go away? No. No. So I've listened to this podcast about three times. They want us to believe that the initial police officers who showed up there, that your daughter stabbed herself 20 times. It's ridiculous.
Starting point is 00:38:18 Ridiculous. Josh, seriously. How could they have come to that decision in that apartment in Manny Yonk? They walk in, she's been stabbed 20 times, and they call it a suicide? This is no way. As my wife said, it's ridiculous. It's absurd. And our journey through this today, over the decade or 10 years we've been involved in
Starting point is 00:38:43 this, it's more ridiculous every day. Yeah, it seems like the case was botched from the opening day. Tom, you've been investigating crimes for years and years. Do you agree with that? Yes. If you look at the timeline from the 26th of January through the 28th of January through the 28th of January,
Starting point is 00:39:08 it totally discredits any good basic police work at all. What transpired? We'll get into how the crime scene was completely deep clean way too soon. The door was locked, right? Her door was locked from the inside. This is all what we've been told. There was never really an investigation to clearly illustrate any of this. What does that, she lived on, what floor was this on?
Starting point is 00:39:44 Sixth floor. Sixth floor. So this was the only way in or out of her apartment. Well you can go out on the balcony, but you're not gonna climb down or climb up again. Right, and there was a snowstorm that day. That's why she was home at one o'clock. And that was the only way in or out. You were up in Harrisburg at the time?
Starting point is 00:40:00 Yes. So I remember that huge snowstorm, my gosh. It was January of 2011. So you weren't able to come down right away. No. We couldn't come. We didn't get word of any of this until late into the evening. There were mounds of snow.
Starting point is 00:40:17 Snow plows hadn't come through. Who called you? The fiance's father. And I didn't know what he meant. I said you know where's the ambulance and then he said there is none. Because we won't need one and then you knew? No I didn't really. It was shock. This is not what you expect to get a call from. You have a 27-year-old daughter who's engaged to be married and living in Philadelphia with her fiance.
Starting point is 00:40:49 Had they been arguing? Not to our knowledge. And she had been to see a psychiatrist because she was having some troubles. She was having trouble at school. No, she had anxiety. Anxiety? Where was the anxiety coming from, do you know? I'm going to postulate, I guess.
Starting point is 00:41:06 There were various injuries on her body that were indicative of bruises and healing. Okay, let's go back to that. So there are bruises all over her body, and those bruises were from maybe days, weeks before she was attacked. They weren't part of that night. Were not part of that night.
Starting point is 00:41:25 Were not part of that night. So now you've got to figure out what that is all about. We are babes in the woods. We had no knowledge. If you know anything about this type of problem, it's very unlikely that the victim is going to say anything to you. And we think she was a victim.
Starting point is 00:41:45 That's part of what's going on here. Now, why in the world was the fiance's uncle allowed to go into her apartment and take Ellie's stuff, her computer and stuff like that, after the apartment was deep cleaned? So now there's no longer a crime scene. You can't get any material out of there now. This was done by a prominent attorney, Uncle, okay? And he's currently supposedly a judge
Starting point is 00:42:13 on the state attorney's disciplinary board. Now, this individual removed Ellie's cell phone, the fiance's laptop, Ellie's work laptop, and Ellie's personal laptop. So right then and there, that negates that chain of evidence, okay? That adversely impacts the chain of evidence on those on those devices so that anything that's anything that's discovered on those devices can be challenged in court. Any expert that you've hired since then, everybody that looks at this case says that Ellie was murdered. Correct.
Starting point is 00:42:57 Yes, it was a homicide. It was a homicide, except for that initial report that day that said it was a suicide. But then it went back to a a homicide then back to a suicide. I think it went from homicide to suicide to homicide. Really? Yeah. Yes. So what do we do now?
Starting point is 00:43:16 I mean, obviously it needs to be re-investigated. So we asked the Attorney General, is there anything you can do yesterday? And he wrote back in a statement, we've looked at all, no, we're not going to reopen this case as of now. He needs more evidence, he says. What is, it goes into how it's heartbreaking and all that, but he says they don't have legitimate new evidence to bring forward. It has not been brought forward yet, so we're not going to do anything.
Starting point is 00:43:43 So what can we do? I know you have a petition. Maybe if we all put enough pressure through this petition, we can get it reopened. Well, there are two things happening. Number one, there's a petition on change.org, which has over 110,000 signatures that we had nothing to do with. We don't elicit that or whatever. Number two, we are going to go to trial.
Starting point is 00:44:09 And the purpose of our trial is to get the suicide change to either undecided or homicide, which we prefer, and have the case reopened and investigated. Now that would be a non-jury trial. It happens to be a bench trial, yes. Okay, a bench trial. The Philadelphia situation with trials right now is very overloaded. You're not giving up.
Starting point is 00:44:30 No. Why is it so important to get that, get at least the determination changed from suicide to homicide? She was our daughter. Mm-hmm. I mean, what would you do? I would do the same thing you're doing. The longer this goes on, the more we uncover, the more we discover.
Starting point is 00:44:51 Just because you work for a government agency doesn't give you license to say whatever you want without facts and proving the facts. Do you think the key, the linchpin here, is what happened when they went into her apartment and took all of her stuff out? We don't know the why or the who, so don't ask us the why or the who. It should have been you two in her apartment taking her stuff. Well, theoretically, if he took... No one had permission to touch her things. Theoretically, he should have returned it to us the next day at her funeral, which he did not do. This statement by the Attorney General's office is vile.
Starting point is 00:45:33 Why do you say it's a lie? It's a lie. Can you put it up again? It's a lie. In 2020, under growing public pressure and new evidence brought forward by Ellen's family and independent experts, the case was reopened for further investigation. The decision came despite receiving a deposition from a medical expert who noted that many of the nearly 20 stab wounds showed no signs of hemorrhage. This suggested that Ellen
Starting point is 00:45:57 was not even alive when those wounds were inflicted, and that these wounds were inflicted post-mortem. Which, for you true crime sleuths, you know that if they're post-mortem. Which, for you true crime sleuths, you know that if they're post-mortem, that means that they were done after Ellen was dead, and that Ellen could not have done them. Plus, there were several other details that they believe indicated this was a homicide. If Ellen had planned on killing herself,
Starting point is 00:46:19 why had she filled up her gas tank after leaving school? She certainly wouldn't need a full tank of gas for any reason. Why had she not left a note? Why was that half finished fruit salad she made after getting home from school found on the kitchen counter above her body? And moreover, if she was intent on taking her life, why had she chosen to stab herself?
Starting point is 00:46:38 And why had she done so through her clothing, something that one expert noted as very rare in cases of suicide by stabbing. That in the rare occurrence that somebody is going to take their own life and choose stabbing as the method, that very rarely are they clothed. And that they usually do it when they are nude to ensure that it fully penetrates and that it is a fast process. Also, how would she inflict those wounds to her back, her head, and her neck? How would she have the physical strength to inflict all 20 of these wounds too and continue to inflict them even after the stab wounds that went to her head and her brain?
Starting point is 00:47:12 Which certainly would have debilitated her, right? And taking a step back, and this is just my opinion, but thinking through that, if you're stabbing yourself 20 times in the torso, the back, the head, certainly one of those is going to either strike a nerve, be so painful to where you can't continue with this frenzied attack on yourself. And they have reports suggesting that she wouldn't have been able to inflict all of these.
Starting point is 00:47:34 Not to mention the report which said that these even happened post-mortem. Not to mention the location of the wounds. 10 to the back of her neck, one in the scalp, eight times in the chest and the abdomen. Now I will say, some people out there who believe that this was in fact a suicide say, you know, stop with all the conspiracy theories, the multiple knife wounds are consistent with a suicidal person who is, you know, testing their ability to go through with it.
Starting point is 00:47:58 There's also no forensic evidence that ties Sam or anybody else to Ellen's death. There's no blood scene on Sam. There's no bloody clothing. It would be very difficult for Sam to murder Ellen, stage the scene, possibly move her body, clean everything up, and not leave any sort of evidence or DNA behind, all in a window of 30 minutes to an hour like we were talking about. Also, in a lot of the cases that we cover when there is a stabbing involved, we know that especially if it's a mass stabbing, there is a lot of blood and that typically the perpetrator's hand will slip on the blood
Starting point is 00:48:29 and they will sometimes cut themselves, whether it's on the hands, on their legs, whatever it is when they're going through that up and down motion, but there were reportedly no cuts on Sam's hands. However, if you're like me, and like a lot of other true crime people out there, there's probably still some suspicion that the fiance might have been involved. Something might still be creeping around in the back of your mind. We know that they were engaged,
Starting point is 00:48:50 and her psychiatrist and her parents said that they had no reason to suspect that she was unhappy or that there was any sort of domestic violence in the relationship. Yet according to Ellen's father, she had told her parents about a month earlier that she wanted to move home. So could there have been trouble in paradise?
Starting point is 00:49:06 The only issue that she was having is she was complaining that she had an she was overwhelmed by the workload. But that was bullshit. That was the excuse. Ellen wants to come home and we don't know why and she said that was the reason. to come home and we don't know why. And she said that was the reason. But when Ellen passed, the teacher took over her position, said everything was in perfect order with Ellen's teaching and everything and grades, everything.
Starting point is 00:49:33 So there was no problem with her responsibilities to her job. Something else was happening. And think back to those text messages that Sam had sent Ellen when she wasn't opening the door that night after he returned from the gym. It showed a slew of text messages that appeared angry. He had said, hello, open the door. What are you doing?
Starting point is 00:49:56 I'm getting pissed. Hello, you better have an excuse. What the fuck? Ah, you have no idea. Domestic violence author, advocate, and expert Barry Goldstein says that the text message You better have an excuse raises an especially concerning red flag. He says, quote, What I'm getting from their conversation is he makes the rules, and if she doesn't obey the rules, he will punish her, end quote.
Starting point is 00:50:23 He also says, That's the tone that I'm getting. And that's really the essence, of course, of control. Ellen's father told the hosts of a true crime podcast that they do know that she was abused before the attack. Further, that she had been ongoingly being abused but did not know how to tell them, didn't know how to confide in her family or friends about what was going on.
Starting point is 00:50:44 They also said that she didn't know how to ask the right questions to find out if she was a victim of domestic violence. And that takes us back to those bruises that were found on her body, the 11 bruises that were all in various stages of healing. In many domestic violence cases, we often see that abuse will escalate from emotional to verbal to physical to deadly. Another interesting detail is on January 23rd, three days before Ellen's death, her family and friends received save the date cards for her wedding. I understand things can happen on a whim and somebody may be manically depressed or suffer from anxiety and even if they sent those out that that something may change, but three days before,
Starting point is 00:51:27 they received those Save the Date cards. So I think that's also a detail just worth mentioning. Now I'm gonna go into a couple of the theories out there, because as I'm sure you can imagine, this case began to attract media attention all over, with true crime sleuths, legal experts, everybody questioning the original investigation. Could it be that Ellen was the victim of foul play crime sleuths, legal experts, everybody questioning the original investigation.
Starting point is 00:51:45 Could it be that Ellen was the victim of foul play and her death was covered up as a suicide? Or was there something even more sinister at work here? But please keep in mind these are all theories and nothing has been proven. So if she was thinking of taking her own life, would she have sent out those save the date cards? That's question number one. Her dad also said that she expressed wanting to move home and we know that she recently had started
Starting point is 00:52:08 suffering from anxiety along with those mysterious 11 bruises. Could it be that Ellen had a discussion with Sam inside their apartment that afternoon? Maybe informing him that she was leaving and perhaps that she wanted to call off the wedding? Could this have angered him? Could the reason that Ellen had no defensive wounds
Starting point is 00:52:25 be because she was blitz attacked? And could the reason that she had wounds that appeared to have happened post-mortem be because this was in fact an overkill murder? 20 stab wounds and the killer kept going after she was already dead. Something that would have been physically impossible for her to do herself according to the many experts.
Starting point is 00:52:44 Could Sam have done this and then left for the gym for 45 minutes to create some sort of alibi or a timeline of sorts to cover his tracks? The last activity on Ellen's computer was four minutes before Sam arrived at the gym in their building. Was it Ellen using the computer? Or could it have been Sam trying to access her computer to perhaps log a note, write a note of some sort?
Starting point is 00:53:07 Maybe a suicide note. Or is it possible that when Ellen locked the door from the inside it was because she was packing or maybe even going through their computer or doing something else that might anger Sam? Sparking him to send this string of overly aggressive text messages until he finally broke down the door. When he entered did he see her going through something or maybe doing something that angered him and then he blitz attacked her? That would also explain the lock being broken and those angry messages. Sam has never spoken publicly about his fiance's death and he also has not responded to previous inquiries for interviews from the media. As of now, the official cause of Ellen's death remains a
Starting point is 00:53:44 suicide, but the questions surrounding her case continue to haunt those who have studied it. And there's a whole other element to this case that I wanna talk with you guys about. Her parents never got her journal back, which I have to ask, if it's a suicide and it's not a murder investigation, why wouldn't they receive it back?
Starting point is 00:54:02 The case also saw a jurisdictional shift. Initially, it was handled by the Philadelphia Police Department and the Philadelphia Medical Examiner's Office, but the Greenberg family fought to move the case to the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office, arguing that the local authorities had a conflict of interest and had mishandled the investigation.
Starting point is 00:54:20 In 2022, the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office, which was led by then Attorney General Josh Shapiro, declined to Attorney General's Office, which was led by then-Attorney General Josh Shapiro, declined to take over the case, citing a lack of sufficient evidence to overturn the suicide ruling. This decision was met with a lot of frustration from the Greenberg family, who continued to push for an independent investigation. Now, a controversial aspect of the case involves potential political connections that some people believe may have influenced how this case was handled and why the then-Attorney
Starting point is 00:54:49 General Josh Shapiro declined to take over this case. First, Sam Goldberg's family connections. Sam Goldberg, Ellen's fiance, is reportedly related to very influential figures in Philadelphia's legal and political circles. This has led to concerns that these connections might have affected the investigation into Ellen's death. Some people also think that the Attorney General Josh's decision to not reopen the case despite the new evidence that was presented by Ellen's family might have more reason behind it.
Starting point is 00:55:20 Some people speculate that his decision might have been influenced by his ties to Sam's family. Though there's no direct evidence to prove that, I want to be clear. However, remember his cousin's father who is a lawyer and called him five minutes before Sam called 911? There's apparently a connection there. Apparently, Attorney General Josh Shapiro and Sam's uncle, James, their kids all go to school together. There's even photos of all of them together. So many are raising the question and saying, it's interesting that at 614,
Starting point is 00:55:53 Sam calls his cousin, who's a lawyer. A few minutes after that phone call, his cousin's dad, who's a lawyer, calls Sam back. They talk, then the 911 call is made. Then a friend of the lawyer family, and arguably a friend of the fiancé Sam by extension, is the attorney general, who they're begging to reopen the case, to reclassify it. He refuses, saying there's a lack of evidence, but he's friends with the fiancé's family. Certainly that is a conflict of interest, right?
Starting point is 00:56:22 Also get this, that Uncle James the lawyer was allowed into the crime scene to get Sam's suit, but then he apparently left with Ellen's computers, wallet, phone, handbag, and other items. In 2018, one of their attorneys became the DA in Philadelphia, so to avoid a conflict of interest, he sent the case to the state attorney, state attorney general, in fact, who at the time was this guy.
Starting point is 00:56:52 If he looks familiar, he should. It's Josh Shapiro, the same Josh Shapiro, who is now Pennsylvania's governor and Governor Shapiro. Back then, he too signed off on that suicide finding. Suicide! He signed off on it! Governor! But then came allegations never proven that Josh Shapiro, now governor, also had a conflict, a relationship with the family of that fiancé, Sam Goldberg. Yesterday our Brian Enton sat down with Ellen Green of that fiance, Sam Goldberg. Yesterday, our Brian Enton sat down
Starting point is 00:57:26 with Ellen Greenberg's parents, Josh and Sandy Greenberg. And here's what they said about the winding path that this case has taken and about Josh Shapiro in particular. Did it bother you that Shapiro never... It doesn't seem like he took a personal interest in your case. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:46 But we have no power. I still don't have power over him. But I wonder why he didn't. I don't, why we didn't or he- No, why he didn't. Beats me. I think, okay, I'll answer that. I think he tried to keep his hands off as much as possible
Starting point is 00:58:01 because I think deep down he knew something, this was a hot potato. He might have known other things that we didn't know also like why this is happening that we don't know. Well we emailed his office and haven't heard anything. You're not gonna hear anything. But good. Good. Ask away. It just seems like for a politician that would be something you could be proud of helping helping a case get solved, finding the truth. He didn't, he didn't.
Starting point is 00:58:28 He went that same, he went, what I'm gonna call the party line. This is a suicide. That was the party line. Every piece of this story is, I look at it in disbelief, I keep looking for alternative theories for explanations. I try.
Starting point is 00:58:46 I really do try to come up with some reasonable explanation as to how the police botched this so badly and how others after that seem to be just fine signing off on what seems comical. But Brian, I don't understand what were Ellen Greenberg's parents? Like what was the response they had when you talk to them about the fact that Sam Goldberg's judge uncle and a lawyer cousin were able to get into that apartment and leave with her laptop and her cell phone? I mean they're shocked now when they think about it. Actually at the time you
Starting point is 00:59:24 can imagine their daughter was dead. They were still trying to understand what happened. It didn't sit right with them that it was being called a suicide. They were grieving. So they were trying to process all of it. They thought it was a lockdown crime scene. They didn't know that people could just go in there. This is what they said about it. Upsetting thing to me is
Starting point is 00:59:50 the unauthorized uncle came to the building, got permission to get a suit for Sam with his son. And they came for the suit, but somehow they left with Ellen's two computers, Ellen's wallet, car keys, handbag. Cell phone. Cell phone, you know, critical electronics
Starting point is 01:00:20 that they had no business taking, they never had permission. I'm suspicious of that. So the police didn't immediately take those things? No, they waited till Saturday. Three or four days. Why? We don't know. That's a good question. Ask the Philadelphia Police Department. We never had any phone calls ever telling us what was going on. I also want to mention another bizarre story about her spine sample. Because the coroner apparently walked a few blocks through the snow with the sample in a jar, so that they could show it to the neuropathologist.
Starting point is 01:00:57 And this coroner said in that civil suit deposition that he would not have changed his ruling from homicide to suicide if he had known that the fiance Sam broke down the door himself. However, at the time the police had told him that the doorman was involved in this. And I find that very interesting because there were a lot of conflicting reports on this. Remember how Sam said he went down to the doorman trying to get him to come up to help him get into the apartment, but the doorman refused. Well apparently there's reports out there where they said that the doorman was with him, almost like he could verify that it was locked, he could vouch for him. But now the coroner said in that deposition, had I known that the doorman wasn't with him
Starting point is 01:01:38 and that Sam broke the door down himself, I definitely would not have changed the ruling from homicide to suicide." So in short, some people believe that these political connections might have played a role in the case not being thoroughly investigated. However, this all remains a matter of speculation. In July of this year, the state Supreme Court agreed to hear the family's appeal regarding the death certificate and the wrongful death and the ruling. So we will see what comes from that and if there is any movement. Tonight we're learning a legal back and forth over the death investigation of Ellen Greenberg will now go to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The 28-year-old teacher was found dead inside her maniunk apartment with 20 stab wounds in 2011. Her death was ruled a suicide,
Starting point is 01:02:21 but her parents believe she was murdered. Her family is hoping the state's highest court will help bring answers and shed light on how and why she died. It's been a long haul. Let's start with that. We're very appreciative. We don't know how to express our gratitude for this. Ellen Greenberg's parents have been fighting to have her death ruled a homicide or undecided. Her body was found with 20 stab wounds more than 13 years ago. The Philadelphia medical examiner has ruled her death a suicide.
Starting point is 01:02:53 Over 20 stab wounds, 10 in the back, 10 in the front that she had. And it was homicide. No doubt about it. Last September, a lower court wrote, while this court is acutely aware of the deeply flawed investigation of the victim's death by the City of Philadelphia Police Department Detectives, the City of Philadelphia District Attorney's Office, and the Medical Examiner's Office,
Starting point is 01:03:13 we have no choice under the law but to reverse and remand to the trial court for the entry of judgment in favor of the Medical Examiner's Office. It's just a journey that's continuously uphill and every step forward they trip us so we go back two steps. There's been no cooperation, no information, no conferences or communication or anything with the authorities. It's always she committed suicide, we can prove it,
Starting point is 01:03:46 and they can't prove it, and I can prove they can't prove it. Greenberg's family filed an appeal that has now made its way to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, the family hoping the court will now open up a path to further investigate how the 27-year-old teacher died. I would like to have an unbiased investigation led by an unbiased team with an unbiased leader and I would like to try
Starting point is 01:04:07 and get the truth. A family's long search for answers taking one step forward. The Greenbergs have filed multiple lawsuits pushing the case to be reopened and investigated as a homicide. Their determination has kept the case in the public eye ensuring that Ellen's story is not forgotten. However the mystery continues because who if anyone was responsible for Ellen's story is not forgotten. However, the mystery continues because who, if anyone was responsible for Ellen's death? Was it a botched investigation? Was it something far more nefarious and sinister? And most chillingly, I mean,
Starting point is 01:04:35 could a killer still be out there having successfully evaded justice and never got caught? Like, crime site is 2020 when we hired experts and we've read the autopsy and you find out the amount of bruising and various stages of healing, the contusions, the dried, vacuolated blood that went from her nose to her ear, which meant she had all been moved. And the amount of abuse that her body... There's a murderer and an abuser in Philadelphia somewhere, it's a bed. had all been moved. And the amount of abuse that her body... There's a murderer and an abuser in Philadelphia somewhere, in Spain.
Starting point is 01:05:08 We failed. I would accomplish something after 13 or 14 years. No one has ever gotten as far as we have with a case like this, fighting the criminal justice system, the medical examiner, and all the other things involved in this case. the medical examiner, and all the other things involved in this case. It's painful for us. I mean, it was a crushing blow to loser. But what we're doing is we're doing for Ella. Homicide detectives hate to admit it, but there is a way to get away with murder. Make it look like a suicide. And what's worse is it's almost impossible for victims' families to legally challenge a manner of death ruling by a medical examiner or a coroner.
Starting point is 01:05:48 Three ex-boyfriends came to pay their respects at the funeral, which I think was pretty amazing, considering, you know, she had moved on with her life. A lot of her friends didn't know each other necessarily before Ellen passed, but as a result of her passing, she brought a lot of people together. Do you think that Ellen took her own life or do you think that she was murdered? Let me know in the comment section or on the Q&A section on Spotify. Thank you guys so much for tuning into another episode and for hearing Ellen's story. Let's continue to hope that she does get the justice she deserves and that the truth comes to light, but I am curious to know what you guys think. Also just another reminder about those tour tickets, get them at anniealease.com on the events page and come hear one of these episodes live with me in person.
Starting point is 01:06:41 I'll be back on the mic with you Thursday for this week's Headline Highlights and then of course next Monday with an all new episode, a deep dive into a case. Guys, I don't know. We have just got so much to talk about this week, so I will be back with you very soon, but I want to know what you think about this case. All right guys, thanks again and until the next one, please stay safe.

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