• Ellen Greenberg 'suicide': Pennsylvania court hears arguments in family

    From Philly Cheese Stank@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 12 14:52:55 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, pa.politics, alt.law-enforcement.corruption XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Which Philly nigger did it?

    Ellen Greenberg was found with 20 stab wounds, half of them to
    the back of her head, and a Philadelphia pathologist determined
    it to be a suicide

    For more than a decade, the family of a woman stabbed 20 times —
    including 10 from behind — has battled to have the Philadelphia
    medical examiner’s ruling that her death was a suicide
    overturned.

    Ellen Greenberg, a 27-year-old teacher, was found covered in
    bruises and stabbed to death in her apartment during a blizzard
    more than a decade ago. Despite the blood-soaked crime scene,
    evidence her body had been moved and stab wounds to the back of
    her skull, investigators found "no evidence of a struggle in the
    kitchen area or anywhere else in the apartment."

    Dr. Marlon Osbourne, a former pathologist at the Medical
    Examiner’s Office in Philadelphia, initially ruled the death a
    homicide, based on the injuries, then backtracked and revised
    the manner of death to suicide after conferring with city
    police, according to a civil lawsuit from Greenberg’s family.

    An appeals court heard arguments in a civil lawsuit this week
    and will decide whether it can move to trial.

    Lawyers on both sides of the appeal made their cases before a
    three-member panel of the Commonwealth court Tuesday, Joe
    Podraza, an attorney for Greenberg’s parents, told Fox News
    Digital.

    "We are cautiously optimistic that the panel will find the
    estate of Ellen Greenberg may proceed to trial on her mandamus
    and declatory actions against the City (of Philadelphia) and Dr.
    Osbourne so that the manner of her death may be changed from
    suicide to something else," he said. "Only then can we begin to
    secure justice for Ellen."

    He said he expects the panel to reach a decision in the next
    three to six months.

    "[The] judges were well-prepared and versed about the issues,"
    he said. "The judges also displayed the proper degree of
    sympathy over Ellen’s death and the terrible circumstances
    surrounding her death."

    Greenberg’s fiancé Sam Goldberg called police on Jan. 26, 2011,
    to report coming home to find her dead in the kitchen of their
    Philadelphia apartment, according to court documents.

    According to Podraza, evidence shows that at least two of the 20
    stab wounds were inflicted after Greenberg’s heart stopped
    beating.

    Multiple investigators who reviewed the case told Fox News
    Digital they disagree with Osbourne’s findings.

    "I was startled by the amount of questions that remained," Guy
    D’Andrea, a former homicide prosecutor with the Philadelphia
    District Attorney’s Office, told Fox News Digital in September.

    Before leaving the DA’s office, D’Andrea performed a review of
    the case and said he believed "at a minimum" the cause of death
    should have been "undetermined."

    "Reviewing the file and the crime scene photographs and the
    medical examiner’s photographs, I don’t know how you come to
    that conclusion (of suicide)," he said.

    Four key pieces of evidence caused him to doubt Osbourne’s
    finding of suicide, he said. A wound to the top of her head, the
    fact that she was found seated upright, but blood had dripped
    sideways across her face — indicating that she had been moved —
    a large amount of bruises at different stages of healing, and
    the fiance’s claim that he broke the locked door down when crime
    scene photos show the latch still attached to both the door and
    the frame.

    Several forensic pathologists, including Dr. Cyril Wecht, one of
    the country’s leading experts in the field, reviewed Dr.
    Osbourne’s findings over the years and found the circumstances
    "strongly suspicious of homicide."

    "In all my years of experience, and all of the homicides that
    I’ve done, and suicides, I’ve never seen anything like this," he
    told Fox News Digital earlier this year.

    But city officials maintain a comprehensive investigation found
    no evidence of homicide.

    Separately, after referrals back and forth regarding the case
    between the Philadelphia district attorney’s office and the
    state attorney general, the Chester County district attorney’s
    office has assigned an investigator and a prosecutor to conduct
    an outside investigation into Greenberg’s manner of death.

    "We will have to wait for the Chester DA’s response to know the
    next steps," Podraza said of those proceedings. "If she finds a
    basis to proceed with a homicide investigation, we will have to
    see if her office keeps it, it goes back to [Philadelphia
    District Attorney Larry] Krasner, or a special prosecutor is
    assigned."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/ellen-greenberg-suicide-pennsylvania- court-hears-arguments-familys-bid-overrule-medical-examiner

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