3.9 • 7.6K Ratings
🗓️ 5 August 2024
⏱️ 41 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Ellen Greenberg is a first-grade teacher in Philadelphia. At 27-years-old she and longtime boyfriend Sam Goldberg have just sent out "save the date" cards for their upcoming wedding. A blizzard is bearing down on Philadelphia and school has dismissed everyone early. Home with her fiancé, Sam Goldberg leaves around 4:45 pm to work out in the apartment complex gym. When Sam arrives back less than an hour later, the door is locked from the inside.
Over the next 20 plus minutes, Sam pounds on the door, texts, and calls Ellen, but she doesn't reply. He breaks down the door at 6:33 pm. He finds Ellen on the floor of the kitchen, stabbed 20 times in the chest, neck, and head. As he is on the phone with 911, they ask him to perform CPR, and he tells them there is a knife still stuck in her chest. First responders arrive within minutes and Ellen is pronounced dead at 6:40 pm.
Police investigate. Initially, the medical examiner declares Ellen's death as a homicide, but later after meeting with police, that finding is changed to suicide. Ever since the day the medical examiner changed the manner of death from homicide to suicide without any explanation, Ellen Greenberg's parents, Josh and Sandee Greenberg, have fought to have the ruling changed. Josh and Sandee Greenberg file a lawsuit against the city of Philadelphia, seeking to have the manner of Ellen's death changed back to homicide, or at least, undetermined, but the suit grinds to a halt when the Commonwealth Court rules against Josh and Sandee Greenberg. In the ruling, the judges acknowledged that the investigation of Ellen Greenberg's death was a “deeply flawed investigation” by the Philadelphia Police, the District Attorney’s Office and the Medical Examiner’s Office. But none of that matters because the court says Josh and Sandee Greenberg don't have standing in the case. Attorney Joseph Podraza says they will take the case to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court is now going to hear the Greenberg's case saying it will consider whether “executors and administrators of an estate have standing to challenge an erroneous finding recorded on the decedent’s death certificate where that finding constitutes a bar or material impediment to recovery of victim’s compensation, restitution or for wrongful death, as well as private criminal complaints.”
Joining Nancy Grace Today:
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0:00.0 | Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. |
0:05.0 | Bomb-Sell, a beautiful young bride to be stabbed 20 times including in her back, the back of her neck, actually |
0:19.0 | sneaking the dura of her spinal cord, the back of her head, the top of her head, |
0:25.0 | all over her body. |
0:28.0 | It was ruled a suicide? |
0:31.0 | A bombshell in that case and tonight her family breaking their |
0:37.5 | silence. I'm Nancy Grace this is crime stories thank you for being with us. |
0:42.6 | The FBI is a firm 842 who's |
0:48.0 | the judge. |
0:49.0 | My wife, she answered on the floor with blood everywhere. How she stabbed herself? |
0:56.0 | She stabbed herself. |
0:57.0 | There's a night speaking out of her heart. |
0:59.0 | How did he know immediately that Ellen stabbed herself? |
1:05.0 | Because I would never think that my husband stabbed himself. |
1:09.0 | I just wouldn't believe that. |
1:10.5 | So what was on the crime scene that suggested a suicide. |
1:15.0 | Now, hold on, hold on. |
1:17.0 | I don't want to put the cart before the horse. |
1:19.0 | I want to listen to that 911 call because as many of you know there's nothing like a 911 call |
1:29.0 | why is it significant why is it critical Because that is the most probative, in other words, proves something, evidence that I know of. |
1:40.0 | Because it takes a jury or a listener, such as ourselves, |
1:44.3 | back to the moment the crime is discovered. |
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