On January 26, 2011, during a blizzard in Philadelphia, Ellen Greenberg decided to leave her workplace and return to her apartment in Manayunk.

On January 26, 2011, during a blizzard in Philadelphia, Ellen Greenberg decided to leave her workplace and return to her apartment in Manayunk.

Around 6:40 p.m. that same evening, Ellen tragically succumbed to twenty stab wounds, including ten inflicted on her back and neck. 

Additionally, she had eleven bruises at various stages of healing on her right arm, abdomen, and right leg. 



Despite these concerning circumstances, the Philadelphia Police Department initially classified her death as a suicide.

The Philadelphia Police Department did acknowledge that there were suspicions surrounding Ellen Greenberg's death, with homicide investigators considering it a suspicious case. 

Nevertheless, the case was officially closed as a suicide.

Ellen Greenberg was a 27-year-old elementary school teacher at Juniata Park Academy in the Juniata neighborhood of Philadelphia. She was born in New York City, New York on June 23, 1983. She lived in the Manayunk neighborhood of Philadelphia, where she shared an apartment with her fiancé.

On the day of her death, Ellen’s fiancé, Samuel Goldberg, had gone to the gym around 4:45 p.m. When he returned, he found their apartment door locked and latched from the inside. After an hour of trying to reach her, he broke down the door to find Ellen slumped in the kitchen. She had a 10-inch knife sticking out of her chest.

In the years following her death, Ellen’s family fought to have her cause of death changed. Not only had Greenberg been stabbed 20 times in the chest, back, and neck, but some of her wounds were absent of blood — suggesting that they’d been inflicted after her heart had already stopped beating. Forensic pathologist Cyril H. Wecht reviewed the case and determined it was "strongly suspicious of homicide". Similarly, forensic scientist Henry Lee concluded, "the number and types of wounds and bloodstain patterns observed are consistent with a homicide scene."

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