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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Ugh, I hate this story so much. I'm so sure he killed her. [/quote] It’s a super sad story. Take a look at the actual evidence and you won’t be sure he killed her. [/quote] 1. How did Sam break down the door (as he claimed), without breaking the lock per the crime scene photos? 2. He claims he returned from the gym at 6pm but only texted Ellen for 20 minutes trying to get her to open the door. He didn't break the door down until 6:40 (according to him) - where was he the rest of the time? 3. There is zero evidence he actually went to the gym as he claimed - no video footage and no witnesses 4. Some of her wounds barely bled at all, indicating they were inflicted post mortem and the blood spatter is consistent with suicide as well. [/quote] Summary of evidence and ME report: 1. Ellen suffered “severe” anxiety over her first-grade teaching job at the time of her death. She was being treated by a psychiatrist for approximately two months. Bottles for alprazolam, clonazepam, and zolpidem prescribed to Ellen were recovered from a bedside table on the evening of her death. 2. While calling the “distribution of the 23 stab wounds admittedly unusual,” Ellen would be capable of self-inflicting all these injuries -- even those to the back of her head and neck, the report concluded. 3. least 8 shallow stab wounds “would best be categorized as hesitation wounds” – an indication of suicide by stabbing. The review identified at least three more of this type of wound, upping the total number of stab wounds Ellen sustained from 20 to 23. 4. Ellen sustained no defensive injuries, which are a tell-tale sign of being attacked by an assailant. The 31 contusions or bruises found on Ellen’s body aren’t consistent with “intentional infliction by another.” Most of the bruises were in the process of healing. Their distribution is consistent with “incidental contact sustained during activities of daily living, including her work as a first-grade teacher,” the report concluded. 5.There was no evidence to indicate Ellen was incapacitated or incapable of defending herself, something that would explain the noted lack of defensive wounds. 6.The DNA of Ellen’s live-in fiancé, Sam Goldberg, wasn’t detected on the knife used to inflict her injuries. 7. Goldberg’s self-reported timeline of events on the afternoon and evening of Ellen’s death is corroborated by phone logs, text messages, surveillance footage, keycard swipes and police interviews. 8.There’s no evidence Ellen was in an abusive relationship with Goldberg. A review of their text messages showed the two were often separated due to his work travel. There were no texts where Ellen mentioned hostility or mistreatment, and she never expressed fearing him, the report states. 9. There was no evidence of a third party being in the apartment on the day of Ellen’s death, nor was anyone else’s DNA detected on the knife used to stab Ellen to death. 10. No findings of a struggle were present at the scene.[/quote]
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