Ellen Greenberg Case Takes Major Turn as Family Wins Settlement, Ex-Pathologist Admits Suicide Ruling Was Wrong A long-awaited breakthrough in the 14-year battle for justice in Ellen Greenbergâs death arrived in a Philadelphia courtroom Monday, as her parents, Joshua and Sandee Greenberg, reached a settlement with the city that will result in an expedited review of their daughter's controversial suicide ruling. The Greenbergs, who have fought tirelessly to prove their daughter was murdered, agreed to drop lawsuits against former Philadelphia Chief Medical Examiner Sam Gulino and Homicide Det. John McNamee. Their lawsuit alleged that the officials conspired to cover up evidence that Ellen was the victim of homicide. The settlement also halts a separate case that was scheduled for arguments before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in early 2025. âThis is a step forward to bring in the people to justice who are responsible for this homicide,â said Joe Podraza, the familyâs attorney. âWeâd like to find out who the murderer or murderers of Ellen are.â The City of Philadelphia will pay an undisclosed sum to the Greenbergs in July, but monetary compensation was never the goal for Joshua Greenberg. âThere is nobody in the world who can say Ellen committed suicide, and thatâs the most important thing,â he said. âI donât care about the money. I wanted Ellenâs suicide taken care of.â His confidence comes from a key development: a sworn admission from former Philadelphia pathologist Dr. Marlon Osbourne, the man who initially performed Ellenâs autopsy. Osbourne originally ruled Ellenâs death a homicide before changing it to suicide after discussions with Philadelphia homicide detectives and medical examiners. Now, he admits he was wrong. A Stunning Reversal in Ellenâs Case In a legal document signed Saturday, Osbourne outlined the evidence that led him to reconsider his stance. His reversal confirms what the Greenbergs' independent investigation has long suggestedâthat Ellen Greenberg was murdered. The Greenbergsâ private investigator, retired Pennsylvania State Police Detective Tom Brennan, uncovered major inconsistencies in the case, including: New witness statements disputing whether Ellenâs fiancĂ©, Sam Goldberg, actually forced entry into their apartment. Evidence suggesting Ellenâs body was moved after she died, contradicting the crime sceneâs initial assessment. A neuropathological evaluation confirming no hemorrhaging in a critical knife wound to Ellenâs spinal cord, indicating she was already dead when the wound was inflicted. Despite these findings, the Philadelphia Medical Examinerâs Office has not yet committed to changing Ellenâs cause of death. Instead, theyâve agreed to conduct a new reviewâone the Greenbergs hope will officially overturn the suicide ruling A Flawed Investigation From the Start From the moment Ellen was found stabbed to death in her apartment on January 26, 2011, her case has been plagued with investigative failures. Ellenâs fiancĂ©, Sam Goldberg, claimed he returned from the gym to find their apartment door locked from the inside. After allegedly forcing entry, he said he discovered Ellen slumped against the kitchen cabinets, with a knife still lodged in her chest. During his 911 call, Goldberg repeatedly insisted that Ellen had âstabbed herself.â Philadelphia police and the medical examinerâs office quickly accepted that explanation, ruling her death a suicide despite the glaring improbability of someone stabbing themselves 20 timesâincluding wounds to the back of the head and neck. Perhaps the most egregious failure came when detectives left the crime scene unsecured. The next day, the apartment was professionally cleaned before a proper forensic investigation could take place.
Ellen Greenberg Case Takes Major Turn as Family Wins Settlement, Ex-Pathologist Admits Suicide Ruling Was Wrong A long-awaited breakthrough in the 14-year battle for justice in Ellen Greenbergâs death arrived in a Philadelphia courtroom Monday, as her parents, Joshua and Sandee Greenberg, reached a settlement with the city that will result in an expedited review of their daughter's controversial suicide ruling. The Greenbergs, who have fought tirelessly to prove their daughter was murdered, a...