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Ellen Greenberg Federal Investigation: FBI Agent on Who Flips First in a Cover-Up
Description
Fifteen years after Ellen Greenberg was found with 20 stab wounds and ruled a suicide, the federal government is asking questions — not about how she died, but about who decided to call it suicide and why. Robin Dreeke, former FBI special agent and behavioral analysis expert, explains the federal methodology: how investigators build corruption cases against institutions, what makes people in the orbit of an investigation decide to cooperate, and what the medical examiner's sworn recantation of his own ruling means for everyone else who touched this case. The crime scene was professionally cleaned before homicide detectives could return. Electronic devices were removed by a politically connected family member. The ruling changed from homicide to suicide after police publicly disputed it. And Josh Shapiro's office held the case for four years before suddenly discovering a "conflict of interest" with connected families. Robin breaks down what federal investigators are looking for, who's most vulnerable to pressure, and why the complete institutional silence tells us more than any press conference could.
#EllenGreenberg #FederalInvestigation #RobinDreeke #FBI #Philadelphia #TrueCrimeToday #JusticeForEllen #CoverUp #SamGoldberg #20StabWounds
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.