A crazed killer prowling the streets of Manhattan the night before nine to eleven. It's evocative and absurd. I mean, sure, it's possible, but it's extremely unlikely, so unlikely, I'm not going to waste your time seriously considering it. In two thousand and one, there was one murder in the NYPD's first precinct, a single, non nine to eleven murder in Lower Manhattan. So the idea of a random killer murdering Sneha on September tenth, two thousand and one is ludicrous.
You might say, well, what about Sneha's quote lifestyle? If she met random people at bars, at lesbian bars? What about that? First off, Snaho was probably safer at lesbian bars than at hetero bars packed with men. And the idea of what a lesbian killer pulling off the perfect crime on the eve of nine to eleven, it's laughable. Here's Mark Boguten, Ron Liebermann's attorney, could be a victim of random violence and crazy Hillo running through or then
had in that night. Okay, and so let's sake to start, He testified at the hearing. He said, it's very rare that somebody is murdered in that fashion without a body ever turning up, And that's really what this spoils down to nobody. Remember we're talking about Manhattan, an island packed with one point six million people. A body almost certainly would have been found on land or in a river. So when considering explanations forced snayhouse disappearance, I think we
can safely cross off random act of violence. But what about a non random act of violence? What if Snayhau was killed by someone she knew, maybe even accidentally during a heated argument. From My Heart Radio, This is Missing on nine to eleven, the story of one woman who vanished on the eve of history and my quest to find her. I'm your host, John Waalzac. The NYPD, private investigators, and attorneys all focused on the idea of random violence.
You see it repeatedly in court records. Quote a random act of foul play, a random act of violence, a random act of New York City street violence that they didn't seriously consider people snaeha New as possible suspects strikes me as disingenuous. Most murdered women are killed by men they know, and most people, especially cops, private investigators, and
attorneys know that. What makes you certain that it wasn't maybe somebody she knew, like, but it wouldn't have been somebody she knew, because then that's something you can investigate. Anybody have a grudge. Was there a beef with their disagreement? Was she involved in any type of vendetta? He give was some crazy neighbor. Maybe it's a crazy neighbor upstairs that she doesn't do it, but he thought or she thought, you know, she was sending radio waves into his brain.
And then but no, if it was anybody that she knew of in her circle, or that's something you could investigate, there'd be some sign of them. And they spoke to spoke to everybody. Do you think that the NYPD really fully investigated this though, because when I looked at Detective Stark's words and court, it seemed very much like from the get go that he just assumed that Snail was a trade center victim as far as they can see from what his testimony was in the police reports that
I did. Yeah, they did all the basic stuff, and they did everything was required. They said, you do the financial records. Obviously did that public record financial records, and they spoke to everybody who knew her work and family friends. That's what else do you have? Work, family friends. They did all that, and if there had been some and they asked those people, obviously those those basic questions you just brought up. Did anybody have a grudge against her?
She involved in any type of disputes? And again, it seriously possible to some dispute that nobody knew about. So I said, maybe it was a crazy neighbor in the building, you know, I mean, that's like you I would say, that's stress clutching at straws. I mean, it's highly unlikely they there's no evidence they pursued that wasn't actually had a dispute, grudge, disagreement. I'm sure you can't rule at one hundercent craz killer. You can't rule out one hundercent.
Maybe there was some grudge, and there were grudges snayhad did have enemies, people who were not investigated as thoroughly as they would have been if nine to eleven had not occurred. What makes you so sure that it could not have been foul play at the hands of somebody that she knew. I'm sure that it's not foul play, as I am that it's not aliens, because what the detective said, bodies show up, because there has to be
some evidence. They did speak to everybody. And you say somebody she knew, somebody she knew, it's even even more likely because that would have been a trace. It would have been Yeah, she had a beef with this person, had a dispute. Oh she upset that person or that person, as they said, maybe it was a neighbor in the building, but she she was playing the radio too loud and this was a psycho and but that, but she had she had a dispute at the time, at least with
two people she knew, doctors. She did with the man who she accused of assaulting her, that was and that was a court proceeding, and he brought charges against My understanding killer. My understanding is he lived in the same building and down the killer. Come on, now, you getting no, no, no,
even more I mean than the people in court were. No. I'm not saying, but I'm saying, you know, if you're running through all the things wandering the streets in Manhattan, or you know, or somebody she's involved in a court dispute with, I'm sure the police spoke to him. I'm sure obviously the primary person to speak to. I'm sure they spoke to him. I asked retired NYPD detective Richard Stark about the possibility of murder. You don't believe foul play is even possible, though, No, I don't seen no
reason in it. I don't see. Well, in the beginning, maybe we just looked at Ron saying, because you know, it s the day of fighting. Yeah, we all auctions are opened. That he possibly did something to us. That was that was on the table too in the beginning. In the beginning, me and Ron meant about thirty times, so we were always meeting. He's always coming over to precinct, and well he's got to I just didn't see it him doing it, That's all I know. I know the
husband is always suspect number one. But no one I interviewed seriously thinks that Ron killed Snayha. Everyone described him as a gentle soul, someone stricken with grief who went to great lengths to find her. Do I think Ron is telling the truth about everything? No? But do I
think he killed Sneha? No? I don't. However, I do think the way investigators handled Ron is important because there are signs they didn't seriously investigate him, and I think that says more about the investigation than it does about Ron. Take for example, Ron's computer. Detective Stark obtained it. He did his job, but when he turned it over to the NYPD's Computer Investigation and Technology Unit or c i TU, well, they did not analyze it. Instead, it went through an
incompetent circle. Detective Stark got the computer, gave it to c I TU, it sat there, no one examined it, and Ron got it back. Any other case, this would be considered lazy, sloppy police work. But before you blame the NYPD, know that the person who chose to release the computer was actually Assistant District Attorney Linda Fairstein. If you recognize her name, it's probably from the infamous Central Park jogger case, in which Fairstein helped convict five innocent
boys of a brutal rape they did not commit. According to NYPD records, Fairstein released Ron's computer without having it analyzed because quote she thought it was not relevant and the husband needed it for work end quote. I reached out to Fairstein. She said she does remember this case. Clearly she tentatively agreed to an interview, but she flaked out. She never followed through, so I have no comment from her. If you rule out Ron, two people still stick out
to me as possible suspects. One is the doctor Sneha accused of sexually assaulting her at a bar in June two thousand and one. On September tenth, two thousand one, the day she disappeared, Sneha was in court because of this doctor, because he pressed charges against her. Remember, after telling the NYPD that this doctor assaulted her, Snayha then allegedly recanted and proceeded to harass the doctor and his wife. It's understandable then that the doctor may have been upset
with Snayha angry at her. So should we consider the doctor a suspect. Well, immediately I saw a red flag. Snayha and the doctor lived in the same apartment building on the same floor. I thought, wow, okay, maybe at some point on September tenth, Snayha went to the doctor's apartment, confronted him, and he harmed her. But here's the thing. By September tenth, Ron and Snayha had already moved to a different building in a different part of the city. By that point, they no longer lived in the same
building on the same floor as the doctor. In addition, neither the NYPD nor Ron considered the doctor a suspect. The NYP he cleared the doctor. The final person I considered was Snayhu's younger brother, John, for four key reasons. First, John lived at eighty eight Greenwich Street, only five minutes from Century twenty one, where Snayhaw was last seen alive. In fact, when Ron came home the night of nine ten to an empty apartment, that's where he thought she
was at John's apartment. Second, John lied multiple times, most notably to WABC. He made up a story saying he spoke to snayha on nine to eleven while she was in the towers helping people. Later he admitted that was a lie. John also said multiple times that Detective Stark did not interview him, but I obtained NYPD records proving that Detective Stark did interview John by phone on September
twenty nine, two thousand and one, so another lie. Third, when snay Haaw disappeared and John Ron bad terms Ron testified in court that day had been fighting fourth. When questioned about when he last saw or spoke to Snayhaw, John gave multiple conflicting answers. On September twenty ninth, two thousand and one, he told Detective Stark that he last
spoke to Snayhaw six weeks prior, around August eighteenth. Later, in court, he testified that he last saw and or spoke to Snayha two and a half weeks before nine to eleven, around August twenty fifth, and John told me, yes, I interviewed him that he last saw Snayha eight or nine days before nine to eleven, around September two or third, August eighteenth, August twenty fifth, September second or third, So yeah,
I was suspicious. I am suspicious. John lived only five minutes from Century twenty one, where Snayha was last seen alive. He lied about speaking to Snayha on nine to eleven, He lied about not speaking to Detective Stark. He and Snayha were fighting before she disappeared, and he gave multiple conflicting answers about when he last saw and or spoke to Snayha. According to Hugo Kogia's Newsday article, which ran on September twenty six, two thousand and one, Snayha emailed
her mom and John right before she disappeared. I don't know what she said in the emails or why her family never mentioned them again after September two thousand and one. Initially, John did not respond to multiple interview requests, but on my second to last night in New York reporting this story, he agreed to meet me the next day an hour north of the city at a cafe. We spoke for nearly four hours. John didn't allow me to record our conversation,
but I did take copious notes. Our interview took place in public, and it was observed by our assistant producer, Chris, sitting across from me in a wingback chair in a cafe in the midst of COVID. John describes Snayhu's disappearance and everything that followed as a mind fuck. The last twenty years have been extremely painful and exhausting for his family. He said. He loves snay Haw, he misses her. She never got to meet John's son, who was born after
nine to eleven. Snay Haw, he said, was quote the most sophisticated woman I've ever known, empathetic, approachable, authentic, social, charming, quick, witty, dynamic, confident, ambitious and very brave, so smart it was intimidating. She was a progressive feminist who supported the LGBTQ community. When I asked if she identified as a member of the LGBTQ community, he deflected, joked about card carrying, then said
to his knowledge that no, she didn't. He showed me photos of Snayha as a child there she was a happy kid at Disney World. He also showed me her date book from nineteen ninety to ninety one. I asked if she kept a journal in two thousand and one. He said no. I asked if he still has emails from back then, emails from Snayha. Again, he said no. During our conversation, John said multiple times that the turning point in Snayha's life was the alleged sexual assault in
June two thousand and one, the bar incident. NYPD records showed that Snayha recanted five days after filing an official complaint. Not true, John's said. Snayhow was assaulted, he said, by a fellow doctor, a colleague at Cabrini Medical Center. Before the bar incident, snay Haw was okay He said she was doing well. She was happy. After she was depressed, she started drinking more. John believes that had the bar
incident not occurred, Snayhow would still be alive. It's why Snayha lost her job, he said, Why Cabrini retaliated against her, Why she moved to a new apartment near the Trade Center right before nine to eleven, Why she died. But there's a problem with John's story. It's not accurate. See Cabrini decided not to renew Snayha's contract in May two thousand one, one month before the bar incident. In June two thousand one, John described himself as deeply spiritual and
said he seeks out simplicity. He loves music and plays the piano. He told me that Snayhaw, six years older than him, was like a second mother. In the summer of two thousand, John moved to eighty eight Greenwich Street, near the Trade Center. His apartment had a wrap around balcony at the corner of Washington and Rector Quote, a view to die for a view of the towers. He was young and happy and entrepreneur. He felt alive. Snayhow
used to come over all the time, He said. She would tell him about cancer patients she befriended, and she John and Ron would dine and drink and talk and live. John and Ron were close. They still are. John refers to Ron as his brother. In fact, they spoke earlier that day before our interview, he said. John told me that the last time he saw Snayhaw was eight or nine days before nine to eleven, September second or third.
He went over to her apartment. She was happy to see him, but he could tell she was still struggling. That night, Snayhawk, John and John's girlfriend went to dinner at Mustang Sally's, he said, near f I t the Fashion Institute of Technology. What did they do after dinner? John said, quote, I don't want to talk about it. I asked if he ever spoke to Snayha again. He said no. Today. John is forty five. On nine to eleven, he was twenty five at the time. He worked from
home running an advertising and marketing company. He remembers September tenth, two thousand and one, as a beautiful day and said the weather was incredible, but that's not accurate. On nine ten, It's thunderstormed for about six hours when I asked John if it rained on nine ten. He said no. Before you read too much into this, just remember whatever happened to Snayha. John lost his sister. Two skyscrapers near his apartment apsed, killing nearly three thousand people, and the world
his world turned upside down. John remembers dining on his terrace the night of nine ten. He barbecued on a grill outside. He said, I asked twice about nine ten. The first time, John told me about dinner on his terrace, about barbecuing, but he didn't mention anyone being with him. The second time, he told me that his girlfriend was there, that they barbecued together, and that she left his apartment around one am on nine eleven. At that point, he said,
he went to sleep. The next morning, he awoke to a boom American Flight eleven hitting the North Tower. At the same time, his alarm clock went off and Howard Stern came on. John heard sirens. He went out onto his terrace. He watched as debris and people tumbled out of the towers. He went inside, turn on a TV and tried to turn on a video camera, but the battery was dead. Fifteen minutes later, the second plane flew
right over him into the South Tower. At nine fifty nine am, when the South Tower collapsed, John was outside on his terrace. He saw quote a volcano coming at me. First he was a statue. Then he ran back into his apartment. Really, the debris cloud threw him into the apartment. He was engulfed in quote, this black smog of nothingness. The sound was overwhelming, so too was the smoke. He coughed and hacked and choked. He crawled into the hallway
and lay against his front door. A neighbor who saw him guided him to an elevator and down to the basement, which had a gym and communal computers. John got on a computer and spoke briefly with his mom ONSU. He said he was okay. Security wanted residence to stay in the basement, but John ig north and went back up to his apartment. He's not sure if that was before or after the second tower fell. He thinks In the apartment, John gathered stuff, including covered business cards. He took a shower,
went back downstairs, and someone gave him a mask. He managed to evacuate Lower Manhattan on a tugboat, which dropped him off at thirty first Street. That afternoon, he walked down Second Avenue to a fireman's bar and had a few drinks. He knew the area he used to live there, so he went to his old apartment and met up with friends. The whole time he had a really bad sound in his ear, like a concussion. The rest of nine to eleven was chaos and confusion. It was surreal.
John couldn't reach anyone in his family until the next morning. On nine twelve, when it became clear that Sneha was still missing, John joined the search for her. That night, he lied on w ABC saying that he spoke to Snaha the day before while she was in the towers. I asked John why he lied. He said he wanted to get Snayha on TV to help find her. I asked whose idea it was to make up a story his or Ron's, because in two thousand and one, Ron
took responsibility telling twenty twenty quote. I called John on the phone and I said, don't mention anything about Monday. Just say she's missing and we're worried, and that should be enough to get her on TV. But John said no, it was not Ron's idea. It was his idea. About a week after nine to eleven, John returned to his apartment to get stuff. A few weeks after that, he moved back into the apartment, but he stayed only three days then left for good. Living there he said, was
like watching a graveyard. I asked John about the NYPD. He looked me in the eye and said, quote, they never even spoke with me. I asked him about the story. He told Detective Stark that shortly before nine to eleven, he walked in on snay haa having sex with his girlfriend. He said it was false. I asked why Detective Stark would just make it up. He said, no idea. The thing is, I know John spoke with Detective Stark. I have a record proving that he did so. I watched
him very closely when he lied to me. I watched his eyes, and then I kept asking questions. One major unanswered question is whether or not snay Ha had a cell phone. Detective Stark thinks that she did, so does John. He also thinks she had a pager, raising the question if Snayha had a cell phone, if she had a pager, why Didnity and YPD examine her phone, her pager, her call records nine to eleven. Obviously and understandably traumatized John.
He still has nightmares. He told me that he did consider the possibility that someone murdered Snayha, but he thinks it's unlikely. He also considered the idea that Sneha ran away, but he dismissed it, saying it was quote asinine. John is really upset with how the media handled Snayha's story. He called a prominent New York magazine article about her case, which ran in two thousand and six, quote butchery. After that,
he said, the family stopped cooperating with reporters. He's upset that news coverage focused on Snayha's problems and not at all on the complex, beautiful woman he knew his sister, the human being. Tabloid coverage was especially hurtful. He said the fact that Snayha visited lesbian bars was overhyped and sensationalized. John told me that he has seen YouTube videos theorizing about what happened to Snayha. He's unsure though, if his son,
now a teenager, has seen them. He doesn't know how his son would react to sensational coverage of an aunt he never met. Overall, I found John forthcoming except about two things. One, the last time he saw Snayha. When I asked what he Snayha and his girlfriend did after dinner that night eight or nine days before nine to eleven, he clammed up. He said he didn't want to talk about it. And Two, his experience on September tenth, the day Snayha disappeared. When I asked twice about nine ten,
he seemed thrown off. The second time I brought it up, he told me that his girlfriend was with him that night until about one am on eleven. I think John's girlfriend now is ex girlfriend is indispensable. She's the key witness. But I was unable to reach her. So where does that leave us as we consider foul play, as we consider whether or not someone snahad knew may have killed her. To me, it all goes back to a lack of
a body. Without a body, it's illogical to think Snaha was murdered by anyone, either a random crazed killer or someone she knew. As for John, I don't think he's telling the truth about September tenth. I wonder strongly whether or not he saw Snaha that night, whether or not she went to his apartment after century twenty one. But even if he did, even if she did, that does not mean he killed her. There's zero evidence of foul play. And let me point out strongly that even if someone lies,
you don't necessarily know why. There are a million reasons why people lie that do not involve murder. Snay Haw's family understandably wants people to remember her in a positive light, not in a dark fog of mental illness, substance abuse, affairs, and conspiracies. They want people to remember snay Haw the hero who rushed into burning towers on nine to eleven.
Her family loves her. She loved them, especially her mom a zoo, and that's why they do not believe one of the other pervasive theories about snayhouse disappearance that she used nine to eleven as cover to run away to start a new life. She wouldn't do that to them. It could not have been snay Ha who mailed a postcard of the burning towers with the message, everyone who knew me before nine to eleven believes I'm dead. Next time on missing on nine to eleven, How does somebody
just get a new passport? Noid that quick and just disappear, but she planned it. Homework this week. One, I'd like to speak to John's ex girlfriend. Two I'd like to speak to Snayhaw's friend Tony. Three did you live at eighty eight Greenwich Street on nine eleven? Four? Did you know Snayha in Italy in the nineties? Do you have any of her paintings? If so, you can reach us
by phone at one eight three three new tips. That's one eight three three six three nine eight four seven seven Again one eight three three six three nine eight four seven seven, or you can reach us via email at tips at iHeartMedia dot com. That's tips tips at iHeartMedia dot com. Ben Bowen is our executive producer, Paul Decan is our supervising producer, Chris Brown is our assistant producer,
Seth Nicholas Johnson is our producer. Sam T. Garden is our research assistant, and I'm your host and executive producer John Walzack. Cover art by Pam Peacock. Special thanks to Tamika Campbell at iHeart and to Christoph Zappri in New Orleans. Also thank you to Mark bogutin, Detective Richard Stark, John Philip and ASoP Rock. Original theme music by ASoP Rock.
Check out asop's website at ASoP rock dot com. You can find me on Twitter at at john wallzac j O n w A l c z a K. If you like this show, check out our first season, Missing in Alaska, about the nineteen seventy two disappearance of two congressmen. Missing on nine to eleven is a co production of iHeartRadio and Greenfork Media
