Geetha Angara Pt. Two - podcast episode cover

Geetha Angara Pt. Two

Apr 25, 202446 min
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Episode description

February 8, 2005. Totowa, New Jersey. 43-year old chemist Geetha Angara shows up to work her shift at the Passaic Valley Water Commission treatment facility, but turns up missing. The following day, Geetha’s body is discovered inside one of the facility’s water tanks and her cause of death is determined to be drowning. A number of bruises on Geetha’s neck and body suggest that she got into a violent struggle before she was placed in the tank, so her case is classified as a homicide. While police investigate a number of Geetha’s co-workers, the killer is never identified. Who was responsible for murdering Geetha Angara and what was their motive? Or could her death have actually been a tragic accident caused by negligence? On this week’s episode of “The Path Went Chilly”, we explore an horrific unexplained death which has stymied the authorities for over 15 years.

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Additional Reading:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geetha_Angara_homicide

https://www.nj.com/news/2015/02/from_the_archives_accident_or_murder_former_invest.html

https://www.nj.com/news/2015/02/death_in_the_water_tank_nightmarish_case_remains_u.htm

lhttps://www.nj.com/news/2015/02/from_the_archives_at_plant_a_chilling_idea_killer.htmlhttps://www.nj.com/news/2015/02/from_the_archives_state_to_take_up_probe_in_death.html

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2005-jun-12-na-drown12-story.html

https://people.com/archive/a-killer-among-us-vol-65-no-11/

https://nypost.com/2006/02/06/zeroing-in-on-n-j-chemists-killer-3-suspects-eyed-1-yr-after-water-plant-slay/

https://nypost.com/2006/05/01/murder-may-be-mishap-scientist-might-have-fallen-into-tank/

Transcript

Welcome back to the Path Went Chile for part two of our series about the unexplained death of Gita Angara. Robin, do you want to catch everyone up of what we talked about in our previous episode? Well, our victim here is Geeta Angara, a forty three year old chemist who originally hailed from India.

She graduated top of her class at Loyola College, and after emigrating to the United States with her husband, she had three kids and got a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in chemistry and then got a job at the treatment

facility for the Passaic Valley Water Commission in New Jersey. She had a high position as senior or chemist, seemed to be well liked in her position, though apparently there was some resentment from a few people who did not like a female immigrant having a higher position than them, though it doesn't sound like it

led to any serious problems. But one day at work, Gita went down into the basement for what should have been a routine assignment, but she never returned and no one could find her, and she was eventually reported missing. And then they discovered that because a panel on one of the floors in the

basement had been tampered with. They looked into it and found a water tank which contained some of Gita's personal items, and it would later turn out that her body floated to another tank and that her exact cause of death was drowning. However, because she has bruised on her body, it seemed apparent that someone had assaulted her and attempted to strangle her and probably unscrewed the panel, put her body into the tank and then screwed the panel back on to cover

up what they did. There was a Scottish expert on drowning who looked at the possibility that Guta's death could have been an accident, that maybe someone left the panel open and she was walking through the basement and fell through, and then later on someone went back and screwed the panel back on in order to cover up what she had done. But the vast majority of people, including DA's family, believed that she was the victim of a homicide and that she

was killed intentionally. Obviously, because of this security surrounding the plant, it meant that one of her co workers had to be the killer, and they determined that there were fifty employees working on the day that she went missing. They did it eventually narrow things down to three suspects, but a couple of years later they suddenly said, well, we couldn't find any evidence on them, and now we no longer believe that they were responsible. So it sounds

like the investigation is right back to square one. And even though it seems obvious she was killed by someone who was at the plant that day, they just don't have any evidence to conclusively implicate anyone, and the motive for the

crime is still a mystery. So if you're an unsolved mystery span, you might have noticed that this story is very reminiscent of the suspicion death of Dave Box, which was featured on the show, as well as an episode of The Trail Went Cold and an entire season of the long form investigative podcast Accused.

In both of these cases, an employee disappeared during the middle of their shift at a large plant and was not reported missing for a long period of time before the victim or what was left to them, was discovered on company grounds. In one case, it was a uranium processing furnace and in the other it was a water tank, but no matter the circumstances of how they died, you could only hope the victim was not conscious when they found themselves

in that position. Now, Dave Box was working the graveyard shift and died inside a building which was not being used at that particular time of night, so if it was a homicide, you can understand how someone could have gotten away with it. However, Geta Angara's death was a lot more brazen since it apparently took place in an open corridor during the morning hours, so the perpetrator got extremely lucky that no one else happened to come by while this was

going on. While a suicide has been explored as a potential explanation in the Dave Box case, no one has ever considered that possibility in Geeta's case, because if she jumped into the water tank voluntarily, it obviously would have been impossible for her to slide the panel back in place behind her. Theoretically, that detail should have eliminated all possibility of her death being an accident as well, But this has actually been presented as a potential explanation, and we'll talk

more about that later on. Now. Dave Box's story has always had a major conspiracy vibe surrounding it, because in the months following his death, his plan experienced a major scandal once it became public knowledge that they have been causing radioactive contamination in the surrounding community. So one of the most prominent theories is that Dave was murdered because he was threatening to blow the whistle on the plant's

unsafe practices. This has been presented as a potential theory in Gheta's case as well, but it's unclear what she could have stumbled upon that put her life in danger. During this time period, the water facility was in the midst of an expensive project to transition from chlorine to an ozone disinfectant system. But while this wasn't a popular decision with all the employees, it was hardly scandalous,

believe it or not. One of the most ridiculous theories which has been pushed forward is that the New Jersey Mob was angry about the Water Commission's decision to switch to ozone treatment because it would curtail what their contractors were doing, so as a result, the mob decided to order a hit on Geita. Well, that theory makes no sense whatsoever, because Guita was a chemist who had no authority to make big decisions like that. So I don't see how

murdering her would change anything. No, I'm going to go ahead and let everyone know the mob didn't hire anyone to kill her. That is a pure conspiracy theory kind of sounding idea. But when you do think about what was going on at the plant, it is very clear that Gita stands out out amongst the other employees. She's incredibly educated, she immigrated to America. She is one of the only women likely at this plant, and she's in a

place of a supervisory role. And so when there's issues at the plant, she's the one who's calling employees in. She's the one asked to retrain them, she's the one offering disciplinary actions and things like that when they need to happen. And so she's already a target there. She's confirmed that with her husband. She said there's tension in the workplace when they talk about it being

an accident. Could it have been? There is a possibility, right, It makes sense if she accidentally fell in and someone later came after she had already passed away or was unconscious, they could have screwed that plate back on the same could have happened if she was a suicidal individual, I assume, because she could have been deceased and someone walks in and finds that plate move. But it makes so much more sense that someone wanted her gone. They

didn't lie like the position she was in. They didn't like the way she had authority over them, they felt insecure, they didn't like her as a racial minority, they didn't like her as a woman. We know those things were active. So then when you have her death and then her body recovered thirty two hours later, especially with the bruising, it feels like we're pointing

more towards foul play. In my opinion, it feels like it could have been something as simple as Gita was going to collect this water sample and she ran into somebody and maybe had a few words with that person, maybe implying that they were doing something wrong, or that is how they interpreted it, and they didn't like it coming from her, and that it was an impulsive

crime of passion rather than something that was pre planned. I mean, the beaker was broken there, obviously, if she was killed, there was not some other weapon, Like we didn't see any blunt force injuries. So if she was strangled and then put in a water tank. It was likely that somebody just lost their temper, and who knows if it was from some kind of verbal exchange or just something that had been building and maybe at that moment

just seeing her face was enough for this person to snap. I really don't get the sense that there's a massive conspiracy surrounding Gyda's death, and the crime may have been more personal in nature. This case is pretty unique in that it seems to be pretty solvable, yet at the same time, it's also an investigator's worst nightmare. By the sound of things, the exterior security at the plant was pretty strong and it would have been very difficult for an outside

intruder to sneak into the facility and commit this crime. This means that the perpetrator had to be one of Gita's coworkers who was on shift that day. So there's a pool of fifty potential suspects to work with, But at the same time, there really doesn't seem to be any conclusive evidence which could implicate any of them. Since there was a window of over twelve hours before the police became involved, a number of people walked through the basement tunnels past the

spot where Gita was likely killed, contaminating the crime scene. Contaminating the crime scene. The shards of glass on the floor from Gda's broken beaker could have provided evidence, but someone took the initiative to throw them away, and due to the heavy chlorination of the water, all potential forensic evidence which could have been left by the killer on Gita's body, such as DNA and fingerprints,

were eliminated. With no witness or security camera footage placing a suspect at the murder scene, I think the police were hoping that if they interrogated everyone hard enough, the perpetrator would eventually break down and make a full confession, but this never took place. For a while, investigators were certain that they had narrowed down the field to three suspects, but after all these years, they

apparently now believed that none of these guys were actually involved. So unless a confession takes place or someone with inside knowledge of the crime comes forward with information, it's really hard to see how the police police will be able to build a strong enough case against anyone to make an arrest. It kind of boggles my mind too, when you think about there were fifty people there that day and they were able to narrow it down to three. We don't know a

lot about that information. The one guy was down in that area, so it was pretty clear he would be one of the people you'd question. But I'm wondering if the other two, if fellow employees were able to say they had a problem with her, right there was tension with her, and that's how they were even brought to the forefront in the first place. Yeah,

I really wonder about that. I can understand police not releasing that information publicly, but when they say we've narrowed it down from fifty to eight, and now we've narrowed it down to three, I have to guess that they came to this conclusion just from maybe people other employees telling them that these people had a problem with the GITA and could have had a motive to kill her. While securities protocols preventing outsiders from entering the plant seemed to be adequate, security

protocols inside the plant were a different story. Since no key card access was required at the time, anyone could move about the plant freely and pretty much

go wherever they wanted. They've since remedied that in the years following Gita's death, but investigators have stated that if these security protocols have been around all along, it would have been easier to track all of the employee's movements that day and possibly determine who is in the basement during the approximate time period Gita was

killed. It's pretty unsettling to hear that the underground water tanks were not equipped with any lighting or ladders, even though there was a five foot gap between the water and the panels, so if someone did fall in there by accident, it would have been impossible for them to climb out before they succumbed the

freezing cold temperatures. In addition, the sensor, which was designed to send out alerts about changes with the water displacement, just happened to be broken that day, which is why it didn't go off when Gita's body hit the water. It's possible it was deliberately sabotaged by the perpetrator, but if the sensor was simply broke in, that's really not reassuring. Remember this was just over three years removed from nine to eleven, and one disturbing point which was raised

is if the sensor couldn't detect a body. What if there had been an attempt at a terrorist act and someone dumped some dangerous chemicals into the drinking water.

Obviously, Yita's death exposed some major inadequacies with the plant safety protocols, and that alone would have been grounds for her family to say, listen, you were responsible in many ways for even allowing her body to sit in that water for so long, right, and for the aftermath that came with that, because had that sensor been working, had those protocols been checked and that was working, the moment her body hit that water, the alarms would have

gone off. So God forbid it was an accident. God forbid, she had been rendered unconscious but was still alive. Someone could have run to that tank and removed her body and saved her life. And so it really was that sensor alone could have been a deciding factor whether she was able to get

retrieved from that tank or not. And so since there wouldn't be going off for hours without someone checking it, someone would have immediately run down there because, like you said, at the time, they would have been on alert for any potential risk of something foreign going into that water. And that is true because Geta's exact cause of death was drowning, so she technically was still alive when she first went into the water. We don't know if she was

still conscious or not. But like you said, if the sensor had gone off, there still would have been a chance to rescue her and save her life if they had gotten there in time. Oh. Absolutely, you hear a people who have been underwater for a couple of minutes, right and are still rescued, and so a plant like that, response would be quick. When they thought, okay, the rates have the levels of water have gone this much over the sensor, something's really problematic down there, there'd be a

massive rush to get to that tank. And we know when it comes to asphyxiating somebody or strangling them that it can take like three four minutes, so it can take an inordinate amount of time. I'm more time than I think that most people prepare to be in a position with their hands around somebody's neck or using a ligature. So it's possible that whomever her attacker was, they thought, okay, well she's rendered unconscious. At least if she isn't dead

by the time she hits that water, she'll die from drowning. I also find it troubling that there was a window of over six hours during Geita's shift when her whereabouts were unaccounted for, but no one really seemed to be troubled by it, and the police were not contacted until several hours after her shift ended. I mean, when Gita went missing, she was carrying a radio which wound up being found inside the tank, but it's not clear if anyone

even attempted to call her on the radio to see where she was. Even if there was only one person who was directly involved in Gita's death, this makes me wonder if others might have been aware of what happened but kept their mouths shut. The panel to the water tank weighed about fifty pounds. It would have been difficult for one person to remove it, dump get it into

the tank, and then replace the panel by themselves. So even if only one person killed her, they could have enlisted the assistance of others to cover the whole thing up. You can't understand how unsettling this whole situation must have

been for everyone at the plant. It was conclusively established that Geta's killer had to be one of the fifty employees working there that day, which men from that point on, they all had to keep showing up with the knowledge that at least one of their co workers was a murderer and continuing to get away with it. I heard the morale at the plant went down following Gita's death, and I can certainly understand why, as I'm sure many of the employees

felt they had to constantly look over their shoulders. I definitely would think there's a concern there when you have fifty employees who realized that their supervisor has been found in a water tank. They have no idea, just like we're sitting here years later with no answers. They have no idea what happened to her, and so I would assume that they also learned she had bruising on her.

The family was likely outspoken that they believed it was a murder, and so the people who are looking around there going, well, if it's a murder, it was one of us, and it is. It's like that game of clue where there's only this many people in the house and we have a deceased individual who did it, and it would be that constant fear of if we can't figure out what happened to her. Then we make all of these assumptions and we're looking back and forth saying it's one of us. So

am I safe out word? Remember that episode we recorded a few months ago about the death of Rodney Marx at the research station in Antarctica. Yes, yes, And even though we don't know for certain if that's a homicide, you can still imagine the fear that, well, if it was a murderer. We're trapped here in the middle of nowhere for a couple more months, and at least one of these people is a murderer, so we're going to have to constantly look over our shoulder and be frightened for months. And yeah,

thinking he was poisoned or something. I've got to sit here and eat and drink around you people like yeah, I'm pretty sure. We all kept saying that it was like the plot of a horror movie, like there was no way in or out. We talked about that doctor that basically had to perform like a biopsy or a lumbaectomy or whatever and like treat her breast cancer at that station. It's just so intense to be trapped there with a potential

murderer. Oof and it's kind of the same thing here where it's like, even though they still got to pay the bills, So even though they're showing up to work potentially with a murderer, they still have to keep doing it

whether they like it or not. It seems like the majority consensus about Ghita was that she was a very dependable and well liked person at the plant, but there have been quotes from anonymous sources about how some of Ghita's co workers resented her because of her education and qualifications and did not appreciate being a subordinate for an immigrant. No matter who was responsible, it sounds like investigators have always believed this was not a premeditated murder her, but more of a spur

of the moment crime the passion. After all, Yita had strangulation marks on her neck, which seems to imply that the perpetrator had no weapon on them and was trying to fatally choke her. And since drowning was her exact cause of death, Guita was technically still alive when she was thrown into the tank.

We know that Gita was heading down into the basement to calibrate the instruments when she disappeared, so it seems like she must have crossed paths with her killer in the corridor, who subsequently attacked her before they removed the floor panel and dumped her body into the tank. But what could have caused things to escalate like this? Did Gita bump into someone and get into a heated confrontation which led to violence, or did she stumble upon something she wasn't supposed to

see which led to her being killed. Do you guys remember the pink stuff that they were finding in the water. Did they ever determine what that was? Because is it possible someone was manipulating and doing something to the system that caused that contamination and they're saying, oh what now, we can't use this new system. It doesn't work right, like causing a problem, And maybe

someone was down there doing something like that. I'm not exactly sure what the pinkish substance was, but I do know they found it when Geta was absent, So it could be one of those things where someone was doing something while she wasn't around and she was trying to maybe I'd cover the truth about it, like try to figure out what was going on here, and maybe someone

got paranoid and decided to kill her for it. It was established that one of Gita's coworkers from the lab asked her to go down into the basement and later went to search for her, where he discovered the broken glass from Geta's beaker. Under these circumstances, you can understand why this guy would have been one of the three employees that police zeroed in on as a potential suspect, But they apparently no longer believe that any of these three men were involved.

Without knowing anything else about this lab technician or his relationship with Gita, or potential motives for wanting to harm her, I cannot evaluate the likely of him being the perpetrator. One detail I do find interesting is that before this incident took place, some of the plant's employees claimed they had no idea there were tanks underneath the basement floor and walked through that area numerous times without even realizing

there were millions of gallons of water below them. But obviously Guida's killer would have known this since they went to the trouble of removing a panel and disposing of her body. Considering that many of the screws on the panel were broken or missing, and it was left slightly Ajar. I get the impression that whoever did this was in a hurry for fear that someone else would enter the

corridor and catch them. So I'm assuming that when investigators were narrowing down their pool of suspects, they focused on employees who might have had knowledge of those tanks and the panels. Another odd detail of this case is that they filmed an episode of Law and Order spu at the plant one year earlier, which contained a scene where a victim's body was found floating inside a water tank.

As you probably know, the bread and butter of the entire Law and Order franchise a fictitious storylines which are based on real life crimes from the news. Well, this is a rare occurrence where the real life crime occurred after the Law and Order episode. Of course, the whole thing is probably just a coincidence, as investigators found no indication that Getah's death was some sort of copycat

crime. But I can help but wonder if the perpetrator might have seen the episode and remembered it, which is how they came up with the idea of hiding Geta's body inside a water tank. That gave me chills when you said that this was a Law and Order episode, and did you say it was filmed at the facility it was, Yeah, so that's just crazy. Oh my lord, Yes, that seems really odd. It's also very eerie.

I don't know, is it that a copycat? Is it? Like you said, in the heat of the moment, they said, what do I do with her body? And they said, well, wait, we were here when they were filming, and they dumped her in the water tank. I'm going to go ahead and do that. It seems way too ironic for that to be a coincidence. Yeah. Are you aware, Robin, if all the employees knew that the plant was used to film that Lawn Order episode.

That's a good question, because it's possible that they filmed while the plant was closed and none of the employees were there because they didn't want to disrupt work. But I have to think that they were at least aware of it, and that they probably some of them would have at least watched the episode and realized, hey, that's where I work. So I'm sure sure it

was probably common knowledge. I would think they'd know, like here they filmed like a ghost Hunter episode, you know, at the local hotel, and everyone was like, Oh my gosh, they're filming at the hotel on Thursday. This is so cool. I wish I was on you know, the schedule that day, and so I would think it was quite a big deal, especially such a large show. This isn't like a mom and pop production company coming into film a forty five second you know promo. This is a

Law and Order episode. So I bet they were all quite aware and quite excited and then able to say like, oh my gosh, that's my office. Holy cow, that's where I go down every day, right, And I bet people were quite hyped up about the facility being featured on the show, which would lead us to believe that probably if everybody the plan knew about

this, they likely all watched the episode. Because if your workplace is featured on a show like Law and Order, SBU, I think you would actually want to see that episode and then talk about it later with everybody at work. And that's why it's not implausible that it could have been on the killer's

mind when they were thinking of a way to dispose of Geita's body. Well, investigators actually looked through the possibility that Geta's death might have been connected to another similar unsolved homicide which took place in New Jersey over thirty six years earlier. The crime occurred on August the thirty first, nineteen sixty eight, at a massive eighty six building campus for the Hoffman Laroche pharmaceutical firm, which was

Lowald on the Passaic County Essex County border. That evening, the body of a twenty two year old secretary named Joan Freeman was found in the hallway of building number thirty four. She was struck on the hedge several times with a wooden mallet before her throat was slashed. Joan had been employed by the firm for three years, and since it was a Saturday, she was working there

alone doing overtime. She had spent the day in a second floor library recording the employee's work hours from their time cards before she was attacked from behind in the hallway. Much like the Passaic Valley Water Commission treatment facility, the Hoffman Laroche campus had a high level of security and was surrounded by fences, so access was restricted to employees, meaning that Jan's killer had to be someone who

worked for the company. However, there were no fingerprints found in the wooden mallets, and the knife was never found, so investigators had no forensic evidence to identify a suspect. They also found nothing in Joan's background to provide any

insight into a potential motive for this crime. Over the course of the next several months, a grand jury investigation would take place, though I get the impression they did not have a specific suspect in mind and only wanted to test the waters to see what kind of case they could present if the suspect ever popped up on the radar. But even though over three hundred people were interviewed, the investigation hit a complete dead end, and Joan's murder is still unsolved

to this day. Given that both crimes took place in Passaic Valley, the investigators on Geta's case thought there were enough similarities to look into the possibility that

they were connected. They checked to see if there were any employees who had worked for both Hoffman Laroche and the water treatment facility during the respective time periods of each murder that came up empty, and yes, given the massive time difference, I am inclined to believe that these two crimes are not connected, because, at the minimum Guta's killer would have had to have been in their late fifties if they were also responsible for murdering Joan Well. Joan Freeman's case

sounds like a pretty baff mystery in its own right. I get the feeling that investigators only looked at her murder because they were grasping its straws and desperate to explore any possible lead to help them solve Geeta's case. Yeah, it does seem like a little bit of a stretch. Are they ironically similar? Yes, I mean, you have an unsolved murder in a workplace, no forensic evidence to go off of. But other than that, you know one's

attacked, one strangled, and you have a thirty six year gap. And so while you definitely do have killers who have killed over the course of decades, to say that you can successfully pull it off in an isolated, confined workplace over and over and over again and get away with it so seamlessly,

I think that would be quite implausible. However, the big complicating factor in this case is the theory that Gita could have accidentally fallen into the water tank her self because someone left the panel open during the early stages of the investigation, no one was even willing to entertain that notion, because well, who

would have put the panel back in place after she fell in. It seems this idea gained traction when Scottish forensic pathologist Derek Pounder pushed forward the possibility that the cold temperature of the water caused hemorrhaging on Guita's neck, which could have

been mistaken for strangulation mars. But there are numerous fallacies with this theory, and by Pounder's own admission, this type of thing only occurs in a small percentage of drowning cases, and technically Pounder was only presenting a hypothetical scenario without actually looking at Gita's body or the autopsy reports, whereas the five pathologists who did perform a full examination concluded that she was likely the victim of a homicide.

I think this theory has gained more traction since the former lead detected James Wood, went on the record claiming the Pounder's assessment caused him to change his mind and he now believes that Geeda's death was an accident. Well, you have to take into account that Wood made the statement after his retirement, and no homicide detective wants to end their career with an unsolved murder still on the

books. So maybe this was his way of rationalizing the whole situation. Well, if I could go home and enjoy retirement and not think about the cases that haunt me, right, because you don't want to go off of your career with unsolved murders lingering. They're people and they matter, and a lot of these detectives really do carry those people with them. So if he could say, listen, a scientist comes forward. He says that he thinks it

is a drowning. He said, there's cases like this. I'm just gonna go with that, like I could see that being a peace of mind thing. But I also when you talk about Pounder, he didn't look at her body. Yes, have there been a few cases where there's bruising on the neck according to Pounder, Yes, But again we talked about this. I believe on episode one where to have her sitting in that position for so long that that cold water is going to create just a simple ring around her neck

of strangulation. I don't buy that. I think you would have either multiple rings showing when she got more and more tired and going below the water more and more even bruising on her face when she just has her mouth above water

trying to breathe. Unless she was rendered unconscious before she was put into that water and via strangulation and wasn't actually bobbing in the water, But if she was fighting for her life, I think there would be different kind of marks, maybe even more bruising where she's trying to hit the side of the tank

and crawl out. Just I'm not buying it. I think when you have five people who actually got to see her body and then you have Pounder who didn't, and it is just saying, well, once I saw this case where this happened, I'm not going to pin my career in a conclusion of

a case on that assessment. The other ammunition for this theater is the anonymous plant insider who claimed that a water quality supervisor may have removed a panel from the basement corridor's floor to collect water samples on the day of Keita's death,

providing a potential explanation for how she could have stepped in there accidentally. The evidence seemed to show that the panel had been put back in place very hastily, so theoretically, if the responsible party returned to the scene and discovered the Gheeta drowned. Because of their own negligence, they could have replaced the panel

and kept their mouth shut about what they did. I mean, this plant obviously had serious internal issues with their safety protocols, so I cannot completely discount the possibility that a scenario like this took place. I know that one of the three potential suspects investigators focused on was a supervisor, though it's unclear if it might have been the same old school water quality supervisor. This anonymous insider

was referring to. If a person is indirectly responsible for someone's death by negligence, but is interrogated as if they committed an intentional homicide, you have to wonder if them might affect their demeanor. I know that James Woods said he believed that one of the suspects was on the verge of cracking and making a confession before he stopped talking to the police. So could this person have been overwhelmed with guilt because they were responsible for Ghita's death even though it was purely

accidental. I mean, I assume you could be, but you would really pray that people's moral compass would say, oh my god, there's this poor family. There's three children and a husband who are wondering what happened. I messed up, Like I removed that panel this morning, and I want to tell them what happened, because what if it was the panel falling through or she stepped on it and she fell into the water. I don't know. Maybe I'm an odd ball, but I feel like I would say, this

is so accidental? Could it have been my fault? Like I almost feel like I'd come forward and be like they found her body down there there was a panel missing, Oh my god, I moved a panel this morning. Was it that panel? And give information if it's accidental? I don't. Yes, someone passed away, But when there's an accident like that, you're not going to be charged with murder or something because you didn't screw a panel on tight enough. It was a workplace accident and the company would get in

trouble, but you're not. I don't. I don't know. I guess a lot of people cover their own skin before they do the right thing, but you'd pray that that wouldn't be the case when a mother dies and people are wondering what the heck happened to her. But if there's like five pathologists who are saying that their likely way that Gita died was by homicide, then I could see if that was already the narrative that somebody, even if they accidentally were like, okay, I put the panel there and it was a

total accident. I didn't know that she was in the tank at that point, they might be nervous to come forward and be questioned as a murder suspect, because how many times do we see where somebody who is innocent, or maybe the one that discovers the body, they're then like suspect numero uno. There's times where police do get it wrong or investigators get it wrong. So I could see how somebody would be slightly trepidacious if they did that. But

I'm the same way as you ash. If it were me in that situation, the guilt would get me, so I would have to come forward and be like it was me. I accidentally did this. I had no idea,

and I'm sorry. I do see what you're saying too. Though if the narrative was already homicide, I might have more like, oh my gosh, because ask rebel, he said, please don't ever die in are like around me, right, don't let me be the first to find you, because he's like, I don't trust people anymore, Like I'd be scared to call nine one one and what would follow, you know, because you do see these cases where people are accused of murder when a natural death or an

accident occurs. But I would assume that they knew her body was found in that tank, and I'm not sure that the homicide narrative was immediate, but like you said, if it was, then oh my lord, maybe I

don't want to put myself in position anymore. I was just saying, gosh, when they're scrambling to figure out what happened to this poor woman, I was down there, Like maybe information would have come out before the homicide noticed, but it I still am leaning towards the fact that it was a murder, given the fact that these five pathologists all agreed and they saw her body

well. One of the biggest issues with this accident theory is that Gita was known for being a very conscientious person, and she'd walked through those basement corridors numerous times before, so everyone who knew her found it unlikely that she would have failed to notice an open panel in the floor. I also think that if Gita had fallen into the tank, her beaker may have been found in there, alongside her radio and clipboard, but since it was found broken on

the basement floor, this suggests that she got into a struggle beforehand. Even though an alternate theory was presented to explain how cold water could have caused the marks on Gita's neck, Let's not forget that she also had additional bruising on her waist and elbow. So I really think the evidence supports her being violently attacked. We've covered so many cases where the authorities ruled someone's death to be

a suicide or an accident and ignored compelling evidence to suggest homicide. But I think this is one case where they got it right the first time around, and that any alternate theories besides Gita being murdered do not hold up at all. But even if by chance, this was an accident, whoever left that panel open and caused Geeda to fall to her death still needs to be held accountable for what happened. I mean, it's true they need to be able

to tell what happens so that her family has answers. Again, I think the plant as a whole would be more responsible for not having the protocols in place, for not having safety checks or signing off when you move the panel, all the things that could have been put into place to protect all the employees from accidents like that, those would be the things that I'd focus on. I think the family needs the answers, and that's what should be compelling

someone to say, I did this. I need to tell you what happened. I'm so remorseful it was an accident and see what occurred. But again, I just don't feel like that's the case. I feel like the beaker was dropped in a struggle. That's why she got the bruising on her waist, Like what part of you would be bruised on your waist unless she fell through that hole and hit the you know, the side on the way down. She has bruising on her waist, she has bruising on other parts of

her body. She has that strangulation markings that by pathologists recorded they saw on her body. It just indicates more that there was a struggle and a fight and then a desperate need to cover her up. And then you think back that one year earlier, in that same location, they filmed a lawn or episode where a woman drowned in the tank, and I could see someone saying, that is genius. I'm going to dispose of her body here and it'll be hours before they find her. I'll be home, they won't even know

what happened to her. Still don't have a clear cut idea of what the motive might have been for a homicide, but I doubt the crime was pre planned, and I think the perpetrator or perpetrators just got very lucky that they weren't caught in the act, and some potentially crucial evidence which could have implicated them wound up being destroyed. But no matter how Gheeta died, this was

just an incredibly tragic end to her life. Remember this is a woman who found great success in her male dominated native country for not only becoming the first woman to attend Loyola College, but graduating as the top student in her class. She then moved to the US to provide a better life for her family and was pretty much living the American dream until her life was cut short by

a pretty horrific death. I read a number of heartbreaking articles about the difficulties that Gyeeda's husband, Jaya, and their children have experienced while dealing with her loss, as I know that Jaya actually held on too Geda's cell phone and would frequently call her voicemail just so he could hear his deceased wife speak again.

The Ingara family has frequently voiced for frustrations over the police's inability to make an arrest in the case, but I honestly get the impression that without any real forensic evidence to work with, there's really not much they can do until they receive a big break. Perhaps all this case needs for a resolution is for the right person to come forward. So if you happen to have any information on the death of Geta Angara, please contact the appropriate authorities. Jules

Ashley any final thoughts in this case. I can't stop thinking about her three babies and how their father was the one who had to step up and comfort his children and the loss of their mother. He also has to try to grieve the loss of his best friend and the fellow parent in the house, So he's raising these babies on his own without the person who he created them with. The children are growing up and having these experiences where their mother should

be present and she's not. And more so in these cases where you see a woman fight so hard and she moves to America to create this dream where she says, I'm going to raise a family in America so I can provide for them. I'm going to secure my education so that I can financially be an asset to my family. And that's what she's doing. And then all of a sudden, she doesn't come home one day after work. And I can't even imagine what that was like with those three children learning that their mother

was deceased. And you have this father who, like he said, I would call her phone just to hear her voice. Been there, done that. It is awful. And yet, like I said, he's also responsible for these three children who are grieving as well. So accident or homicide, it would be my prayer that someone in that fifty person pool would say I have information. It might not even seem significant, it might seem so minor.

I remember overhearing a conversation where someone was frustrated with her. I remember hearing a conversation where someone said they gave information they probably shouldn't have known. There was this conflict that I'm aware of. Any of that could be profound information, even if it doesn't seem like it. So, like you said, without forensic evidence, which we don't have here because of the chlorine, and without people coming forward, these cases can't be investigated deeply by police,

there's nothing to go on. And so at this point it would take somebody who's had distance in space and time to say, I have information and I don't know if it'll help, but see if it will, and you never know, it could both a case wide open. That's what I hope for as well. I really, just like you said, Ash, I can't

stop thinking about her three children and her husband who were left behind. Gito was brilliant to be the first woman to be in Loyola College after it became co ed, to get a masters and bachelors there, to come to the United States to get two more master's degrees and a PhD. She was so

accomplished and clearly so so intelligent. Oh when I forgot to mention that she won the gold medal for being the student at the top of her class, being an immigrant woman at the time, being in this position of power at this water treatment plant or facility. It couldn't have been easy, and yet she managed to navigate it. And I'm sure that she did it all with grace because that just seems to be the type of woman that she was.

And I really hope that in these coming years, before the clock starts to run out on who may have done this, people start to die, things

change. This was so many years ago, that somebody will come forward with some kind of information, because even if that person wasn't responsible, I believe that there are multiple people there who are aware of what happened and who is the perpetrator, because it just seems unlikely that it was one person was able to dispose of her body into that tank and to get that panel on there, even if it was somebody who just helped in the aftermath during the cleanup,

there has to be somebody out there who has this guilt that is eating away at them just because of the knowledge that they have. And I really hope that in these coming years they come forward and give those babies that resolution

of who killed their mother and why. Yeah, this is definitely such a frustrating and heartbreaking case because we've gone over all the points how Ghita was a brilliant woman who moved her family to the US and was living her best life, but then wound up being murdered in a place she probably never would expect it. I don't think she felt that when she went down to the basement of her plant to perform a routine check that she would cross paths with someone

who would kill her. And we talked about how this is both solvable and unsolvable because you only have a limited amount of suspects to work with. It had to be an employee at the plant, and you, like Jules said, could only one person have done this, Like there has to be other people who at least know or suspect who is responsible. Yet they have no forensic evidence, no security footage, no eyewitnesses, so they just are unable

to make an arrest. And I keep parking back to the narrowing down of the suspects, how it originally went down from fifty to eight, and then it was narrowed down to three, and then ten years ago the authorities say, well, we no longer believe that these streamn were responsible, and we

haven't heard anything new since then. We have no idea if other people are being reinvestigated and because so little information has been released publicly, we know nothing about these suspects, what their motives could have been, and we have no idea where the investigation is right now. It's completely inactive, which is a real shame. It just sounds like whoever did this probably did not plan what

they were doing. It could have been a spur of the moment thing and they just got incredibly lucky that they were able to do it without being seen and without leaving any forensic evidence behind. And who knows. We can hope maybe this person has a conscience that one day from now they'll spill the beans and confest and we can finally find out the truth. But for now, Keith's family still has to live with the pain on not knowing what happened to

her, and I really do hope that they get answers someday. Robin, do you want to tell us a little bit about the Trail Went Cold Patreon? Yes, the Trail Cold Patreon has been around for three years now, and we offer these standard bonus features like early ad free episodes, and I also send out stickers and sign thank you cards to anyone who signs up with

us on Patreon. If you join our five dollars tier Tier two. We also offer monthly bonus episodes in which I talk about cases which are not featured on the Trail Went Cold's original feed, so they're exclusive to Patreon, and

if you join our highest tier tier free the ten dollars tier. One of the features we offer is a audio commentary track over classic episodes of Unsolved Mysteries, where you can download an audio file and then boot up the original Unsolve miss episode on Amazon Prime or YouTube and play it with my audio commentary playing in the background, where I just provide trivia and factoids about the cases featured in this episode. And incidentally, the very first episode that I did a

commentary track over was the episode featuring this case. So if you want to download a commentary track in which I make more smart ass remarks about Jewel Kaylor, then be sure to join Tier three. So I want to let you know a little bit about the Jewles and Nashty Patreons. So there's early ad

free episodes of the Path Went Chili. We've got our Pathwent Chili mini's, which are always over an hour, so they're not very mini, but they're just too short to turn into a series and we're really enjoying doing those, so we hope you'll check out those patreons. We'll link them in the show notes. So I want to thank you all for listening, and any chance you have to share us on social media with a friend or to rate and

review is greatly appreciate it. You can email us at the Pathwentchili at gmail dot com. You can reach us on Twitter at the Pathwin. So until next time, be sure to bundle up because cold trails and chilly pass call for warm clothing. Music by Paul Rich from the podcast Cold Callers Comedy

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