After Saudi sisters found dead by New
York river, police hunt clues
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[November 01, 2018]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York police
were still trying to piece together on Wednesday a mystery over two
young women whose bodies were discovered a week ago on the rocky
Manhattan shore of the Hudson River, bound together with duct tape
around their waists and ankles.
Since then, New York City police have determined that Tala Farea, 16,
and Rotana Farea, 22, were sisters from Saudi Arabia living in Virginia,
and at least one of them was reported missing two months ago.
The city's medical examiner has yet to determine the cause of death, be
it a double homicide or a suicide pact. The medical examiner's office
said the bodies were not decomposed when found by a passer-by on the
afternoon of Oct. 24, indicating they had not been dead long.
The sisters had recently requested asylum in the United States without
giving a reason for the application, the New York Times reported, citing
police. The sisters' mother also received a call from the Saudi Arabian
embassy in Washington telling her about the asylum applications, the
Times reported.
The New York Police Department declined to confirm the Times' report.
The sisters' family could not immediately be reached for comment.
Saudi Arabia's consulate general in New York did not comment on the
Times report directly.
In a statement, the consulate said it had appointed a lawyer to follow
the case "to avoid inaccurate reporting." The Saudi embassy in
Washington was also extending its "support and aid in this trying time"
to the sisters' family, the statement said.
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The two sisters were students accompanying their brother in
Washington, the consulate general said. Rotana Farea had been
enrolled at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, but left
in the spring and may have moved to New York at some point,
according to media reports.
New York detectives have been sent to Fairfax to look into the
sisters' movements there. The police department released new
passport-style photographs on Wednesday showing the two young women
with headscarfs over their hair.
"Are there any clues down in Virginia in their past life?" Dermot
Shea, the New York Police Department's chief of detectives, said to
reporters this week. "We're out to get justice for those two girls."
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; editing by Bill Tarrant
and Grant McCool)
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