Dead Michigan Woman Found after six years of Sitting in the Back Seat of a Car
Pontiac, Michigan – A dead woman was found in the garage of her foreclosed home after a property personnel was dispatched to check the site. The mummified body clothed in a heavy jacket and jeans is believed sitting in the back seat of a car for around six years, the Reuters reports.
A property personnel was allegedly dispatched early this week to conduct a visual inspection of the woman’s property after her home fell into forclosure. This led to the shocking discovery of her remains at her home in Michigan. Sources said her mortgage payments suddenly stopped after her bank account mysteriously ran out of cash. Further investigation revealed the last bank transaction of the woman dated March 2013.
In a separate report, authorities are facing difficulties on the lady’s identity because of the extreme degradation of her body. However, it is thought she worked as a contractor in the financial department for a major automobile company, who stopped working in 2008. Since then, her bills were automatically deducted from her bank account. Eventually, the $54,000 in her bank account ran out.
Middle-class residents at Pontiac neighborhood reportedly didn’t notice anything strange in the woman’s house. Even the neighbor, who periodically cut her lawn, didn’t notice the lifeless woman sitting in the car for around six years.
Update:
Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said detectives were able to secure old dental records before the woman moved to Michigan. He did not mention her name but records show that the dead lady was the 49-year-old Pia Farrenkopf.
The Sheriff said the woman didn’t have any children, or a husband, nor a pet in the house. The woman was a contractor of the defunct Chrysler Financial and her last day in work was in September 2008.
Farrenkopf has family on the East Coast and a sister in the Boston area but they hadn’t communicated for years, Bouchard said. He also said it appears the two were estranged.
The autopsy result of the woman’s remains showed no signs of trauma. Crime investigators concluded the case as a result of a possible homicide. (http://www.lansingstatejournal.com/)