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Monday, December 3, 2018

Will We Ever Know How Nadia Died And Who Is Responsible?

Nadia Malik
Nadia Malik was 22 years old in 2014 and from Marple Township in southeastern Pennsylvania.
She was a Temple University as a pre-med student and had two daughters, ages 1 and 4.
She had a volatile relationship with her boyfriend and the father of her children, Bhupinder Singh.
They also had a baby who died of unknown causes in 2012.
She was very shy, an introvert and she liked staying to herself.
She was also very smart and a devoted mother.
One night Nadia decides to leave Bhupinder after he breaks her ribs.
She made calls to her brother and a friend Sunday, February 9th 2014, to say Bhupinder was holding her against her will.
The family calls the police and the police attempt to locate the couple to no avail. 
The next day the family files a missing person's report and the police put a tracker on Nadia's phone.
The authorities think that the couple are riding around in Bhupinder's car.
Tuesday, February 11th, 2014, Bhupinder sends texts from Nadia's phone to her family stating,
"Look for us in the whole United States i guarantee my life you won't FIND US #!#!!!!!!! Bye."
He also sends texts demanding money from the family if they ever want to hear from her again.
Wednesday, February 12th, police have pinged Nadia's cellphone from Philadelphia to Washington, and to New York City, but it stops moving when it gets to Solon, Ohio.
Authorities send someone to the location in Ohio.
It turns out, it is Bhupinder's parents house.
When the Authorities show up, Bhupinder bolts out the back door.
Police arrest Bhupinder, but there is no sign of Nadia or her boyfriend's car.
When they go through Bhupinder's pockets they find Nadia's driver's license, her cellphone and the car keys. 
The authorities then ask him where Nadia is and he claims not to know.
It turns out that Bhupinder was on a bus when he was trying to extort the money from the family.
He then told cops that he had left her back in Philadelphia.
He had left her with the car, but the car only had one set of keys, which he had taken with him.
Thursday, February 13th, a snow storm hits Philadelphia, the biggest the city has ever seen, just as authorities there attempt to locate the car.
Thursday, February 20th, the car was finally found, covered in parking tickets in down town Philadelphia.
Police find Nadia slumped down in the reclined passenger seat, covered with a backpack and other items.
Later, police discover the car had been previously found in a different location.

If the police that gave those tickets would have run the plate, then they would have seen it was involved in a on going investigation.

When she was found Bhupinder had no reaction to the news of her death, except for immediately asking for his lawyer.
Nadia's body had no signs of violence, so the police were unable to determine her cause of death.
In October of 2014, the family finally received the official autopsy results.
Nadia's official cause of death was undetermined.
The coroner couldn't find an anatomical or toxicological cause.
However, there was an injection mark in her right hand.
Nadia was right handed, so it is highly possible that someone else did that to her.
No charges were filed against Bhupinder or anyone for Nadia's death.

In 2016, Malik's family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Bhupinder Singh.
In the lawsuit, the family contended that Bhupinder was responsible for Malik's death. 
They said he "intentionally harmed her and left her dead or near-dead" in the car, abandoning her without her identification, cell phone, or even the keys for the vehicle.
In July of that year, a Philadelphia Common Pleas Court judge issued a default judgment and ordered Singh to pay the Malik family $10 million, damages they had sought to offset the emotional hardship and financial strain Malik's death had caused.

Bhupinder's dad was also named in the suit.
He gave Bhupinder the car when his son had a suspended license.

Nadia's family is still searching for answers and justice.
Justice for Nadia Facebook

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