WASHINGTON 鈥 The New York City police said Friday there is no credible evidence that the two Fairfax County sisters whose bodies were found near the Hudson River last week were victims of a crime.
Dermont Shea, the chief of detectives for the NYPD, in a news conference Friday gave more details about the disappearance and discovery of 16-year-old Tala Farea and 23-year-old Rotana Farea, whose bodies were found taped together in Riverside Park Oct. 24.
That day, Shea said, a man in the park saw the sisters, who had been in the U.S. for two to three years, sitting about 30 feet apart 鈥渟itting with their heads in their hands 鈥 and they were making noises loudly that he described as praying.鈥
He said the sisters had arrived in New York about Sept. 1, using a credit card in Rotana Farea’s name to stay at upscale hotels, order meals and shop, until the credit card maxed out. He also said the police 鈥渉ave reports鈥 that the two had requested asylum.
Shea gave a timeline of the sisters鈥 whereabouts in the last year:
On Nov. 30, 2017, their family saw them for the last time. In December 2017, they were found, 鈥渂ut they were not returned to the home,鈥 Shea said; 鈥渢hey were returned to 鈥 I鈥檒l call it a shelter-like type of facility due to some abuse allegations that came up.鈥
On Aug. 24 of this year, the two went missing from the facility. The family had no contact with the girls, Shea said. They spent the next week making their way to New York, Shea said, citing electronic records including at least one Uber receipt.
They arrived in New York around Sept. 1, and for weeks after that, they were seen on security cameras twice between Sept. 1 and about five or six days before they were found, and seemed to be in good condition, Shea said.
In New York, they stayed at 鈥渁 number of high-end hotels鈥 and ordered meals 鈥 鈥渁lways two鈥 鈥 until 鈥渂est we can surmise 鈥 the credit-card money started to run out,鈥 Shea said. He added that the cards were “maxed out at the end.”
On Oct. 31, someone called the NYPD detectives and told them a story 鈥渢hat was haunting him 鈥 his words,鈥 Shea said: On Oct. 24, the man told the detectives, he was in Riverside Park at about 7 a.m. to exercise, and found the sisters on a playground.
Later that day, the sisters were found in the water, duct-taped together. Shea described the taping as 鈥渘ot binding them together 鈥 more like keeping them together.鈥
No cause of death has been ruled in the case. Shea did say that it was 鈥渆ntirely credible鈥 that the two were alive when they entered the water.
The 聽area they were found was 鈥渟uch a place where you would essentially walk right into the water,” he said.
Shea said the police are continuing to look for, and through, credit-card, phone and other records to try to fill out the timeline of their whereabouts. 鈥淲e treat everything like a crime until we know otherwise,鈥 he said.
草莓传媒’s Megan Cloherty contributed to this report.
