Twenty-six-year-old Debbie Remorozo was originally from the Philippines, but in 2002, she was working as a coronary care nurse at Royal Oldham Hospital in Greater Manchester, England.
On December 7th, 2002, coworkers noted that Debbie took a call shortly before her shift ended, and appeared “distressed” afterward. CCTV cameras outside the hospital recorded Debbie leaving the facility at three-twenty-seven p.m., clad in her nurse’s uniform and her trademark orange bobble hat.
Nearly half an hour later, she arrived home to her flat at Summervale House in Oldham, and not long after that, a terrible fate evidently befell her.
The following day, Debbie failed to show up at work, and her concerned colleagues called police. When authorities entered Debbie’s flat, they found her dead, stabbed multiple times in the chest with two knives from her own kitchen. The killer had left the victim posed in a crucifix position with a tablecloth over her face. There was no sign of either robbery or sexual assault, and no evidence of forced entry, suggesting that Debbie had likely known her attacker.
Though a male and female suspect were arrested in April 2003 in connection with the crime, they were both subsequently released without charge, and since then, there have been no new developments in the baffling case.

