By [Reporter’s Name]
A new discovery has thrown the investigation into the death of Irena Kovacs into turmoil.
Detectives reviewing surveillance footage from the central railway hub have uncovered a second camera angle — one that appears to show Irena stepping off the train alive, just minutes after the official timeline places her death.
“It shouldn’t exist,” said an investigator who reviewed the recovered file. “According to every report we have, she was already gone.”
The footage, timestamped 10:42 p.m., shows a woman matching Irena’s description exiting the third car and glancing over her shoulder before disappearing behind a column. Moments later, the image flickers — and the file abruptly ends.
Police sources say the footage was located on a backup server belonging to a private transit contractor, not part of the original evidence sweep. Its discovery raises urgent questions about how the primary timeline was established and whether key data was overlooked or intentionally removed.
“This could rewrite the last hour of her life,” one senior detective admitted. “If she left that train, then someone met her — and we need to know who.”
Digital analysts are now authenticating the clip’s metadata to determine whether the footage was altered or suppressed. For now, investigators call it “a game-changing piece of evidence” that could expose major inconsistencies in the case’s original findings.



