By U.S. News Desk

The death of Donike Gocaj, the 56-year-old Westchester grandmother who fell into an open manhole in Midtown Manhattan, has triggered a wave of public anger and difficult questions.

Was the cover deliberately removed?

Could someone have opened it on purpose?

Or was this a horrifying accident caused by a dangerous failure in street safety?

For now, police sources say there is no evidence of criminality. Investigators are treating Gocajโ€™s death as an accident, not a premeditated act. ABC7 reported that police sources said the incident โ€œappears to be an accidentโ€ and that no criminality is suspected.

The tragedy happened shortly before 11:20 p.m. on Monday, May 18, 2026, near East 52nd Street and Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan. Gocaj had parked her Mercedes-Benz SUV and stepped out of the vehicle, falling directly into an uncovered manhole. She plunged roughly 10 feet into a shaft filled with steam and boiling-hot water.

The medical examiner later ruled her death an accident. Her cause of death was listed as scald burns, inhalational thermal injury, and blunt force trauma to the torso.

The most important detail so far comes from surveillance footage. According to reports citing Con Edison, video appeared to show that a multi-axle truck dislodged the manhole cover about 12 minutes before Gocaj fell. Con Edison said it is reviewing the details and noted that, while rare, manhole covers can be displaced by heavy vehicles.

That evidence weakens the theory that someone deliberately opened the manhole to cause the accident.

But it does not erase the question of responsibility.

Reports say the manhole cover was found about 15 feet away from the opening. Con Edison said no construction was taking place at the time and that it was investigating how the cover came off.

The case has become even more troubling because bystanders had reportedly warned officials about open or dangerous manholes in the same general area two weeks before Gocajโ€™s death. One witness told the New York Post she had called 911 after seeing an ajar manhole cover near Fifth Avenue on May 3. Another similar warning was reportedly made the next day.

That detail shifts the public question from โ€œWas this murder?โ€ to something more legally complex:

Was this preventable?

Did authorities or utility crews receive enough warning?

Was the area properly inspected?

Should a cover that could be dislodged by a passing truck have been secured differently?

At this stage, there is no confirmed suspect, no police finding of premeditation, and no official claim that anyone intentionally opened the cover to kill Gocaj.

The emerging picture is instead of a rare but catastrophic chain of events: a heavy vehicle dislodged a manhole cover, the opening was left exposed, and minutes later a woman stepped out of her car into a deadly steam-filled shaft.

For Gocajโ€™s family, the official word โ€œaccidentโ€ may not feel like an answer.

It only raises the next question:

If no one meant for Donike Gocaj to die, why was the danger still waiting in the street when she opened her car door?