Texas Woman Who Fell into Sewer Was Found Dead 9 Miles Away, Says Daughter: ‘Nobody Should Have to Go Through That'
Teresa Gonzales, 66, was reportedly killed in October when she walked over an open manhole and fell into the Dallas sewer system
The daughter of a Dallas woman who was reportedly killed when she fell into a sewer system wants answers about what happened to her mom.
The body of 66-year-old Teresa Gonzales was discovered on Oct. 25, around nine and a half miles away from where she fell through an open manhole cover on Oct. 22, according to her daughter Cynthia Gonzales and attorney Ramez Shamieh.
Cynthia and Shamieh shared a live news conference to Instagram in which she tearfully said she wants justice for her mom.
“It just hurts because nobody should have to go through that, nobody,” Cynthia said in the video posted Wednesday, Dec. 11. “I don’t care who you are, nobody should have to feel that ... not that kind of tragedy.”
Shamieh told local outlet NBC DFW that Teresa was walking in the 1600 block of Record Crossing Road when she walked over an open manhole in a construction zone and fell into the city sewer system.
The attorney added that her body was discovered three days later and more than nine miles away at the Central Wastewater Treatment Plant in southeast Dallas, reported NBC DFW.
WFAA-TV also cited the Medical Examiner's Office as stating that Teresa's body was recovered at a city wastewater treatment plant.
“I didn't understand why it happened. I couldn't wrap my head around it I still can’t,” Cynthia said at the news conference, wiping away tears.
“That's nothing that any family should go through to learn that your mom fell and then is nine-and-a-half miles away,” she added.
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
Shamieh shared that he plans to file a lawsuit but is waiting on a public records request to collect more information. He also showed a photograph taken a week after the accident, which he claimed showed gaps in the metal covering the manhole.
“We believe one of the main reasons is unreasonably dangerous conditions at the site and that's why she fell in,” he said, adding that foul play is not suspected.
According to WFAA-TV and NBC DFW, results of an autopsy are still pending.
Per WFAA-TV, the City of Dallas declined to comment on the incident — although they added that the Dallas Police Department confirmed that officers responded when Teresa’s body was recovered and said the department is investigating the case as an “unexplained death."
A spokesperson for the Dallas Police Department did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment.
Read the original article on People