
Murder She Solved: The Elena Busiakos Case
How a YouTube series revisited the 2001 Woodinville murder that ended in conviction—and continued legal battles
On February 9, 2001, Elena Busiakos was discovered dead, stuffed in the trunk of her own car in the parking lot of Woodinville Athletic Club in Washington—approximately one mile from her home. The 24-year-old's body bore signs of strangulation, with bruising visible on her face and neck. Her clothes were fully intact but disheveled, with socks pulled up. Physical evidence suggested sexual activity prior to her death, though investigators would struggle with DNA analysis throughout the case.
The couple had moved into a duplex in Woodinville just weeks earlier, in early 2001. In the days before her planned trip to California, Busiakos had discovered that her fiancé, Sione Lui, was communicating with a former girlfriend. She confronted him over the phone with the other woman present, delivering an ultimatum: either he would move out, or she would end the relationship. On the Friday before her disappearance, she closed their joint bank account—a definitive action suggesting her decision was final.
On the morning she was supposed to catch her flight, Busiakos vanished. Her last known cell phone call, at 7:04 a.m., was to check her flight status. Her suitcase had been packed oddly—a hair gel bottle left without its lid, toiletries included—and a rental car coupon was left behind. Investigators later theorized that Lui had packed the bag after her death.
Sione Lui, a former rugby player with a violent history (he had nearly killed a man during a match), became the primary suspect. The prosecution's theory was straightforward: he killed Busiakos at home after she dressed for bed, while her packing remained unfinished. Lui's actions that night raised suspicion—he called his sister in Hawaii at 1:15 a.m., an unusual time for a casual call.
However, the forensic evidence told a more complicated story. Nine fingerprints found on Busiakos's car did not match Lui. DNA recovered from the gearshift skirt and shoelaces belonged to an unknown male—someone whose identity was never established. While sperm was found in the victim, investigators could not generate a full DNA profile from it. Notably, no male DNA was recovered from under her fingernails, suggesting she had not scratched her attacker during a struggle.


