“Again a courageous journalist falls in the fight for truth and against corruption,” Frans Timmermans, vice president of the European Commission, said Monday in Brussels. The European Union pledged its support for Bulgarian authorities as they continued their investigation.

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Bulgarian officials emphasized that there was no evidence yet to connect Marinova’s killing to her work.

“It’s about rape and murder,” Interior Minister Mladen Marinov said.

Bulgarian media outlets reported Monday that the park where Marinova was killed is adjacent to a psychiatric facility and that authorities were investigating whether a patient could have been Marinova’s attacker.

“The best criminologists have been sent to Ruse — let’s not hurry them,” Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov said. “A large amount of DNA has been obtained.”

Marinova, a former lifestyle journalist, was a television presenter for TVN, a popular channel in northeastern Bulgaria. Last month she began anchoring a program called “Detector,” which focused on political investigations.

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Only one segment of the relaunched program aired before her death. It featured the work of two journalists investigating the alleged misuse of public E.U. funds by a network of corporations in the region. The journalists — Dimitar Stoyanov, from the Bulgarian website Bivol, and Attila Biro, a Romanian journalist from the Rise Project — were briefly detained by local authorities in mid-September.

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Transparency International, a global corruption watchdog, has identified Bulgaria as the most corrupt member state in the European Union. Reporters Without Borders ranked it 111th out of 180 countries in its annual world press freedom index, the lowest in the European Union.

Atanas Tchobanov, the editor in chief of Bivol, said in a telephone interview that he was skeptical of the government’s response. “We cannot downplay any possibility and any version, but if you are investigating the killing, you are looking for a motive,” he said.

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At the same time, he clarified that Marinova was a television presenter and technically not an investigative reporter. “She wanted to make investigative reporting,” he said. “Who knows? Probably she would be a good investigative reporter one day, but she’s no longer here.”

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Marinova’s killing — as a random act of violence or targeted hit — comes after two other cases that provoked concerns about press freedom in Europe.

In October 2017, Daphne Caruana Galizia, a Maltese reporter who specialized in government corruption and money laundering, was killed by a car bomb near her home. And in February, Jan Kuciak, a Slovakian journalist who also reported on government corruption, was shot and killed along with his fiancee, Martina Kusnirova.

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Also on the minds of press freedom advocates is the disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent Saudi critic and Washington Post contributor, who vanished last week after entering the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. Turkish authorities have asserted that he was killed upon entry.