Influencer found dead before husband took his own life allegedly shared disturbing Facebook post hours earlier

Zaria Khadejah Carr allegedly made a plea before her death hours later in Georgia

Warning: This article contains discussion of suicide which some readers may find distressing.

An influencer was found dead shortly after allegedly writing an ominous post online.

27-year-old Zaria Khadejah Carr was pronounced dead after authorities in Twin City, Georgia, responded to a domestic disturbance call at approximately 9:30pm on June 14.

Responding officers who were part of the Twin City Police Department, the Emanuel County Sheriff’s Office and Emanuel County EMS initially found Carr unconscious, but she later passed away.

It was noted by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) that her husband was then found dead by suspected suicide after he was stopped by police.

As per the Investigation unit, Carr’s husband, Shamarcus Jameal, 36, was missing from the home the two shared together at the time of the call, and his car was not on the property.

Zaria Khadejah Carr was found dead in her home (Getty Stock Image)Zaria Khadejah Carr was found dead in her home (Getty Stock Image)

Zaria Khadejah Carr was found dead in her home (Getty Stock Image)

After putting out on alert on the vehicle, Jameal was found at 11pm when officers attempted to conduct a traffic stop, and he allegedly shot himself.

The GBI added in their statement that he died as a result of his wounds in a hospital.

According to People, a source, who claims to be familiar with the couple, said Shamarcus was a Facebook influencer by the name of ‘The Frenchman’.

He allegedly had 44,000 followers who watched his journey breeding French Bulldog pups.

As for Carr, the source claims that she was known as ‘Dutchess Dior’, with over 30,000 followers and was featured on Shamarcus’ page being shown having a maternity photoshoot.

Her last known post online is allegedly dated on the day of her death.

The eerie message seems to allude that she was in trouble, as she allegedly wrote: “I really don’t know what to do .. but i need help before i lose my life or freedom ! My kids need me !”

It's believed she was a Facebook influencer (Facebook)It's believed she was a Facebook influencer (Facebook)

It’s believed she was a Facebook influencer (Facebook)

As per the statement, the GBI’s Medical Examiner’s Office will complete an autopsy on Carr.

The statement reads: “This investigation is active and ongoing. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the GBI Regional Investigative Office in Eastman at 478-374-6988 or the Twin City Police Department at 478-763-4140. Anonymous tips can also be submitted by calling 1-800-597-TIPS(8477), online at https://gbi.georgia.gov/submit-tips-online, or by downloading the See Something, Send Something mobile app.”

UNILAD reached out to Wayne County Sheriff’s Office for comment.

If you or someone you know is struggling or in a mental health crisis, help is available through Mental Health America. Call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org. You can also reach the Crisis Text Line by texting MHA to 741741.

If you are experiencing domestic violence, please know that you are not alone. You can talk in confidence 24 hours a day to the national domestic violence helpline on 1.800.799.SAFE (7233) 24/7. You can find a list of local resources here.

Featured Image Credit: Dutchess Dior/Facebook/The Frenchman/Facebook

Topics: Gun CrimeCrimeUS NewsFacebook

Court documents reveal selfie Bryan Kohberger allegedly took hours after Idaho student murdersCourt documents reveal selfie Bryan Kohberger allegedly took hours after Idaho student murders

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Court documents reveal selfie Bryan Kohberger allegedly took hours after Idaho student murders

The prosecution team hope to show this selfie to jury in the upcoming trial

Gerrard Kaonga

Gerrard Kaonga

New details have emerged regarding Bryan Kohberger’s actions hours after the brutal murders of four students on a university campus.

Bryan Kohberger stands accused of murdering four University of Idaho in the early morning hours of November 13, 2022.

The four students were 20-year-olds Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle, and 21-year-olds Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen. They were found deceased in their shared King Road apartment house in Moscow, Idaho.

Latah County Coroner Cathy Mabbutt confirmed that the cause of death in each case was murder by stabbing, saying the four students had been ‘butchered’.

Kohberger has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder, with the 30-year-old having pleaded not guilty, He also provided an alibi that he was driving alone at the time of the killings.

All four students were found with stab wounds at their shared home(CBS)All four students were found with stab wounds at their shared home(CBS)

All four students were found with stab wounds at their shared home(CBS)

“Mr. Kohberger has long had a habit of going for drives alone,” public defender Anne Taylor wrote in a filing. “Often he would go for drives at night.”

Now, 40 new court filings that were released on March 19 by the judge overseeing the case, Hon. Steven Hippler, have revealed a new image of Kohberger.

The photo is a selfie that Kohberger took on his phone at 10:31 a.m. on November 13, 2022 – hours after the four students were murdered. The image is of particular importance, because it appears to show Kohberger with ‘bushy eyebrows’ – a description a surviving housemate used to describe the assailant she saw in the house on the night of the attack.

They gave a description of a tall, masked man with ‘bushy eyebrows’ walking past her the night of the murders.

The defense of Kohberger wants the judge to exclude this partial description in the upcoming trial.

Prosecutors hope to show this selfie of Bryan Kohberger to the jury in the upcoming trial (Twitter/Mike Baker)Prosecutors hope to show this selfie of Bryan Kohberger to the jury in the upcoming trial (Twitter/Mike Baker)

Prosecutors hope to show this selfie of Bryan Kohberger to the jury in the upcoming trial (Twitter/Mike Baker)

Kohberger’s team have argued that the witness’ description was unreliable because she had been drinking that night and additionally, that ‘bushy eyebrows is not enough of a description to qualify as evidence.

Prosecutors have combatted this and said they want a jury to describe for itself if the ‘bushy eyebrow’ description is accurate, in part by showing them the selfie Kohberger had taken that day.

The selfie has also begun to circulate on social media.

The accused will stand trial from July 30, the date when jury selection begins, and it is expected to last for three months – with court documents explaining that jurors will need time to deliberate over the death penalty if Kohberger is found guilty.

Featured Image Credit: Instagram/@kayleegoncalves

Topics: US NewsCrime

Parents of 10-year-old boy reveal vile nickname bullies allegedly called son before he took his own lifeParents of 10-year-old boy reveal vile nickname bullies allegedly called son before he took his own life

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Parents of 10-year-old boy reveal vile nickname bullies allegedly called son before he took his own life

Sammy Teusch died by suicide on May 5, 2024

Britt Jones

Britt Jones

Warning: This article contains discussion of suicide which some readers may find distressing.

The parents of a 10-year-old boy who committed suicide have revealed the nickname bullies allegedly called their son before his death.

Samuel Teusch – known as Sammy – was a Greenfield-Central Intermediate School fourth-grade student who died on May 5, 2024.

The young boy’s 13-year-old brother found him unresponsive in his bedroom that morning, the family said.

Sammy’s parents, Samuel and Nichole Teusch, claim that he was being emotionally and physically bullied at the Indiana school and that he was being ‘exasperated’ by the lack of action the school was taking.

Sammy Teusch died in May this year (Stillinger Family Funeral Home)Sammy Teusch died in May this year (Stillinger Family Funeral Home)

Sammy Teusch died in May this year (Stillinger Family Funeral Home)

His father told 13News that kids ‘were making fun of him for his glasses and in the beginning they went on to make fun of his teeth’.

“He was beat up on the […] school bus and the kid broke his glasses and everything,” the dad claimed.

The father added to FOX 59: “‘How could God take my kid from here?’ Of course that was going through my head. God didn’t take my kid; hate did.”

While the dad called for ‘action’ and ‘accountability’, the police investigation found that there was ‘no known cause’ for Sammy to have taken his life, despite his parents’ claims of bullying.

In June, the Greenfield Police Department confirmed ‘there will be no criminal charges filed with the Hancock County Prosecutor’.

At the time, Police Chief Brian Hartman said: “At the very beginning, everybody started saying this was bullying, this was a result of bullying, and I say this with a heavy heart, unfortunately, we do not know the cause of this.

Sammy's parents filed a lawsuit (YouTube/WTHR) Sammy's parents filed a lawsuit (YouTube/WTHR)

Sammy’s parents filed a lawsuit (YouTube/WTHR)

“There was no note or no text messages. Sammy didn’t say why he felt he had to do this.”

However, investigations did find that Sammy had been targeted both inside and outside of the school, and his parents confirmed that they had made at least 20 reports of bullying towards their son prior to his death.

Samuel and Nichole have since filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Greenfield-Central Community School Corporation and Greenfield-Central Community School Corporation Board of Trustees, per WRTV.

In the suit, they claim that there was ‘callous indifference’ towards their son’s bullying as well as being ‘repeatedly informed about the bullying of Sammy Teusch (‘Sammy’) by students under the District’s supervision, and yet did nothing to address it’.

It continues: “As a direct and proximate result of the District’s and these individuals’ gross dereliction of arguably their most important duty, Sammy took his own life on May 5, 2024.”

The suit went on to allege that bullies would call Sammy ‘Dahmer’, in reference to the US serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer.

Sammy's parents say he was called 'Dahmer' (YouTube/ WTHR) Sammy's parents say he was called 'Dahmer' (YouTube/ WTHR)

Sammy’s parents say he was called ‘Dahmer’ (YouTube/ WTHR)

However, when a teacher was made aware of this, the suit alleges that ‘her only response was that, in her opinion, Sammy did somewhat resemble Jeffrey Dahmer’.

The suit also claims that Sammy began acting out in class as ‘a cry for help’ but was reprimanded.

While it notes that the principal began to allow Sammy to have his lunch in their office after the ‘Dahmer’ nickname was uncovered, ‘it is unknown whether [the principal] took any disciplinary actions towards the bullies, or informed their parents’.

Then, according to the lawsuit, when he entered the fourth grade, it only got worse.

The suit claims: “During breakfast period, Sammy was chased throughout the school, and would attempt to hide in a bathroom stall, often refusing to come out.”

Chief Hartman agreed that Sammy was having ‘some rough times at school from other kids’ as police ‘have statements and facts to back that up’, but there were also ‘things that happened outside of school’.

The Chief said that there has ‘probably been an accumulation of things having happened in this child’s life that led up to that traumatic decision he made that day’.

UNILAD has contacted the Greenfield-Central Community School and Greenfield Police Department for comment.

If you or someone you know is struggling or in a mental health crisis, help is available through Mental Health America. Call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org. You can also reach Crisis Text Line by texting MHA to 741741

If you have experienced a bereavement and would like to speak with someone in confidence, contact The Compassionate Friends on (877) 969-0010.

Featured Image Credit: Stillinger Family Funeral Home/YouTube/WTHR

Topics: US NewsCrimeEducation

Disturbing details emerge after 11-year-old girl took her own life after allegedly being bullied over 'family’s immigration status'Disturbing details emerge after 11-year-old girl took her own life after allegedly being bullied over 'family’s immigration status'

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Disturbing details emerge after 11-year-old girl took her own life after allegedly being bullied over ‘family’s immigration status’

Jocelynn Rojo Carranza was found unresponsive by her mom

Liv Bridge

Liv Bridge

Disturbing details have emerged after an 11-year-old girl tragically took her own life after reportedly being subjected to bullies’ taunts over her immigration status.

Jocelynn Rojo Carranza was found unresponsive by her mom, Marbella Carranza, at their home in Gainesville, Texas on February 3.

The grief-stricken parent told CNN affiliate KUVN she was hoping for a ‘miracle’ that her little girl would come around but medics determined there was ‘nothing that could be done.’

Jocelynn passed away five days later while in intensive care in Dallas.

The youngster took her life while at home (ABC News Live)The youngster took her life while at home (ABC News Live)

The youngster took her life while at home (ABC News Live)

Following her daughter’s death, Marbella claimed Jocelynn was a ‘victim of racism‘ as she was taunted for months at her Gainesville school over her family’s immigration status.

The mom said she was unaware at the time of the sixth grader’s ordeal and only learned Jocelynn had been receiving counselling at school from investigators.

“It appears the school was aware of it all, but they never, they never told me what was happening with my daughter,” she said. “It appears she would go once or twice a week to counseling to report what was happening.”

“(I want) justice because it’s not fair – the school was negligent for not keeping me informed of what was going on with my daughter.”

Marbella Carranza said her daughter was a 'victim of racism' (ABC News Live)Marbella Carranza said her daughter was a 'victim of racism' (ABC News Live)

Marbella Carranza said her daughter was a ‘victim of racism’ (ABC News Live)

Marbella further told Univision station that her daughters’ bullies picked on her for being Hispanic, and had said they were going to call Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) ‘so her parents could be taken away and she would be left alone.’

Speaking to ABC News Live, Marbella also said she hopes her daughter’s death ‘should serve as a lesson to the world to see what the new president’s polices are doing.’

Gainesville Independent School District vowed it would investigate the bullying allegations and have now released the shocking findings in a public statement.

In the press release, the school confirmed the youngster was bullied by another pupil on more than one occasion and that the principal was made aware of the harassment just days before Jocelynn’s death on January 30.

Jocelynn Rojo Carranza was found unresponsive in her home (WFAA)Jocelynn Rojo Carranza was found unresponsive in her home (WFAA)

Jocelynn Rojo Carranza was found unresponsive in her home (WFAA)

The school said Jocelynn reported the ICE and deportation threats to the principal and that the remarks were directed towards a group of Hispanic students on the bus.

The school’s Director of Transportation further stated it was not a ‘one-time occurrence.’

Officials also said one student has since been disciplined for bullying but didn’t disclose any further information about the culprit or punishment.

“The student was identified, interviewed, and disciplinary consequences were issued by campus administration on January 31, 2025, in accordance with the GISD Student Code of Conduct,” the statement added.

The school also said ‘additional concerns’ surfaced, including allegations that her brother had also been bullied and referred to a separate CPS investigation.

As for the young girl’s counselling, GISD said her family had signed a permission slip to authorize her involvement.

“Our hearts go out to [her] family, friends, and the entire Gainesville community during this incredibly difficult time,” a spokesperson for the school district previously told UNILAD.

During the youngster’s funeral, her heartbroken mom said: “Please remember her kindly because she was a very happy girl. Every day, she would tell me that she loved me.”

UNILAD has contacted the school for further comment.

Featured Image Credit: GoFundMe

Topics: RacismMental HealthEducationUS NewsTexas

Social media account linked to Natalie Rupnow uploaded chilling post minutes before school shooting took placeSocial media account linked to Natalie Rupnow uploaded chilling post minutes before school shooting took place

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Social media account linked to Natalie Rupnow uploaded chilling post minutes before school shooting took place

The accounts suggest the suspect had a disturbing fascination with death and an obsession with school shooters

Liv Bridge

Liv Bridge

Warning: This article contains discussion of suicide which some readers may find distressing.

A social media account linked to the suspect in the Wisconsin school shooting hints the teen had a disturbing fascination with death – and had uploaded a chilling post just moments before her rampage.

Natalie ‘Samantha’ Rupnow, 15, reportedly injured six and killed two people, a pupil and a teacher, when she took a handgun into the K-12 Abundant Life Christian School in Wisconsin on Monday (December 16).

Police initially said a second-grade student called 911 just before 11am, though they confirmed this week it was actually a second-grade teacher who called for help.

Officers stormed the school minutes later, where they discovered multiple victims with gunshot wounds.

Pupils were evacuated from the school after the terrifying incident (Getty images)Pupils were evacuated from the school after the terrifying incident (Getty images)

Pupils were evacuated from the school after the terrifying incident (Getty images)

Rupnow, who had been a student at the school and went by the nickname ‘Samantha’, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, chief of Madison Police, Shon Barnes, confirmed in a conference on Monday night.

While an alleged document that is believed to have been the suspect’s ‘manifesto‘ has been circulating on social media, photographs and other social media accounts reportedly linked to the disturbed Wisconsin teen have also come to light.

A photograph of the youngster on her father’s Facebook page shows her aiming a rifle at a shooting range while wearing a t-shirt of the German industrial rock band, KMFDM.

The teen is wearing a KMFDM band t-shirt at the shooting range (Facebook/Jeff Rupnow)The teen is wearing a KMFDM band t-shirt at the shooting range (Facebook/Jeff Rupnow)

The teen is wearing a KMFDM band t-shirt at the shooting range (Facebook/Jeff Rupnow)

The band was also a favorite of notorious Columbine killer, Eric Harris, who was seen wearing the band’s shirt before he and Dylan Klebold gunned down 13 people in the 1999 massacre.

Also similarly to Harris and Klebold, Rupnow turned the gun on herself after the atrocity.

Another photograph on her father’s Facebook page appears to show the teen cuddling with the family’s dogs.

Wisconsin school shooter identified by police
Credit: WISN 12 News
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But other distressing posts uploaded to a Twitter account and a Tumblr page, believed to have belonged to the suspect, have also surfaced.

The posts suggest Rupnow had a disturbing fixation on death and school shootings, even going so far as to idolize killers.

The Twitter account had a range of sick videos, from an unknown person committing suicide at a gun range to a 2015 school stabbing attack in Sweden.

Cops said it's too early to tell if the teen's parents could be charged (Getty images)Cops said it's too early to tell if the teen's parents could be charged (Getty images)

Cops said it’s too early to tell if the teen’s parents could be charged (Getty images)

Meanwhile, the blogging page shared images of weapons, made references to other massacres such as a 2007 school shooting in Jokela, Finland, and the Parkland high school shooter, Nicholas Cruz, and had a profile picture of a screenshot from footage of another shooting.

A CashApp account, also reportedly linked to Rupnow, featured a picture of the Columbine shooters, while Spotify playlists were ‘themed’ around suicide and murder.

One final post uploaded to the Twitter account, mere minutes before Rupnow allegedly opened fire on campus, shared an image of a person making an ‘OK’ sign in a bathroom cubicle.

A photograph of Rupnow on her father's Facebook page (Facebook/Jeff Rupnow)A photograph of Rupnow on her father's Facebook page (Facebook/Jeff Rupnow)

A photograph of Rupnow on her father’s Facebook page (Facebook/Jeff Rupnow)

The gesture is believed to be linked to other school shooters, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

The eerie posts suggest that the teen could have been inspired by deadly school shooters – which were also a key theme in the alleged manifesto.

However, police have been unable to verify the authenticity of the document, but said they are ‘looking into her online activity’.

The cops said Rupnow could have been driven by bullying on Tuesday but said it’s too early to determine if her parents could be charged with a crime.

“There are always signs of a school shooting before it occurs,” the police chief said.

If you or someone you know is struggling or in a mental health crisis, help is available through Mental Health America. Call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org. You can also reach the Crisis Text Line by texting MHA to 741741.

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