The Final Moments of Logan Federico: A Chilling Glimpse into Tragedy
In the quiet hours of May 3, 2025, 22-year-old Logan Federico, a bright college student from Waxhaw, North Carolina, met a horrific end during a visit to friends in Columbia, South Carolina. What began as a typical night out with companions near the University of South Carolina turned deadly when Alexander Dickey, a 30-year-old with an extensive criminal record, invaded the rental home on Cypress Street. The details emerging from the investigation paint a picture of innocence shattered in an instant, with Logan’s phone—found on the floor and allegedly still recording—now a key piece of evidence under intense scrutiny by authorities.
Logan, a student at South Piedmont Community College, had recently discovered her calling to teach elementary school children, a passion that lit up her life just weeks before the tragedy. Described by loved ones as “fun, fierce, and full of heart,” she was a Taylor Swift enthusiast who embodied the joy of youth, often channeling the energy of her favorite song, “22.” On the evening of May 2, Logan and her friends ventured out, returning to the residence before 3 a.m. It was during these early morning hours that Dickey, fresh from burglarizing a neighboring home where he stole a firearm, keys, and other items, entered the unlocked house.
The query’s poignant reference to a FaceTime call at 8:27 p.m., where Logan laughed with her best friend about a school project, evokes the normalcy of her final evening—though specific timestamps like this remain unverified in public reports, they underscore the abrupt shift from lighthearted moments to terror. Approximately 40 minutes later, as the night deepened, the intrusion occurred. Police reports indicate Dickey rummaged through rooms, stealing wallets, credit cards, and debit cards before entering Logan’s bedroom and firing a fatal shot to her chest. At just 5 feet 3 inches and 115 pounds, Logan posed no threat, yet she was executed in a random act of violence.
Her phone, discovered on the floor amid the chaos, reportedly captured the last few seconds of the ordeal and is now being meticulously reviewed by investigators. This digital remnant could provide crucial insights into the intrusion, potentially including audio or video that corroborates the sequence of events. Columbia Police Chief Skip Holbrook described the killing as touching “all of us in a way that it’ll never leave us,” emphasizing that Logan was not the intended target but a victim of circumstance in Dickey’s multi-crime spree. Following the shooting, Dickey fled in a stolen vehicle, using Logan’s stolen cards for a shopping spree just 90 minutes later, before breaking into another home, setting it ablaze, and being apprehended after a manhunt.
Logan’s father, Stephen Federico, has channeled his unimaginable grief into a fierce advocacy for justice reform. At a U.S. House Judiciary Subcommittee hearing on violent crime in Charlotte on September 29, 2025, he delivered a raw testimony that silenced the room. Detailing how Dickey allegedly dragged his naked daughter from bed, forced her to her knees with hands raised, and shot her despite her pleas for mercy and calls for her father, Stephen implored lawmakers: “Think about your child coming home from a night out with friends, lying down, going to sleep, feeling somebody come into the room.” He calculated that Dickey, with nearly 40 arrests and 25 felonies since age 15, should have been imprisoned for over 140 years but served only about 600 days due to plea deals, clerical errors by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED), and lenient sentencing.
Stephen’s outrage extends to the systemic failures that allowed a convicted felon to possess a sawed-off shotgun stolen from the neighboring home. “The system failed Logan,” he declared, criticizing policies that release repeat offenders without adequate safeguards. He supports “Iryna’s Law” in North Carolina, aimed at restricting cashless bail and streamlining death penalty appeals, and has urged federal prosecutors to intervene under the Hobbs Act, citing state-level lapses. South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson has assigned a senior death penalty specialist to assist local Solicitor Byron Gipson, signaling a push for capital punishment. Yet, Stephen laments the lack of communication from Gipson’s office, vowing to fight relentlessly: “You will be sick and tired of seeing my face.”
The case has sparked national discourse on criminal justice, with critics lambasting “soft-on-crime” approaches that prioritize rehabilitation over public safety. Social media echoes this sentiment; posts mourn Logan, decry the preventable nature of her death, and demand accountability. One user lamented, “Logan Federico, you are gone but not forgotten,” while another highlighted the father’s testimony as a call to prevent future tragedies. Comparisons to other cases, like Iryna Zarutska’s murder by another recidivist, amplify calls for reform.
Dickey faces charges including murder, two counts of first-degree burglary, grand larceny, weapons possession, and financial transaction card theft. Denied bond, he remains in custody at Lexington County Detention Center. As investigators pore over the phone’s final recording, the Federico family clings to Logan’s unyielding spirit. Stephen relayed her imagined message to Dickey: “You can’t kill my spirit. You might be able to kill my body, but you cannot kill my love that my family and friends shared with me.”
Logan’s story is a stark reminder of vulnerabilities in the justice system and the fragility of life. Her father’s crusade ensures her legacy drives change, preventing other families from enduring such devastation. In a world quick to forget, Stephen vows her name—Logan Federico—will endure as a beacon for accountability and reform.