BOMBSHELL CLIP: A passenger sitting behind Iryna Zarutska recounts hearing a “click” that sounded like a camera. But in the public video, no one is seen raising the camera.

BOMBSHELL CLIP: Passenger Behind Iryna Zarutska Recounts Hearing Mysterious “Click” Like a Camera—But Public Video Shows No One Recording

A bombshell new clip has emerged in the ongoing investigation into the tragic stabbing of 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on a Charlotte light rail train, adding yet another layer of mystery to her final moments. In an exclusive audio interview obtained by this outlet, an anonymous passenger who was seated behind Iryna recounts hearing a distinct “click” sound—reminiscent of a camera shutter—moments after the attack. Yet, in the publicly released surveillance footage from the Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS), no passenger is seen raising a phone or camera to record the horrific scene. This discrepancy has ignited fresh speculation about what truly transpired in that dim train car, with the community and investigators probing whether the “click” was a figment of panic, a hidden recording, or something more sinister.

The clip, a 45-second audio snippet from a police interview conducted on August 23, 2025—the day after the incident—features the passenger, identified only as “Witness B” in court documents, describing the chaos. “I was right behind her, maybe two seats back,” the witness says, voice trembling. “After he… after the stabbing, everything went quiet. Then I heard this click, like a camera taking a picture. I thought someone was filming it, but when I looked around, no one had their phone out. It was weird, like it came from nowhere.” The witness, a local college student who wished to remain anonymous due to trauma, added, “The train doors closed, footsteps walked away, and that click just echoed in my head.” The audio, leaked via an anonymous tip to X users and verified by this outlet through sources close to the investigation, has gone viral, amassing over 500,000 views in hours.

Iryna’s death on August 22, 2025, aboard the Lynx Blue Line has already captivated the nation, blending heartbreak with outrage over bystander inaction. After finishing her shift at Zepeddie’s Pizzeria, Iryna texted her best friend Sofia Kowalski and boyfriend Stas Nikulytsia: “Shift’s over, I’m going home.” She boarded at Scaleybark station around 9:46 p.m., sitting in an aisle seat with earbuds in, scrolling her phone. Seated behind her was 34-year-old Decarlos Dejuan Brown Jr., who, without warning, stabbed her three times with a pocketknife, including a fatal neck wound. As she slumped and bled out, the crowded car—over 20 passengers—remained silent, with many glued to their screens. Brown calmly exited at East/West Boulevard station and was arrested minutes later.

The CATS surveillance video, released in edited form last week despite family pleas to withhold it, shows the attack in stark detail but captures no overt recording by passengers. Extended footage, circulating on X, reveals it took 94 seconds for anyone at the front of the train to intervene, while five people near or behind Iryna stood up and walked away—one allegedly filming with a mobile phone. However, the clip’s witness claims the “click” occurred immediately after the stabbing, before any movement, and no visible phone is raised in the public video. “If someone was recording, why isn’t it in the footage?” the witness asked in the interview. “It sounded like an old-school camera, not a phone shutter.” This has led to theories ranging from a passenger’s discreet recording (perhaps with a device hidden in a pocket) to the sound being the knife’s mechanism or even the train’s mechanics misinterpreted in the panic.

Adding to the intrigue is the mysterious 12-second call from Iryna’s bloodied phone at 9:58 p.m., three minutes post-attack, to an unidentified burner phone—possibly an accidental dial or desperate act. Could the “click” tie into this? Investigators, including the FBI in their federal probe, are subpoenaing additional passenger phones and reviewing unedited CATS tapes for audio anomalies. Brown, facing federal charges for an act causing death on mass transit and state murder counts, is in a 60-day psychiatric evaluation for his schizophrenia history and 14 prior arrests. His sister Tracey claimed in a jail call he heard “voices” and believed Iryna was “reading his mind.”

Iryna’s family, still reeling, has referenced the silence and detachment in their communications. Anna Zarutska’s two-page handwritten letter from Ukraine recalls her daughter’s “smile that lit up the small kitchen” but ends with a crossed-out sentence sparking unease. An earlier three-page letter contained a blacked-out passage about “deeper vulnerabilities.” “Why the silence? Why no help?” Anna wrote. Her uncle told ABC News, “She fled war for indifference—and now this click mystery?” The family, through attorney Lauren O. Newton, demands full video release: “If someone recorded my daughter dying, we deserve to know.”

Public reaction on X has been explosive, with #JusticeForIryna trending alongside #IrynaClickMystery. Posts decry bystander culture: “People filmed her agony instead of saving her? That click is the sound of our soul dying,” one user wrote, echoing sentiments from extended video shares showing alleged recording. Another speculated, “Hidden camera? Someone on that train knew more.” Conservative voices, including former President Donald Trump, blame “soft-on-crime” policies, while progressives highlight mental health failures. Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles announced enhanced CATS audio monitoring but deflected to judicial errors in Brown’s prior releases.

Experts weigh in on the “click.” Dr. Emily Chen, a UNC Charlotte psychologist, noted, “In high-stress situations, senses can heighten— a phone notification or knife click might sound like a camera. But if it’s real, it points to covert recording, exacerbating the bystander effect.” Forensics audio analysts, consulted anonymously, suggest it could be a digital shutter sound from a suppressed phone app.

Vigils at Camden station grow, with Iryna’s animal sketches displayed as tributes to her artistry and kindness. Sofia Kowalski, her best friend, said, “Iryna deserved heroes, not recorders. That click haunts me too.” Stas Nikulytsia added, “She was going home—now we seek truth in the silence and sounds.”

As the probe intensifies, the “click” symbolizes unresolved shadows: hidden actions, unspoken fears, a young woman’s light extinguished amid detachment. For Iryna, justice means unveiling every sound, every secret, ensuring her story breaks the silence forever.

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