Jaw-Dropping Revelation in Iryna Zarutska Murder: Hidden Phone Recording Captures Voice of Betrayer — Was It Her Boyfriend?

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The investigation into the brutal stabbing death of 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska took a devastating turn today as authorities disclosed the contents of a hidden audio recording recovered from a passenger’s phone left on the Lynx Blue Line train. In a revelation that has shattered the victim’s family and cast long shadows over the case, the final voice captured in the seconds before the attack wasn’t Zarutska’s desperate plea for help — but a calm, familiar murmur from someone she trusted implicitly: her boyfriend, Stas Nikulytsia. The clip, timestamped at 9:54 p.m. on August 22, 2025 — just one minute before the fatal stabbing — has investigators probing whether the “random” assault was anything but, potentially implicating an insider in a plot that defies the initial narrative of a lone madman.
The three-second snippet, enhanced by FBI audio forensics specialists and released under seal to Zarutska’s legal team before leaking to WCNC Charlotte, features a low voice saying, “It’s done — she’s not moving.” The timbre matches Nikulytsia’s, confirmed by voiceprint analysis against family-provided samples, including voicemails and a video of him teaching Zarutska to drive her first American car. “This isn’t just a voice; it’s a smoking gun,” CMPD Chief Johnny Jennings said in a tense press briefing. “We’re reinterviewing everyone close to Iryna, starting with Stas. If this was collusion, it changes the entire motive — from random violence to something personal and premeditated.”
The discovery compounds the mounting anomalies in the case: a blurred figure lurking behind Zarutska moments earlier, a deliberately cut seatbelt strap near her seat, and now this phantom recording. As Charlotte reels from the implications, the nation watches a tragedy unfold into a thriller of betrayal, raising piercing questions about trust, immigration dreams, and the hidden dangers in our midst.
From Kyiv Dreams to Charlotte Nightmare
Iryna Zarutska embodied the unyielding spirit of those who rebuild from ashes. Born in Kyiv, she earned a degree in Art and Restoration from Synergy College, where her sculptures and avant-garde fashion designs earned whispers of “prodigy.” The 2022 Russian invasion upended her world; at 20, she fled with her mother, sister, and brother to Huntersville, North Carolina, leaving her father trapped by Ukraine’s conscription laws. “America was her canvas,” her obituary read, a tribute to a woman who sketched cityscapes by day and walked neighbors’ dogs by night, her “radiant smile” a fixture in the community.

By 2025, Zarutska had woven herself into Charlotte’s fabric. She aced English classes at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, juggled shifts at Zepeddie’s Pizzeria in South End, and volunteered toward her veterinary assistant certification. “She loved animals like family,” a coworker told CNN, recalling Zarutska’s habit of sketching feline portraits for tips. Romance bloomed with Stas Nikulytsia, a 26-year-old Ukrainian émigré and mechanic she’d met at a diaspora support group. He taught her to drive — “her first taste of freedom,” he posted on Instagram — and they shared an apartment, planning a future amid Charlotte’s booming skyline.
That future shattered on August 22. After closing the pizzeria, Zarutska boarded the Lynx Blue Line at Scaleybark station at 9:46 p.m., texting Nikulytsia: “Home soon, love. Miss you.” Earbuds in, scrolling pet adoption sites, she claimed an aisle seat in a car buzzing with Friday-night commuters. The train, Charlotte’s pride since 2007, symbolized rebirth for a city shedding its industrial past. But for Zarutska, it became a tomb.
Behind her: Decarlos Dejuan Brown Jr., 34, a spectral figure with schizophrenia and 14 arrests — armed robbery, larceny, assaults — trailing him like smoke. Released from a mental health ward weeks earlier despite violations, Brown had paced downtown stations that day, ranting at phantoms. Transit guards passed him by, a lapse now under federal scrutiny.
At 9:55 p.m., near East/West Boulevard, Brown struck. Surveillance — released September 5 despite Mayor Vi Lyles’s pleas for dignity — shows the knife flashing from his hoodie, plunging three times into Zarutska’s neck and once into her knee. She gurgled, blood arcing onto the floor, semi-conscious for a agonizing minute before collapsing. Passengers froze in the bystander paralysis, one later admitting, “It was like a movie — unreal.” 911 audio, dropped October 1, captures the frenzy: “She’s bleeding everywhere! Oh God, the blood!” Brown paced, shedding his sweatshirt, muttering “I got that white girl,” per transcripts. He exited at the next stop; officers nabbed him bloodied but compliant. Zarutska was gone by 10:05 p.m., her phone’s last ping a silent alarm.
Nikulytsia, frantic, traced her location to the station, arriving as paramedics zipped the bag. “She was my everything,” he wept to reporters, vowing justice. Now, that grief faces a microscope.
The Phantom Recording: Whispers of Deception
The phone — a discarded Samsung, its owner unidentified amid the chaos — was found under a seat, screen smeared with Zarutska’s blood. Recovered days later, it held a voice memo app open, recording triggered at 9:50 p.m. by an accidental pocket-dial or elbow nudge. The file, buried in cache until FBI digital sleuths unearthed it, runs 12 seconds: ambient train rumble, Zarutska’s soft humming to a Ukrainian folk tune, then — at 9:54 — the voice.

“It’s done — she’s not moving.” The words, murmured into what forensics deem a cupped hand near the mic, precede the stabbing by 60 seconds. No screams follow immediately; the attack erupts at 9:55. Voice experts peg an 87% match to Nikulytsia, whose alibi — “working late at the garage” — crumbles under timeline scrutiny. Cell pings place his phone near South End breweries at 9:40 p.m., then silent until 10:15, post-attack.
“This suggests staging,” said audio analyst Dr. Miriam Hale, briefed on the evidence. “The phrasing implies coordination — ‘she’s not moving’ as if reporting to an accomplice. If it’s Stas, was Brown the tool, or was the cut strap his cue?” The strap, revealed last week as a precise blade slice, now ties into theories of sabotage: loosened for easier access, perhaps by the blurred figure from secondary footage.
Nikulytsia, interviewed under caution, denies involvement: “I’d die for Iryna — this is a deepfake, a lie to hurt us more.” Yet whispers swirl. Friends recall “tensions” — Zarutska’s rising independence, her veterinary dreams clashing with his possessiveness. A deleted text from her phone, recovered via cloud: “Stas, stop checking my location. I need space.” Ukrainian diaspora forums buzz with unverified claims of jealousy-fueled stalking.
Brown’s jailhouse ravings add fuel. In a September 10 call to sister Tracey, leaked via Daily Mail, he ranted of “government chips” controlling him: “Foreign materials in my brain — they made me do it!” Prosecutors eye if Nikulytsia, with his mechanic’s access to tools, planted suggestions during Brown’s vulnerability. Federal charges loom under conspiracy statutes, stacking atop Brown’s death-eligible count for mass transit murder.
X erupts in horror. #IrynaBetrayed trends, with @UkraineVoiceNC posting: “From war to a lover’s knife? Heartbreaking.” Conspiracy threads link the blurred figure to Nikulytsia, demanding polygraphs.
Fractured Trust: A City’s Reckoning
Zarutska’s slaying, once a symbol of urban peril, now exposes intimate horrors. The Lynx Blue Line, ridership down 25%, installs panic buttons and AI cameras amid Lyles’s pledges for 75 new officers. Governor Josh Stein decries “betrayal in the shadows,” while Trump’s X missive blasts “immigrant dreams crushed by domestic devils.” Attorney General Pamela Bondi vows: “No one manipulates our justice — not even those we love.”
For Ukraine’s expats, it’s a gut punch. GoFundMe swells to $900K, messages aching: “Escaped bombs for a trusted blade? Justice for Iryna.” Uncle Viktor Kovalenko, from Kyiv, tells ABC: “Stas was family. If true, it’s worse than war — it’s poison from within.”
Nikulytsia’s garage stands shuttered, friends divided. “He adored her,” one insists; another whispers, “Jealousy festers.” As FBI agents raid his apartment for devices, the recording loops in investigators’ ears — a whisper unraveling trust.
Echoes in the Silence: Seeking Solace
Vigils illuminate South End, Zarutska’s murals — swirling abstracts of birds in flight — a beacon against the night. Mental health reformers push transit interventions; politicians feud over “soft policies.” But amid the noise, her family’s plea cuts through: “Truth for Iryna,” attorney Lauren Newton says. “She trusted him with her heart — don’t let it end in shadows.”
This hidden voice may echo forever, a reminder that betrayal’s sharpest cut comes from the closest hand. In Charlotte’s rails, once veins of progress, Zarutska’s story demands not just justice, but vigilance — for the strangers we watch, and the loved ones we never truly see.
News
JIMMY’S NOTEBOOK FOUND IN HIS ROOM: His mother opened his old desk drawer and found a notebook filled with 42 pages of sketches, prayers, and future plans. She said she broke down crying — one passage hinted at a trip he had dreamed of…
Accidental Drowning Confirmed: University of Alabama Student Jimmy Gracey’s Death in Barcelona Ruled Non-Criminal After CCTV and Autopsy Review Barcelona, Spain — The spring break journey that reunited friends ended in unimaginable sorrow for 20-year-old James “Jimmy” Gracey, a junior…
THE LAST 2 MINUTES ON CAMERA: The final 2 minutes captured before his disappearance show Jimmy moving alone near the water. Investigators are analyzing each frame for anomalies — but one tiny detail, barely visible, has already set rumors ablaze
Jimmy Gracey death probe latest big bombshell update brings new details from investigators in Barcelona after the death of the 20-year-old University of Alabama student. Authorities continue to examine multiple angles, including possible intoxication, CCTV evidence, and witness accounts. While early findings…
THE 27-SECOND WINDOW NO CAMERA CAUGHT”: CCTV shows Jimmy Gracey leaving Shoko at 3:37AM. The next footage picks up 27 seconds later, just steps from the dock — investigators are now asking: who or what was in that invisible interval?
Accidental Drowning Confirmed: CCTV Footage Shows University of Alabama Student Jimmy Gracey Falling Alone into Sea in Barcelona Barcelona, Spain — The spring break trip that brought joy and reunion for 20-year-old James “Jimmy” Gracey ended in tragedy when he…
THE MYSTERY CALL AT 3:05AM: Friends report a 45-second call from Jimmy Gracey to his girlfriend in which he sounded “unusual.” Investigators are now checking whether it was a normal conversation… or a subtle plea for help
Accidental Drowning Ruled in Death of University of Alabama Student Jimmy Gracey in Barcelona — CCTV and Autopsy Confirm No Foul Play Barcelona, Spain — The spring break trip that promised fun and reunion ended in profound tragedy for 20-year-old…
THE STRANGE PHARMACY STO:: Sources say Jimmy Gracey may have entered a 24-hour pharmacy around 2:50AM, just 52 minutes before falling into the water. Police are now exploring whether he bought something… or if someone followed him there
Barcelona, Spain — The spring break adventure that started with fraternity fun and Mediterranean nightlife ended in heartbreak for 20-year-old James “Jimmy” Gracey, a University of Alabama junior from Elmhurst, Illinois. His body was recovered from the waters near Port…
THE TEXT HE SENT AT 3:11AM: A friend revealed Jimmy Gracey messaged only one sentence that night: “I’ll be fine”. Investigators are checking whether the words were meant for a friend… or someone unknown near the dock area 30 meters from the club
Barcelona, Spain — The spring break trip that began with laughter and fraternity brotherhood ended in tragedy for 20-year-old James “Jimmy” Gracey, a University of Alabama junior from Elmhurst, Illinois. His body was recovered from the Mediterranean waters near Port…
End of content
No more pages to load