Family of Murdered Ukrainian Refugee Breaks Silence — ‘We’re Living a Nightmare’ While Media Looks Away 👀

In the shadow of a quiet Charlotte suburb, where the American Dream once beckoned like a lighthouse for war-weary souls, the aunt of slain Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska has shattered the silence surrounding one of the most gut-wrenching crimes of the year. Valeria Haskell, 56, stepped forward in an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail, her voice trembling with exhaustion and rage, to reveal a family shattered not just by the brutal stabbing of her niece on a light rail train, but by the indifference of a liberal media machine that buried the story while predators like Decarlos Brown Jr. roamed free. “I feel like people can’t imagine what we are going through,” Haskell said, her eyes haunted as she walked her dogs—two faithful companions Iryna once adored—through the streets of Huntersville, North Carolina. This isn’t just a family’s private hell; it’s a national indictment of failed Democrat policies that let career criminals like Brown slaughter innocents while the elite look the other way.

Picture this: A vibrant 23-year-old artist, fleeing the relentless bombs of Vladimir Putin’s invasion, arrives in the United States in August 2022 with dreams of safety and a future as a veterinary assistant. Iryna Zarutska, born in Kyiv on May 22, 2002, wasn’t seeking handouts or headlines—she was building a life. Graduating from Synergy College with a degree in Art and Restoration, her hands were tools of creation, sculpting beauty from clay and gifting handmade treasures to those she loved. “She shared her creativity generously,” her family’s obituary poignantly reads, capturing a spirit that lit up rooms and warmed hearts. Fluent in English within months, she embraced her new home: slinging pizzas at Zepeddie’s, walking neighbors’ dogs with that radiant smile, and enrolling at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College to chase her passion for animals. She dreamed of independence—learning to drive, caring for strays, turning her love for life’s gentle creatures into a career. “Iryna came here to find peace and safety,” her family stated, a plea now echoing like a broken promise.

But peace? Safety? Those illusions shattered on August 22, 2025, around 9:45 p.m., aboard the LYNX Blue Line in Charlotte’s South End. Surveillance footage, leaked online and viewed by millions, captures the horror in excruciating detail: Iryna, in her khaki pizzeria uniform, scrolls her phone innocently after a long shift. Behind her, Brown, 34, a homeless drifter in a red hoodie, grimaces with paranoia. No security in the car—officers one ahead, as always in understaffed transit systems gutted by defund-the-police zealots. Four agonizing minutes pass. Then, without warning, Brown draws a pocketknife, unfolds it deliberately, and slashes her neck three times. Blood sprays the seats; Iryna gasps, crumples, dies alone in a crimson pool. Brown wipes the blade, exits casually, arrested moments later with her blood on his hands. First-degree murder charges followed, plus federal enhancements that could mean death row—a faint glimmer of justice in a system that failed her spectacularly.

Haskell’s interview, conducted near her Huntersville home where a Ukrainian flag flies defiantly on the porch, lays bare the human cost of this atrocity. The family, already scarred by three years of Russia’s bloody war, is “exhausted,” she confesses. Iryna’s mother, Anna, is too terrified to leave the house, barricaded in grief as the world outside spins on. “We’ve been living for three years in incredible pain,” Haskell says, her voice cracking. The war tore them apart—father Stanislav trapped in Ukraine under martial law, unable to bid farewell at Iryna’s August 27 funeral. He watched from afar as her urn was placed in a sunny hilltop grave at a Charlotte cremation site, adorned with colorful mushroom stickers—touches of whimsy from a girl who saw magic in the mundane—and a gilded photo of her striking blonde-haired smile. “Her absence leaves a deep void,” the obituary mourns, “but her spirit will forever remain.”

This void isn’t just emotional; it’s a chasm carved by systemic betrayal. Brown’s rap sheet is a horror show of recidivism, enabled by Democrat soft-on-crime lunacy. A career criminal since his teens, he served five years for a 2014 armed robbery, released in September 2020 only to plunge back into depravity. February 2021: Assaults his sister, leaving her injured; arrested for property damage and trespassing after kicking in her door. July 2022: Disorderly conduct, yelling and cursing at an apartment complex. His record stretches to 2007—felony larceny, robbery with a dangerous weapon, threats—most charges dropped or dismissed in a justice system that treats felons like victims. Mecklenburg County Magistrate Judge Teresa Stokes freed him in January 2025 on a mere “written promise” to appear in court, despite 14 priors including assaults and drugs. Seven months later, Iryna’s dead. “How many chances?” Haskell might ask, echoing the fury of a nation. Brown’s schizophrenia? His family’s pleas for help? Excuses that ring hollow when innocents pay the price.

The outrage has been volcanic. President Donald Trump called the killing “horrible,” hinting Charlotte could be next for National Guard deployment to restore order in blue-city chaos. Rep. Brenden Jones (R-NC) blasted “decades of Democrat DAs putting woke agendas above public safety.” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt seethed: “Her death was entirely preventable.” A GoFundMe for the family has topped $500,000, donors pouring out rage: “She survived Putin for this American slaughterhouse?” Social media erupts—#JusticeForIryna trends, videos shared millions of times, calls for Brown’s execution deafening. Even Whoopi Goldberg’s pitiful defense of him as a “sick American in need” on The View backfired, tanking ratings and birthing #WhoopiHatesVictims.

Yet, amid this storm, Haskell’s voice cuts through: No spectacle, no show. “We need time and space,” she insists, walking those dogs Iryna once petted, cats trailing like ghosts of joy lost. The family shuns the spotlight, but the media blackout that initially ignored Iryna’s story? That’s the real scandal. Liberal outlets like The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and CNN buried it—until public fury forced coverage. Why? Because Iryna, a white Ukrainian refugee, doesn’t fit the narrative. No “oppressed minority” angle, just a hardworking immigrant slain by the very policies progressives champion: Lax bail, defunded cops, “restorative justice” that restores nothing but fear. Charlotte’s light rail, a fare-free fiasco under Mayor Vi Lyles’ Democrat reign, saw violent incidents spike 30% since 2020—blame the budget cuts to security for “equity programs.” Haskell’s haunted walk through Huntersville symbolizes it: Suburbs once safe now shadowed by urban decay spilling over.

Delve deeper into Iryna’s world, and the injustice boils. She was a homebody at heart, happiest with family, adventuring with friends, sleeping like an “artist’s gift” as her mother teased. Survived by Anna, Stanislav, sister Valeriia, brother Bohdan, partner Stas Nikulytsia, aunt Valeria (and husband Frank Scott), cousins Vera and Viktor Falkner—her circle was tight, her impact profound. Neighbors recall her walking pets “with her radiant smile,” elders from her assisted living job busing to her funeral in tears. “She fell in love with the American Dream,” her uncle told outlets. “We failed her.” Stas, tracking her phone that night, found her body— a boyfriend’s nightmare turned eternal scar. “She escaped bombs for this?” he wept, scrolling Instagram: Sketches vibrant, dogs beaming, captions grateful in budding English.

Brown’s clan? A notorious nest of criminals, as Patriot Sentinel revealed. Father Decarlos Sr.: Break-ins, larcenies, weapons on campus. Brother Stacey: 2014 murder of retiree Robert Heym during robbery, fleeing on the same rails. Sister Tracey: Theft rings, shoplifting, fielding Brown’s delusional jail call about “mind-reading” implants. A dynasty of danger, coddled by courts that sigh at the name “Brown.” Half-brother Jeremiah distanced himself: “Violent history.” But the system? It enabled it, releasing Brown despite pleas, slashing mental health funds for involuntary holds while bloating welfare rolls.

Haskell’s silence-breaking isn’t vengeful; it’s visceral. “No words” for the stabbing’s horror, but plenty for the pain: War’s agony compounded by this “incredible” loss. The grave—urn drawer festooned with stickers, photo gleaming— a makeshift memorial to whimsy stolen. Ukrainian flag on the porch? A cry against two tyrants: Putin abroad, progressive policies at home. As vigils blend blue-yellow with red-white-blue, Charlotte reels. Republicans push “Family Felon Acts,” mandatory holds for threats. Democrats? Deflections to “mental health,” ignoring the malice.

This tragedy screams for reform. Transit as hunting grounds? End it. Revolving doors for recidivists? Slam them. Media blackouts on inconvenient victims? Expose them. Iryna’s obituary nails it: Kindness, creativity, lasting impression. Her void? Filled by outrage. Haskell’s walk, dogs in tow, haunts: A family in fear, America in failure.

From New York subways to San Francisco BART, unchecked crime claims lives like Iryna’s—thousands per Heritage reports since 2020. Her story pierces: Refugee felled by welfare wolves. Calls for Brown’s “public reckoning” echo primal fury. Justice howls: Death for him, overhaul for the system.

Haskell’s words ignite: Imagine our pain. Demand accountability. Reject excuses. Honor Iryna—light snuffed, but spark undimmed. In her name, end the nightmare before another aunt walks haunted streets.

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