In a cramped Huntersville apartment, where the hum of a secondhand refrigerator competes with the distant wail of Charlotteâs light rail, Mykola Zarutsky, 19, sits hunched over his sisterâs battered iPhone. The screen, cracked from a fall during her final commute, flickers as he taps play for the 27th time. The voicemail, timestamped 9:45 p.m. on August 22, 2025, carries Iryna Zarutskaâs voiceâsoft, lilting, unmistakably hersâspeaking in Ukrainian: âMykola, Iâm on the train. Work was crazy, but Iâm okay. Come home soon â¤ď¸.â The words, infused with the warmth of a sister whoâd become his anchor in a foreign land, are a knife to his heart. But itâs the last three seconds that haunt him most: a faint, unintelligible voice in the background, not Irynaâs, murmuring something just beyond comprehension. âItâs there, every time,â Mykola whispers, eyes bloodshot from sleepless nights. âSomeone was with her. But who? And why canât we hear them?â
Iryna Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee, was stabbed to death minutes after leaving that voicemail, her life snuffed out on Charlotteâs Lynx Blue Line by Decarlos Dejuan Brown Jr., a 34-year-old man with a history of untreated schizophrenia. The brutality of her murderâthree knife wounds, one severing her carotid arteryâshocked a city still grappling with rising transit violence. But itâs this audio enigma, revealed by Mykola in an exclusive interview with The Charlotte Observer, that has deepened the tragedyâs mystery. The unidentified voice, captured in a fleeting moment before Irynaâs death, has sparked a firestorm of speculation. Was it a bystanderâs warning? A taunt from her killer? Or something more spectralâa glitch in time, as her family half-believes, tying Iryna to the war-torn home she fled? As police, forensic experts, and amateur sleuths dissect the recording, the Zarutskasâ grief collides with a desperate quest for answers, forcing readers to confront unsettling questions: Can a whisper from the grave point to justice, or does it merely amplify the void left by loss?
A Voice from Kyiv to Charlotte: Irynaâs Unyielding Spirit
Iryna Zarutskaâs story begins in Kyivâs Podil district, where cobblestone streets and golden-domed churches framed her childhood. Born in 2002 to Olena, a seamstress, and Viktor, a printing press engineer, she was the eldest of three siblings, a dreamer with a knack for sketching folklore sprites in her notebooks. Her fatherâs giftâa blue ballpoint pen from his factoryâbecame her talisman, tucked into her pocket through school exams and, later, the chaos of war. When Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Iryna, then 19 and studying art restoration, fled with her mother, sister Sofia, and Mykola, crossing borders to Romania, then Germany, before landing in Charlotte via the Uniting for Ukraine program in June 2022. Viktor stayed behind, conscripted to Kyivâs defenses, his letters dwindling as shelling intensified.
In Charlotte, Iryna rebuilt with quiet ferocity. At Tonyâs Pizzeria in South End, she slung pizzas, her broken English charming customers who tipped extra for her smile. Off-hours, she sketched digital art for an Etsy shopâvibrant pysanky eggs and Cossack warriorsâsaving for graphic design classes at Central Piedmont Community College. âShe was our sun,â Sofia, 21, says, clutching Irynaâs sketchbook, its margins filled with blue-ink doodles. âSheâd call Mykola âlittle warrior,â teach him slang like âlitâ to fit in at school.â Mykola, a lanky high school senior, relied on Irynaâs voicemailsâdaily pep talks left when he missed her calls due to classes or soccer practice. âSheâd say, âCome home soon,â like a code. Meant she missed me, even if I was just at school.â
Her life wasnât without shadows. Journal entries, shared posthumously, reveal fears of being âwatchedâ on her train rides home. âAmericaâs safe, but not the trains,â she wrote in July 2025. âEyes follow you, and not all are kind.â Her boyfriend, Alexei Kovacs, 25, noticed her growing unease, urging her to take Lyft instead. But Iryna, frugal and stubborn, insisted on the Lynx, clutching her fatherâs pen like a shield. âSheâd twirl it when nervous,â Alexei recalls, his voice breaking. âSaid it kept Papa close.â
The Fatal Night: A Voicemailâs Final Echoes
August 22, 2025, unfolded routinely until it didnât. Irynaâs shift at Tonyâs ended at 9:15 p.m., a blur of tourists and pizza orders. âShe was joking about her scooter, how itâd be faster than the train,â her manager, Rosa Mendoza, recalls. Grabbing a half-eaten cheese pizza boxâa leftover sheâd take home for MykolaâIryna boarded the Lynx Blue Line at Scaleybark station at 9:46 p.m., bound for East/West Boulevard, a four-minute ride. At 9:45 p.m., she left her final voicemail, her voice steady despite the trainâs clatter: âMykola, Iâm on the train. Work was crazy, but Iâm okay. Come home soon â¤ď¸.â
The Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) footage, released September 5 under public pressure, captures the horror that followed. At 9:48 p.m., Decarlos Brown Jr. enters the train car, his movements erratic, muttering to himself. A fare-dodger with a history of mental health crises, heâd slipped past CATS officers earlier. At 9:50 p.m., he attacks without warning, his dollar-store pocketknife slicing Irynaâs neck, shoulder, and knee. She collapses, blood pooling, as four passengersâa nurse, two students, and a retireeârush to help. The nurse, Maria Gonzalez, later told police, âShe was gasping, whispering somethingâmaybe Ukrainian. Her hand went to her pocket, then the pizza box.â
That box, now infamous, was Irynaâs final canvas. At 9:51 p.m., as the train halted, she pulled out her fatherâs blue pen and scribbled on the boxâs lid, the act caught on camera: five seconds of frantic strokes, a pause, then a slump. The pen fell; the box stayed. But when police bagged it as evidence, the writingâseen clearly in footageâhad vanished, no ink or indentations detectable. This mystery, paired with the voicemailâs ghostly voice, has gripped Charlotte, fueling X threads and true-crime podcasts like Echoes of the Blue Line.
The Haunting Three Seconds: A Voice Beyond Irynaâs
Mykola discovered the voicemail the morning after Irynaâs death, sent to CMPDâs homicide unit by 10 a.m. on August 23. Heâd played it twice before noticing the anomaly: in the final three seconds, as Irynaâs âCome home soon â¤ď¸â fades, a low, indistinct voice murmurs. âItâs not her,â Mykola insists, replaying it for this reporter on a Bluetooth speaker. The sound is muffled, like a whisper through static, possibly male, possibly English, though some hear Ukrainian or even a distorted laugh. âIâve played it 27 timesâ27, because thatâs how old sheâd be next May,â he says, his hands trembling. âItâs someone else on that train. Was it him? Or… something else?â
Forensic audio experts, hired by CMPD and supplemented by private analysis from the Zarutskasâ GoFundMe funds, are stumped. Dr. Emily Tran, a UNC Charlotte audio engineer, ran the file through spectrographic software, isolating the background. âItâs human, not ambient noiseâmaybe 60-70 decibels, low-pitched, 2-3 words,â she says. âBut the trainâs rumble and Irynaâs voice obscure it. Enhancement pulls up nothing distinctâno phonemes we can pin.â Theories range: Was it Brown, muttering before the attack? A passengerâs casual remark? Or, as Mykola half-wonders, âPapaâs voice, somehow, reaching her?â Viktor, still in Kyiv, dismisses this as griefâs fantasy but admits, âHer pen, her voiceâthey were my thread to her. Maybe God let her hear me one last time.â
The familyâs pain is compounded by the voicemailâs public leak on September 10, posted to an X thread by @CLTTrueCrime, a local sleuth with 15K followers. The clip, downloaded 80,000 times before moderators yanked it, sparked wild speculation: some hear âGet outâ in English, others âBerezhisâ (Ukrainian for âBe carefulâ). A fringe Reddit group, r/ParanoidCharlotte, claims itâs a âghost echo,â tying it to Ukrainian folklore about spirits warning loved ones. Olena, a devout Orthodox Christian, scoffs but admits, âIryna loved those old tales. If she sent a sign, itâd be like this.â
The Suspectâs Descent: A Mind Unraveled, a System Unmoored
Decarlos Brown Jr.âs role in this tragedy is undisputed but layered. Arrested at 9:53 p.m. on the platform, his knife still bloody, he faces federal charges under 18 U.S.C. § 1992 for transit-related murder, alongside state first-degree murder counts. His life, pieced together from court filings and family interviews, is a grim mosaic: 14 arrests since 2007, including a 2014 robbery stint; diagnosed schizophrenia in 2010, untreated since 2020; and 911 calls in 2025 reporting âdemons in wires.â His mother, Tanya Brown, begged for commitment, but North Carolinaâs criteriaâimminent dangerâbarred it. âHe was a ghost in the system,â she told WSOC-TV. âTheyâd arrest him, release him, repeat.â
On the train, Brownâs behaviorâcaught on CATS camerasâsuggests delusion, not premeditation. He paced, laughed, and clutched a crumpled paper, later found to be a grocery list scrawled with âeyes watching.â Did he speak the words in Irynaâs voicemail? Audio analysis canât confirm; his voice sample, taken post-arrest, is too slurred by medication. His lawyer, public defender Marcus Hill, argues diminished capacity: âDecarlos wasnât a predatorâhe was a patient, failed by a state with 16-day psych bed waitlists.â DA Spencer Baugh counters: âMental illness isnât a free pass to kill.â
The voicemailâs voice fuels darker theories. Could it be a second assailant, missed by cameras? CMPDâs Detective Lara Chen dismisses this: âFootage shows Brown alone near her.â Yet, X users like @Justice4Iryna speculate about accomplices, citing CATSâs spotty camera coverage (12% of cars unmonitored in 2024). Others point to Brownâs muttering: Was he talking to himself, or responding to Irynaâs call?
The Pizza Box Enigma: A Sisterâs Lost Words
The voicemailâs mystery intertwines with the pizza boxâs vanishing ink, deepening the caseâs surreal edge. Surveillance shows Iryna scribbling furiously post-attack, her fatherâs pen leaving visible marks. Yet, forensic tests found no residueâno blue ink, no scratches, despite ballpointâs permanence. âItâs physically impossible,â says Dr. Raj Patel, a UNC forensic chemist. âEven blood wouldnât erase it without chemical traces.â Mykola theorizes the penâs ink, from Viktorâs Soviet-era factory, might fade under heat or humidity, but Patel debunks this: âNot in seven minutes, not without residue.â
The box, now in CMPDâs evidence locker, is under re-examination after Mykolaâs insistence. Was the writing a name? A plea? A mirror of the voicemailâs âCome home soonâ? Olena clings to hope: âMaybe she wrote to Viktor, to say goodbye.â Alexei, analyzing stills nightly, believes it was a warning: âShe sensed himâBrownâbefore the knife. She was sharp like that.â The familyâs GoFundMe, raising $160,000, funds private tests, but results are weeks away.
A Cityâs Reckoning: Grief, Reform, and Unanswered Whispers
Irynaâs death has galvanized Charlotte. A September 22 vigil at East/West Boulevard drew 600, blue pens raised skyward, echoing her fatherâs gift. Mayor Vi Lyles pledged $2.5 million for CATS upgrades: AI fare checks, crisis intervention teams. Ukrainian expats, via the Charlotte Slavic Center, demand transit marshals, citing 2024âs 27% spike in train assaults. Nationally, the case fuels mental health debates: Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) pushes a $100M psych funding bill, while Gov. Roy Cooper calls Irynaâs death âa failure of systems, not just one man.â
Globally, Ukraineâs diaspora mourns. Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tweeted: âIryna carried our spirit across oceans, only to fall to Americaâs shadows.â Al Jazeeraâs Kyiv bureau framed her as âwarâs ripple victim,â linking displacement to vulnerability. On X, #IrynaZarutska trends, with 1.4M postsâsome demand Brownâs life sentence, others decry deinstitutionalizationâs toll.
The Voice That Lingers: A Familyâs Plea
Mykola plays the voicemail daily, now on his 28th listen. âItâs her, but itâs not just her,â he says, eyes on the phone. Sofia, sketching Irynaâs face in her sisterâs style, adds: âThat voiceâitâs like sheâs still trying to tell us something.â Olena, clutching Viktorâs latest letter, believes itâs a call to act: âSheâd want us to fix thisâtrains, minds, broken things.â
The inquiry into the voice continues, with CMPD crowdsourcing audio tips via a hotline (704-555-0193). Experts warn of auditory pareidoliaâhumans imposing meaning on noiseâbut Mykola rejects this. âItâs real. Someone was there, or something was.â Readers, weigh in: Is it Brownâs delusion, a strangerâs echo, or a sisterâs final bridge to home? As Charlotteâs trains rumble on, Irynaâs whisper demands we listenâlest her words, like her ink, fade forever.