The final moments of Iryna Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee, were captured on chilling surveillance video as she looked up in terror after being stabbed in the neck during a random attack on a Charlotte, North Carolina, train.
A Brutal, Random Killing
On August 22, Zarutska boarded the train still wearing her pizzeria uniform. She propped up her feet and scrolled on her phone as other passengers sat in silence. Just four minutes later, Decarlos Brown Jr., 34, who had been lurking nearby in a red hoodie, calmly unfolded a knife and suddenly plunged it into her neck.
Zarutska clutched her head and appeared to sob as blood poured down her body. Passengers at first seemed frozen; one man chased the attacker as he walked away, but others looked on or left the car. About a minute later, horrified commuters rushed to help as she slouched to the ground. She died on the train surrounded by passengers.
Brown exited the train and he was arrested at the next station after passengers fled and begged for help. He now faces first-degree murder and a federal charge of causing death on a mass transportation system, which could carry the death penalty.

A System Under Fire
The murder ignited outrage because Brown was a repeat offender with 14 prior arrests for crimes ranging from larceny and armed robbery to assault and false 911 calls. Just weeks earlier, a court ordered a mental health evaluation. His mother said he was diagnosed with schizophrenia but refused treatment. He had been released in January on cashless bail despite 14 prior arrests.
President Donald Trump condemned the killing as evidence of failed cashless bail policies: āShe was slaughtered by a deranged monster who was roaming free after 14 prior arrests. In Charlotte, we saw the results of these policies when a 23-year-old woman who came here from Ukraine met her bloody end on a public train.ā

Calling for tougher measures, Trump said: āWe have to be vicious just like they are. Itās the only thing they understand.ā
A Family in Mourning
Brownās mother admitted her son had been violent and unstable in the days leading up to the attack. āWhat he did was atrocious. It was horrible. It was wrong,ā she said, offering condolences to Zarutskaās family.
For Irynaās loved ones, the loss is immeasurable. Fleeing the war in Ukraine, she had dreamed of building a life in America. Her family described her as a natural artist with a passion for animals and a goal of becoming a veterinary assistant.
āIryna will be remembered for her kindness, her creativity, and the lasting impression she left on everyone she met,ā her obituary read. āHer absence leaves a deep void, but her spirit will forever remain in the hearts of those who loved her.ā
A Nation Shocked
As Charlotte reels from the attack, the case has sparked a national debate about bail reform, mental health, and public safety. For those who knew her, however, the focus is on the young woman who escaped a war zone only to meet violence on an American train, her look of terror now frozen in memory as the final image of her life.
