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#531
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11-10-2025, 05:12 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:14095 Join Date: Feb 2023 Posts: 7 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 4 Post(s)
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Re: *Hanged Women Thread* (NEW)
i wanna see the moment of bleeding too, i hope we can get the full livestream
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#533
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11-28-2025, 09:13 AM
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Re: *Hanged Women Thread* (NEW)
Honduras. Couldn't find it unwatermarked. Thanks to kellyhound for contributions. |
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#534
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12-03-2025, 03:09 PM
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Re: *Hanged Women Thread* (NEW)
This video was posted without any real detail on another forum. 21 year old Marie Sellena Shanone D’Eau hanged herself on the night of December 1st in her apartment in Petit-Verger, Mauritius. She livestreamed the entire thing, albeit without sound. Initially she tries and fails, then repositions a few minutes later and manages to succeed in a partial suspension hanging. She keeps one hand up on the noose and one foot on the chair the entire time, but still manages to get the job done. She initially goes for a full suspension with both feet in the air, but quickly pivots and gets her right foot on the chair. Not sure if she was intending to stop herself from hanging or if it was pure chance. In any case, the successful hanging begins around 7:48 and continues to the end. The last shot of the video has her standing and alive, but with an accurate timestamp in sequence with the hanging. This initially gave me a bit of pause, but upon closer analysis the final image is just a freeze frame of one of her setting up the noose for the earlier, failed hanging. Her posturing, agonal breathing, and decerebrate movements during the second hanging look legitimate. Also, despite there being no audio, you can clearly see her emptying her bladder on the floor from 8:15-8:32. All of that gave me enough cause to invest the time in getting details, since I felt at that point that the video was real and not staged/faked. I spent some time researching the event and was able to match a date with a location and decedent name. Also got a coroner's initial report saying that she had no signs of violence and that her cause of death was mechanical asphyxia due to suspension hanging. There were three children asleep in the house as she was hanging herself. One was hers, and the other two were the children of her boyfriend, with whom she was living at the time. The boyfriend discovered her when he got home from work a few hours later. People watching and responding to her livestream tried calling the police, but were unable to find a specific location for her. |
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#536
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12-04-2025, 07:45 AM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:13251 Join Date: Nov 2024 Posts: 8 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 3 Post(s)
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Re: *Hanged Women Thread* (NEW)
Beautiful dance. She was so determined. Usually people will give up after they fail to hang themselves. But she found another belt to hang herself quickly. And I think the action she put her foot on chair is just a natural reflect while she move around on the rope. Because she lost awareness very soon. That's a wonderful find, thank you Vedderman.
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#538
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12-11-2025, 01:41 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:13251 Join Date: Nov 2024 Posts: 8 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 3 Post(s)
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Re: *Hanged Women Thread* (NEW)
I have more details about that girl, poor Karla. 1. The El Heraldo de México piece: threats, prior history, and family complicity This article repeats much of the core information but adds several key points: 1. The most chilling threat spelled out clearly The family’s lawyer, Augusto Avellaneda, tells the press that Zerda gave Karla a sort of “final ultimatum”: > “If you don’t kill yourself, I will kill your mother, your father, your entire family.” This is not just generic verbal abuse, but a very typical pattern of psychological control: using the threat of slaughtering loved ones to push a victim toward suicide. 2. At least three years of ongoing harassment and intimidation According to the lawyer, for at least three years he had been stalking, harassing, and threatening her. Karla filed at least six police reports, none of which led to effective action. 3. A longer history of violence & criminal behavior The article also brings up information from a previous ex-partner: A woman named Luz Chocobar publicly accused him in 2020 of having subjected her to physical and psychological violence back in 2010–2011. That same statement mentioned that he had previously been imprisoned for drug trafficking. In other words, this was not someone who suddenly “snapped,” but a man with a long-standing pattern of violent and criminal behavior that the system repeatedly failed to contain. 4. His family’s role in protecting him Karla’s mother, Mirta, also says that: Zerda treated his own mother badly; Yet his mother would make excuses for him and protect him. This kind of “family shield” tends to reinforce the perpetrator’s sense that he is untouchable. --- 2. The long piece by the anti-bullying NGO: everyday details of “pushing you toward death” The organization Bullying Sin Fronteras (“Bullying Without Borders”) wrote a commemorative piece that adds some painful, day-to-day details: 1. She felt she had to report everything she did to him The article says that in this “toxic relationship,” Karla felt she needed to constantly justify her actions and “report” everything she did to him, as if she had no autonomy. 2. “Why don’t you just kill yourself?” was a repeated line According to the text, he did not say this only once in the heat of an argument. He repeatedly told her things along the lines of: > “Why don’t you go kill yourself?” This turns the idea of her killing herself into a constant background message, not a one-time outburst. 3. All six of her complaints were archived by the same prosecutor The article specifically names the prosecutor Augusto Zapata: Karla reported him to the authorities at least six times; All six cases were “archived” by this same prosecutor, without meaningful protective measures or detention. Karla’s mother’s line – “If he had locked that man up the first time my daughter reported him, she would be alive today” – is quoted again and given central importance. The overall tone of this piece is clear: this was not a random, isolated suicide. It was a death that unfolded under years of unchecked intimate partner violence, in a context where the judicial system repeatedly failed to act. --- 3. The local newspaper La Gaceta: how prosecutors legally frame the “psychological torture” La Gaceta, a major local paper in Tucumán, focuses more on how the prosecution is legally describing Zerda’s long-term psychological abuse: 1. “Systematic abuse” from 2022 onwards The indictment states very explicitly that: Since 2022, within their five-year relationship, he subjected Karla to both physical and psychological violence. On multiple occasions he told her: > “You’re crazy, that’s why they hospitalized you. You should just kill yourself already.” “If you don’t come back to me, you’d better kill yourself, or I’ll kill your whole family.” This presents the abuse not as sporadic quarrels but as a sustained pattern of coercive control. 2. “Intentionally persuading her to end her own life” The prosecution’s theory is that: Through repeated behavior and threats, he deliberately persuaded and encouraged Karla to take her own life; And that this took place within a broader, long-term context of gender-based violence, which should be considered an aggravating factor. In other words, the core argument is that he used his knowledge of her vulnerabilities and their emotional bond to systematically push her toward suicide. 3. The parents’ statements in court Karla’s mother told the court: > “He was watching the live stream. He watched my daughter die. I want him in prison.” Her father said: > “If he’s allowed to walk free, there will be another Karla.” These lines underline the family’s view that this is not merely “her decision,” but that he remains a present danger to others. This article makes the prosecution’s model very explicit: they are not treating this as “they argued and she impulsively killed herself,” but as a case where a man used long-term psychological abuse to corner her into seeing death as her only exit. --- 4. Other small but important additions from various outlets 1. A message she left in the live stream about mental health Some Argentine media highlight that in her TikTok live, Karla said: > “Take care of your mental health.” On one level, she is warning others; on another level, it is deeply tragic, because she herself was not protected by the systems that should have responded to her mental health and safety needs. 2. International coverage Spanish outlets (like Telecinco, La Razón, etc.) mostly compile what Infobae and La Gaceta reported, but put emphasis on: Her repeated, ineffective attempts to get help from the justice system; The years of threats, harassment, and violence; The idea that this case is now being cited internationally as a paradigmatic example of gender-based violence + live-streamed suicide + institutional failure. |
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#540
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12-17-2025, 05:01 AM
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Re: *Hanged Women Thread* (NEW)
Here is what led up to Rizzi taking her life. I want you to take note of the time and dates and the people around her Bryce HB and Candy. We’re all “friends “but they used her for her money and when she no longer wanted to give them money, this is how they did her. They knew she was in and out of mental health facilities. They knew she was struggling. They didn’t care. They just pushed her over the edge. Rizzi is a victim of SA by her therapist. He took her virginity and she has never done anything sexual ever since but get treated like she is easy. |