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Stalker Fatally Shoots Audio Streamer and Husband in Washington

The police in Redmond, Wash., said the gunman had been stalking the woman, who appeared on an audio stream on the social media app Clubhouse.

An audio streamer and her husband were fatally shot in Redmond, Wash., early on Friday morning by a fan who had been stalking the woman, the police said.

The audio streamer, Zohreh Sadeghi, 33, and her husband, Milad Naseri, 35, were pronounced dead in a home in Redmond, about 15 miles east of Seattle, around 1:45 a.m. on Friday, said Darrell Lowe, the Redmond police chief.

By The New York Times

Ms. Sadeghi’s mother, who was also in the home at the time, escaped and called the police from a neighbor’s house.

The gunman, Ramin Khodakaramrezaei, a 38-year-old long-haul trucker from Texas, had broken into the home through a bedroom window, Chief Lowe said.

Mr. Khodakaramrezaei, who had been stalking Ms. Sadeghi, fatally shot himself after shooting the couple, according to a Redmond Police Department news release.

Mr. Khodakaramrezaei first discovered Ms. Sadeghi after listening to a Farsi audio stream about gaining employment in the tech industry, the chief said at a news conference.

The stream was hosted on Clubhouse, a social media app described in a blog post by Hootsuite as “a cross between podcast and a conference call” and that allows users to talk and listen in chat rooms.

It is believed that Mr. Khodakaramrezaei was a listener to the audio stream featuring Ms. Sadeghi and later began communicating with her. They eventually became friends, until his actions escalated and she sought a no-contact order against him, the police said.

His interest in Ms. Sadeghi was made clear by messages he had sent her. “One message suggested he would love her forever and would burn himself in front of her house,” Chief Lowe said.

According to the authorities, Mr. Khodakaramrezaei had harassed Ms. Sadeghi over the phone for months, even calling her more than 100 times in one day.

“There were instances where the individual did show up at the location previously, bearing gifts,” the chief said, referring to Mr. Khodakaramrezaei. “There were items, I’ll say items of affection, gifts, that were mailed to the victim.”

Mr. Khodakaramrezaei once followed Ms. Sadeghi to a conference in Denver near the end of 2022 and visited her home the night before the shooting, the chief said.

Ms. Sadeghi contacted the police in January, and the department assigned the case to an investigator, but the police could not easily locate Mr. Khodakaramrezaei.

It was not until March that a judge issued a temporary protection order forbidding Mr. Khodakaramrezaei from contacting Ms. Sadeghi. The order, however, had not yet been served as of Friday.

Investigators had been attempting to find Mr. Khodakaramrezaei so that the police could arrest him, Chief Lowe said.

“This is every detective’s, every police chief’s worst nightmare” Chief Lowe said.

The police were not aware of Mr. Khodakaramrezaei having any criminal history beyond minor traffic violations.

They also could not confirm whether he had obtained his weapon legally. Investigators said he had rented a vehicle, but it was not immediately clear how he had traveled to the home.

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