In the spring and summer of 2025, two young women with boundless futures were stolen from their families by career criminals who should never have walked free. Logan Haley Federico, a 22-year-old aspiring teacher from Waxhaw, North Carolina, and Iryna Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee studying to become a veterinary assistant in Charlotte, shared a passion for making a difference. Their lives, cut short in horrifyingly similar acts of violence, have become a rallying cry for justice, exposing a justice system that failed them both. At the heart of this tragedy are their fathers—Stephen Federico and Stanislav Zarutskyi—whose raw, gut-wrenching pleas for reform echo the final, desperate calls from their daughters, sparking a nationwide demand to fix a broken system.

Logan Federico was a spark of joy, her 5’3” frame bursting with dreams of shaping young minds. A University of South Carolina student, she spent her days volunteering at local schools and her nights planning lessons, her notebooks filled with ideas for inspiring kids. “She was our sunshine,” her father Stephen recalls, his voice heavy with grief. “Logan could make anyone smile—her laugh was contagious, her heart huge.” On May 3, 2025, she was in Columbia, South Carolina, crashing at a friend’s off-campus house after a carefree evening. Their nightly text ritual—“Love you, Dad. Sleep tight”—went unanswered, a silence that gnawed at Stephen. Then, at 2:17 a.m., his phone rang. “Dad, I’m scared… I hear someone,” Logan whispered, her voice trembling. Stephen urged her to hide, to call 911, but the line cut off. Alexander Devonte Dickey, a 30-year-old with 39 arrests and 25 felonies, had smashed through the door. He dragged Logan from her bed, forced her to kneel, and shot her through the heart as she begged for mercy. Her killer fled, using her stolen credit cards for a callous spree before a manhunt caught him.

Hundreds of miles away, Iryna Zarutska’s story mirrored Logan’s in its brutality. Escaping Ukraine’s war in 2022, the 23-year-old arrived in Charlotte with her family, her blue eyes alight with hope. Studying at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, she dreamed of healing animals, volunteering at shelters and sketching pet portraits in her spare time. “Iryna was our miracle,” her father Stanislav says from Ukraine, where war kept him from her side. On August 22, 2025, after a long shift, Iryna boarded the Lynx Blue Line at Charlotte’s East/West Boulevard station. As she sat, exhausted but hopeful, Decarlos Brown Jr., a 34-year-old with 14 arrests for violent crimes, attacked without warning. Security footage captured the horror: three swift stabs to her neck and chest, her body crumpling as passengers screamed. She died before paramedics arrived, her dreams of a veterinary clinic extinguished in seconds.

The killers’ freedom wasn’t fate—it was failure. Dickey’s rap sheet read like a warning ignored: assaults, thefts, a 2018 burglary charge that should’ve locked him away for 15 years but ended in a plea deal and months served. Over a decade, he spent just 600 days behind bars, enabled by lost warrants and lenient courts. Brown’s story was no different: repeated violent offenses, ignored mental health red flags, and a cashless bail release days before Iryna’s murder. “These weren’t men—they were monsters the system unleashed,” Stephen told a hushed House Judiciary Committee in Charlotte on September 30, 2025. Holding a photo of Logan in her graduation cap, he recounted her final call: “She said, ‘Dad, help me.’ I hear it every night—the silence after was worse than death.” His voice shook the room. “This wasn’t random. The courts chose to free a killer with 39 chances to change. Logan got none.”

Stanislav’s grief, trapped by Ukraine’s war, poured out in a viral video from a makeshift memorial. Kneeling beside Iryna’s photo, he sobbed, “My girl survived bombs, only to die like this? She called me that morning, said she loved America, loved her animals. Why wasn’t she protected?” Unable to attend her Charlotte funeral on August 27 due to travel restrictions, he clutched her college acceptance letter, begging for justice. “Iryna deserved safety,” he said in Ukrainian, his words translated for a global audience. “Her killer was free, again and again. Why?” His plea fuels “Iryna’s Law,” a North Carolina push for no-bail holds on violent reoffenders and faster death penalty reviews, mirroring Stephen’s “Logan’s Law” for federal sentencing reform and plea-deal crackdowns.

The parallels are chilling: two women, one bullet, three stabs, two predators with endless second chances. Dickey faces federal murder charges, with prosecutors seeking death. Brown, too, stares down a capital case. But for Stephen and Stanislav, justice isn’t just a verdict—it’s prevention. “I failed her because the system failed us,” Stephen told lawmakers, his fist slamming the table. “Picture your daughter, woken in the dark, begging. That’s what Logan endured. That’s what Iryna faced.” Social media erupts with #JusticeForLoganAndIryna, posts sharing Logan’s voicemails and Iryna’s pet sketches, alongside stats that shock: over 1,500 repeat-offender burglaries in the Carolinas in 2024. “Two girls, two dreams, one broken system,” a viral X thread declares. News shows dissect the cases, from Dickey’s fast-food binge with Logan’s cards to Brown’s history of untreated mental health crises, sparking debates on reform versus retribution.

The fathers’ bond transcends borders. Stephen, now a tireless advocate, connected with Iryna’s family via video calls, their shared pain forging unity. “Stanislav’s voice is mine,” Stephen says. “We’re fighting for every parent who might get that call.” Vigils blend Logan’s Carolina blue ribbons with Iryna’s sunflowers, strangers funding scholarships in their names. Stephen visits Logan’s untouched room, her teaching books gathering dust, while Stanislav, in war-torn Ukraine, keeps Iryna’s drawings by his bunk. “She’d want us to save others,” he says. Their trials loom, but the real battle is in Congress and statehouses, where “Logan’s Law” and “Iryna’s Law” could rewrite justice—or stall in gridlock.

This isn’t just tragedy; it’s a wake-up call. Logan and Iryna, united in death, demand we see the cost of leniency. Their fathers’ cries—one from a Carolina courtroom, one from a Ukrainian field—carry their daughters’ dreams forward. “They were our futures,” Stephen says. “Don’t let the next call be yours.” As the nation grapples with rising crime and fractured systems, their stories beg the question: how many more must die before we lock the cage for good? The answer lies in the laws yet to pass, and in the love that keeps two daughters’ lights burning.