
They found the iPhone wedged between the mattress and the box spring in Austin Lynch’s bedroom, screen spider-webbed from the shotgun recoil that had torn through his face hours earlier.
When Suffolk County detectives finally cracked it open on December 12, 2025, the passcode was childishly simple: 112625 — the exact date and time he pulled the trigger.
What spilled out was not a teenager’s phone. It was a shrine. A time capsule. A confession.
Forty-three voice memos, all addressed to “E.”
Prosecutors played the worst ones in court yesterday, and the gallery sat frozen.
Memo #39 — recorded at 1:47 a.m. the night before the murder: “She blocked me again. She thinks distance fixes everything. Distance doesn’t fix me. Nothing fixes me without her.”
Memo #41 — 4:02 a.m., voice thick with tears and rage: “I keep seeing her dancing in my head. With someone else. I want to cut that picture out of my brain.”
Memo #43 — 2:13 a.m., just seven hours before Emily pulled into the driveway: “Tomorrow she comes here to give my stuff back. Tomorrow I give her the only thing left. If I can’t have her, nobody gets to.”
Then came the call.
At 9:47 a.m. on November 26, the house landline rang Emily’s cell. The Finn family’s Verizon account auto-recorded it. Forty-one seconds.
Emily’s voice is soft, exhausted, trying to stay kind: “Austin, I’m outside. I just want to drop your hoodie and be done. Please let’s not fight.”
His reply — eleven words, delivered flat and calm, like he’d rehearsed them a thousand times in the dark:
“I love you, but you’re never leaving me alive.”
Click.
Three minutes later she was dead on the foyer floor.
The rest of the phone was a museum of madness:
A hidden folder with 212 screenshots of her Instagram stories, each captioned in red text: “Who is he?” “Why is she smiling?” “This used to be us.”
A Maps history showing three round-trips to Oneonta in four weeks.
An unsent 1,200-word note titled “When You Read This I’ll Be Gone” that ended with the line: “You made me do this.”
A 17-second video filmed in his bedroom mirror at 8:30 a.m. the morning of the murder: Lynch loading the shotgun, staring into the lens, whispering, “This is the only way we stay together forever.”
When detectives played that video for him in the hospital on December 12, Lynch reportedly closed his eyes, nodded once, and said:
“I told her on the phone. I warned her exactly what would happen.”
Emily’s mother had to be helped from the courtroom when the 11-word call was played. She managed four words to reporters on the courthouse steps:
“He warned her. She still tried to be kind. That kindness killed her.”
The iPhone and its contents will now sit in an evidence locker until trial, every memo, every screenshot, every second of that 41-second call ready to be played for a jury.
For the Finn family, those eleven words are the epitaph they never wanted:
“I love you, but you’re never leaving me alive.”
And for the rest of Long Island, they are a permanent reminder that sometimes the most dangerous weapon isn’t the shotgun.
It’s the phone that records everything.
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