THE NOTEBOOK OF DEATH: HISHAM’S HANDWRITTEN HIT LIST? 📔🩸

Just when we thought the ChatGPT logs were enough, investigators found the “smoking gun” in the bedroom: a notebook with handwritten timestamps that match the murder timeline to the second.

This isn’t just a crime; it’s a meticulously logged execution. While the USF community reels, the timestamps prove Hisham was watching the clock while Zamil and Nahida were breathing their last. The “quiet roommate” kept a diary of the darkness. 🕵️‍♂️💔

See the leaked details of the notebook and why this guarantees Life Without Parole. 👇🔥

In a development that has sent chills through the Florida legal system, investigators have recovered a handwritten notebook from the apartment shared by Hisham Abugharbieh and his victims. The notebook, which contains a series of meticulous “timestamps,” reportedly serves as a grim logbook that bridges the gap between Abugharbieh’s ChatGPT queries and the actual moments Zamil Limon and Nahida Bristy were silenced forever.

The Diary of a Killer

While digital forensics provided the “how” through ChatGPT logs, the notebook found in Abugharbieh’s room provides the “when” with terrifying accuracy. Sources close to the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office reveal that the suspect didn’t just plan the murders online; he tracked his progress on paper.

The notebook reportedly contains scribbled times—down to the minute—spanning from the night of April 16th to the early morning of April 17th. These timestamps coincide perfectly with:

The final activity on Zamil Limon’s phone.

The movement of a cart seen on CCTV, used to transport heavy boxes to the apartment complex’s trash compactor.

The exact moments license plate readers caught Abugharbieh’s vehicle crossing the Howard Frankland Bridge.

“It’s as if he was running a scientific experiment,” said a source familiar with the evidence. “He was checking off stages of the ‘disposal process’ he had asked the AI about just days prior.”

The “Third Roommate” Breaks the Silence

The breakthrough came as detectives re-interviewed the third roommate living in the off-campus apartment. While Abugharbieh initially claimed Zamil and Nahida had simply “gone for a walk,” the third roommate pointed investigators toward a discarded notebook Abugharbieh had tried to hide under a stack of old textbooks.

The witness also described hearing “heavy dragging sounds” during the exact intervals noted in the notebook’s timestamps. This testimony, combined with the physical evidence, has effectively demolished Abugharbieh’s defense of “non-involvement.”

Evidence in the Compactor: The Pink Case and the Tan Slides

The timestamps also directed police to specific dumpsters at the Lake Forest subdivision. There, investigators made a series of heartbreaking discoveries:

A light pink iPhone case known to belong to Nahida Bristy.

Blood-stained tan slides and a grey shirt riddled with “cuts and holes,” suggesting a violent struggle.

Limon’s campus ID and credit cards, found at the bottom of the trash compactor, matching a timestamp in the notebook labeled “Clearance.”

A Community Demands Answers

As the news of the notebook broke, the Bangladeshi Student Association at USF issued a searing statement. “The level of premeditation is beyond human comprehension,” the group stated. “To log the deaths of your friends as if they were data points is a level of evil we are not prepared to face.”

The search for Nahida Bristy’s remains continues near St. Petersburg, with the notebook providing “geographical clues” that search divers are now using to narrow their focus. Detectives believe the timestamps may lead them to the exact location where the second body was discarded.

Legal Endgame

Hisham Abugharbieh remains held without bond at the Falkenburg Road Jail. With the ChatGPT logs providing intent and the notebook providing a chronological confession, legal experts believe a plea deal is unlikely. Prosecutors are expected to pursue the death penalty, citing the “heinous, atrocious, and cruel” nature of the premeditated acts.

The USF campus plans a “Walk of Light” this Friday, even as the community grapples with the realization that a monster was living in their midst, checking his watch as he ended two of their brightest lives.