He still has the screenshot. 3:07 a.m. ship time, November 7, 2025. Anna Kepner’s face fills the frame, eyes half-closed, lips curved in that sl

eepy smile that always made him weak. Behind her, the tiny cruise-ship cabin is dark except for the glow of her phone. You can just make out the shape of the top bunk above her.

That’s when it happens.

Her boyfriend, who asked to remain anonymous because the FBI still has his phone, remembers every second. He saw movement first, a shadow dropping down from the upper bunk like a cat. Then a figure in a gray T-shirt crouched beside Anna’s bed. The boyfriend’s voice cracks when he talks about it now: “I said her name, like ‘Anna, who’s that?’ but she was already drifting off. She just mumbled something about her stepbrother being restless.”

The figure leaned over her. The boyfriend saw Anna’s shoulder shift slightly, like someone was pressing down. Then the phone tilted, screen went black, call ended. He tried calling back seventeen times. Straight to voicemail.

He didn’t sleep. He texted her stepdad. No reply. He told himself cruise ships have bad service. By 11 a.m. he was pacing his bedroom in Titusville when the news alerts started popping up: Florida teen found dead on Carnival cruise.

When the FBI finally knocked on his door two days later, they already knew about the FaceTime. Apple had pulled the metadata. The call had lasted 43 seconds after the figure appeared. The boyfriend cried so hard he couldn’t speak. He kept saying, “I watched it happen and I couldn’t do anything.”

Investigators asked if he could identify the person on the video. He didn’t need to. He had met T.H. twice before, once at a blended-family barbecue, once when the kid came to pick Anna up for a school event. Same height, same build, same gray Nike T-shirt he wore in every photo.

The autopsy would later show that Anna died from compression of the carotid arteries, less than two minutes of sustained pressure. Two minutes that her boyfriend unknowingly witnessed from 800 miles away.

T.H. has not spoken publicly. His mother postponed her divorce hearing indefinitely. Anna’s father still insists there must be some mistake, that “boys wrestle sometimes.” But the boyfriend’s phone holds the truth in high definition: the last moment Anna Marie Kepner was alive, and the exact second someone decided she wouldn’t wake up.

He says he will never delete that screenshot. Some nights he opens it just to look at her smile one more time before the shadow falls.