HE WAS WATCHING ANOTHER CHILD! 🚨😱 THE DISCOVERY THAT HAS EVERY PARENT LOCKING THEIR DOORS TONIGHT!

“He had no delivery to make…” Just days after the unthinkable happened to Athena, Tanner Horner was caught on another driveway, empty-handed and lurking. The details from homeowner Tom Euler are sickening: Horner was casually feeding the family dog while an 8-year-old girl played just feet away.

Was he hunting again? The chilling composure of this man as he sat in his van, watching, is enough to make your blood run cold. This isn’t just a murder case anymore—it’s the reveal of a serial predator’s “routine.” 💔🥀

SEE THE HOME SECURITY FOOTAGE AND THE FATHER’S TERRIFYING ACCOUNT 👇🔥

A disturbing new chapter has opened in the sentencing phase of Tanner Horner, as a local father took the stand to describe a “chillingly calm” encounter with the FedEx driver just days after Athena Strand was reported missing. The testimony of Tom Euler has sent shockwaves through the courtroom, suggesting that Horner may have been scouting his next victim while the entire state was still searching for Athena.

The revelation paints a picture of a predator who didn’t just strike once by accident, but who operated with a calculated, predatory routine that has left North Texas parents paralyzed with fear.

A Stop with No Purpose

According to Tom Euler, Horner pulled his FedEx truck into the Euler family driveway on a day when no deliveries were scheduled for their address. Euler, watching from a window, described a scene that appeared normal on the surface but felt “off” in hindsight.

“He didn’t have a package,” Euler testified, his voice trembling with a mix of anger and relief. “He just walked up, gave my dog some treats, and picked up a random parcel from the porch like he was supposed to be there. Then he just… sat in the truck.”

Most harrowing of all was the proximity of Euler’s 8-year-old daughter, who was playing in the yard just a few feet from the idling FedEx van. Euler claims Horner sat in the driver’s seat for several minutes, staring toward the child with the same “vacant, unblinking expression” that has become his trademark in court.

‘The Predator’s Routine’

Legal analysts are calling this “Propensity Evidence” of the most dangerous kind. The prosecution argues that Horner was using his FedEx uniform and vehicle as a “trojan horse” to infiltrate private properties and groom domestic animals to avoid detection.

“He wasn’t a delivery man that day; he was a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” a prosecutor stated during cross-examination. “Feeding the dog wasn’t an act of kindness—it was a tactic to silence a witness. Sitting in that truck wasn’t a break—it was a stakeout.”

Digital Backlash: #TheOtherDriveway

The internet has reacted with visceral horror to Euler’s testimony. On X (formerly Twitter), the hashtag #TheOtherDriveway began trending as parents shared stories of suspicious delivery drivers. On Reddit’s r/TrueCrime, users are calling for a federal investigation into all of Horner’s routes over the past year.

“To think that another little girl was just feet away from the same fate… it’s a miracle Tom Euler was watching,” wrote one user on a thread that has garnered 150,000 shares. “FedEx didn’t just hire a killer; they gave a predator a master key to every home in the county.”

Corporate Liability Reaches a Boiling Point

This latest “twist” has effectively moved the trial beyond Horner’s individual guilt and into a direct indictment of corporate oversight. Activists under the “Athenians” banner are now demanding that FedEx release full GPS logs for every stop Horner made in the six months leading up to Athena’s death.

The fact that a driver could make an “unscheduled, non-delivery stop” and sit idle while a search for a missing child was underway in the same area is being cited as a catastrophic failure of the company’s real-time monitoring systems.

The Final Sentencing Phase

With the Euler testimony on the record, the defense’s attempt to portray the murder of Athena Strand as an “isolated, impulsive incident” has been decimated. The image of Horner sitting in his van, watching an 8-year-old play while Athena’s body was yet to be found, is a haunting visual that jurors are unlikely to forget.

Outside the courthouse, a group of local fathers has joined the vigils, standing in silent protest. For them, the trial is no longer just about justice for one girl, but about the safety of every child who ever waved at a delivery truck.

“He was hunting,” one resident told reporters. “And he was doing it on company time.”