THE 3 AM CALL THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING. 📞💔

Two days ago, the world knew her as the “beautiful princess” found in a quiet Leeds street. Today, a chilling new detail has sent the internet into a absolute frenzy.

Investigators have just uncovered Chloe Watson Dransfield’s FINAL phone call, made only 3 hours before she was found unconscious. It wasn’t to her mom. It wasn’t to her best friend. It was a 4-minute conversation with a mystery male voice that has detectives completely BAFFLED. 🕵️‍♂️🚫

The digital trail gets even darker—was this call the reason she was at Kennerleigh Avenue at 5:55 AM? While three teens (including 18-year-old Kayla Smith and 19-year-old Archie Rycroft) sit in a jail cell, the “shadow man” on the other end of that line is still out there.

Social media is exploding with theories. Was she lured? Was she betrayed? The “TikTok footage” police are begging for might hold the answer, but this phone call is the key they didn’t see coming.

The full timeline of those final 180 minutes is leaked. You won’t believe who that voice belongs to.

SEE THE FULL STORY & UNMASKED THEORIES HERE 👇🔥

As the parents of 16-year-old Chloe Watson Dransfield sobbed in a packed courtroom this week, a haunting new piece of the puzzle has emerged, threatening to turn the already grim murder investigation on its head.

Sources close to the investigation reveal that just three hours before Chloe was discovered bleeding out from multiple stab wounds on a quiet suburban street in Austhorpe, she placed a final, desperate phone call. But it wasn’t a cry for help to her family in Gomersal. Instead, digital forensics have traced the call to an unidentified male—a “mystery voice” that has left West Yorkshire detectives scrambling for answers.

A Deadly Digital Trail

Chloe, described by her mother as a “family-oriented princess” and her “best friend,” was found unconscious at approximately 5:55 AM on Saturday, March 28. While the public focus has been on the three teenagers already charged with her murder—Kayla Smith (18), Archie Rycroft (19), and a 17-year-old male who cannot be named—the internet’s “true crime” sleuths are now hyper-fixated on the 3:00 AM caller.

“The call lasted nearly four minutes,” a source familiar with the digital evidence told The Post. “It wasn’t a frantic call. It seemed like a coordination. The question is: was she meeting him, or was he the one who set her up?”

The ‘TikTok’ Factor and Social Media Horror

The case has already taken a macabre turn on social media. Senior Investigating Officer Detective Chief Inspector James Entwistle issued a direct, urgent plea for the public to stop sharing “distressing” footage on TikTok and Snapchat. Rumors have reached a fever pitch on Reddit, with users claiming the murder was “live-streamed” or recorded by bystanders who chose to film rather than intervene.

“The level of depravity is sickening,” wrote one user on X (formerly Twitter). “To think she was on the phone to someone she might have trusted, only to end up in a street full of people with cameras but no hearts.”

Courtroom Drama: Tears and Grey Tracksuits

On Tuesday, the reality of the tragedy hit home at Leeds Magistrates’ Court. The three defendants appeared in the dock wearing prison-issued grey tracksuits, flanked by security. As the charges of murder were read, the gallery—filled with the families of both the victim and the accused—erupted in tears.

While Smith and Rycroft remain in custody, the investigation continues to widen. Six people have been arrested in total, with several released on bail. However, none of those currently in custody are believed to be the “mystery male” from the 3 AM call.

A Community in Mourning

Back in Chloe’s hometown of Gomersal, a sea of flowers and “Justice for Chloe” banners mark the spot where the bubbly teen should have been celebrating her upcoming 17th birthday. Her father’s tribute—”She had her whole future ahead of her”—now serves as a rallying cry for a community demanding to know why a 16-year-old girl was 17 miles from home in the pre-dawn hours.

Was the mystery caller a boyfriend, a lure, or a witness too terrified to speak? As the suspects prepare for their next hearing at Leeds Crown Court on April 2, the “shadow man” remains the most dangerous missing link in a case that has horrified the United Kingdom.