On Halloween morning in Wichita, what began as a quiet day turned into tragedy. Police responding to a call on Crowley Street discovered 80-year-old Anita Avers fatally stabbed in her home. Outside, officers detained her daughter, Angelynn “Angie” Elizabeth Mock, 47—a former FOX television anchor—who was later charged with first-degree murder and held on a $1 million bond. A neighbor recalled a woman covered in blood pleading for help, while dispatch audio captured someone saying she “stabbed her mother to save herself.” Authorities are still investigating motive and whether self-defense played any role.
Mock’s arrest shocked many who remembered her from her broadcasting years in Oklahoma City and St. Louis. After leaving television, she had worked in corporate communications and volunteered for health causes. Detectives have released few details about the weapon or prior family conflicts, leaving the community grasping for answers as they mourn Anita Avers’ death.
In Michigan, tragedy struck again when Sarah Carroll, a 20-year-old college student, was killed in what police believe was a murder-suicide. Investigators say her ex-boyfriend shot her at her apartment before taking his own life. Sarah’s family shared that she had sought a restraining order after months of stalking and fear. Remembered for her kindness and ambition to become a physician’s assistant, her story now serves as a call for greater awareness of domestic-violence warning signs and early intervention.
And in South Carolina, the ripple of youth violence deepened when nine teens were charged in the June 2025 shooting death of Trey Dean Wright, 16. Prosecutors allege the group coordinated a confrontation that turned deadly, invoking the state’s “hand-of-one-is-the-hand-of-all” law to charge multiple participants with murder. Trey, a two-sport athlete described as generous and hardworking, has become a symbol of loss for Johnsonville High School and the surrounding community.
Each of these stories underscores the same haunting truth: behind every headline are families and futures cut short. Authorities urge anyone with information about violent crimes—or anyone struggling with anger, fear, or despair—to seek help. If you or someone you know is in crisis, call 988 (U.S.) or text 741-741 to reach trained counselors anytime.