Posts are circulating that Hisham Abugharbieh sent “eight haunting words” to individuals identified as Zamil Limon and Nahida Bristy before their deaths.

At this time, those specific claims should be treated with caution.


What Has Not Been Confirmed

There is no verified public record that:

The exact “eight words” have been officially released
Those messages have been authenticated and presented in full
Authorities have described them in the dramatic way circulating online

In real cases, sensitive communications:

Are often withheld or partially redacted
Only appear in court under strict evidentiary standards


How Message Evidence Is Handled

Investigators typically:

Extract messages using digital forensic tools
Verify timestamps, senders, and recipients
Analyze context, not just isolated phrases

A short message—especially one shared without context—can be:

Misinterpreted
Taken out of sequence
Or even inaccurately reported


Why “Eight Words” Narratives Spread

These types of claims gain traction because they:

Create a memorable, dramatic hook
Suggest a clear insight into intent
Evoke strong emotional reactions

But without confirmation, they remain:
👉 unverified storytelling—not established fact


The Critical Distinction

There’s a difference between:

Evidence presented and proven in court
and
Details amplified in viral posts

Blurring that line can distort public understanding of serious cases.


The Question That Matters

What exactly has been verified—and what is being assumed?

Because in cases like this, the truth isn’t defined by a single phrase—

…it’s defined by evidence that can be proven, in full context.