Something dark had been unfolding quietly in Dalton, Georgia.
It started with a simple welfare check. A woman hadn’t been seen in days, her coworkers worried, unsure if she was just off the radar—or in danger.
When officers arrived Friday evening, around 6 p.m., the silence inside her apartment was deafening. No answer. No movement. Eventually, staff let them in—and what they found made hearts sink.
A 35-year-old woman, lifeless, with a gunshot wound to the head. The kind of discovery that freezes you in place, making the world outside feel distant and unreal.
Detectives moved quickly, reviewing surveillance footage and tracing every step. Two days prior, a man had left her residence. Calmly, as if nothing had happened—but what followed would soon unravel a story too tragic to comprehend.

The investigation led authorities to another apartment complex on Shadow Lane. The scene there was tense, almost cinematic in its horror. Police waited for a search warrant, but the man returned on his own, opening the door and calling 911.
Inside, officers found two more bodies: a 33-year-old woman and a 37-year-old man. The man had shot the woman before turning the gun on himself.
The tangled relationships added a chilling layer. The man, Kevin, had been married to the first victim while simultaneously involved with the second—who was five months pregnant at the time of her death.
Details slowly emerged: Kevin had first killed his wife early Wednesday morning, before driving to the second victim’s apartment to carry out the unthinkable.
The ripple effects hit the families immediately. Rebeca’s younger sister, Emily, struggled with grief—and with logistics. Financial matters were tangled. Life insurance policies, funeral costs—everything uncertain after a death like this.
Emily shared her heartbreak on a GoFundMe page, her words raw: “My older sister Nicole was tragically taken away from us by the man she had loved for over half of her life. This has broken all of us beyond words.”
Rebeca’s life, twenty years entwined with Kevin, had left her family scrambling. They wanted to honor her properly, celebrate her kindness, her love, her joy—but they needed help. $18,000 was the goal, and every donation felt like a step toward closure.
Cindel’s family faced a similar struggle. She had been expecting a son with Kevin, due in September, while already raising two daughters. The weight of providing for them fell heavily after the tragedy.
Her family’s GoFundMe, led by Ashley Barker, painted a picture of a devoted mother trapped in a dangerous, manipulative relationship. “Cindel was more than just a victim of this tragedy,” Ashley wrote. “She was kind, full of life, and a devoted mom doing her best for her girls.”
Without life insurance, the funds raised would cover funeral costs and provide some stability for Cindel’s daughters. The goal: $20,000. Every contribution a lifeline in the wake of devastation.
These GoFundMe campaigns aren’t just about money—they’re about community. About reminding the world that even in the aftermath of something incomprehensible, people can come together to honor lives cut tragically short.
It’s hard to imagine the weight of this loss—the fear, confusion, and sorrow in the hearts of those left behind. Every photo shared, every story remembered, every donation made is a quiet act of defiance against the darkness of the events that took place.
And yet, amid the grief, a question lingers. How do families rebuild when the foundation of their lives has been violently shattered?
The story of Dalton is far from over. Every detail uncovered, every memorial created, and every act of kindness contributes to a narrative that will echo far beyond this small Georgia town.
Because even in tragedy, there’s a thread of humanity weaving its way through the pain, one small, vital connection at a time.