After a woman was set on fire on the New York subway, a post falsely identifying her has gone viral on social media.
It took police more than a week to publicly identify 57-year-old Debrina Kawam as the woman who was fatally set on fire in a ...
A post on X claims that a young woman named Amelia Carter was identified as the woman set ablaze on the New York City subway ...
Authorities have yet to confirm the identity of the victim, who died after she was lit on fire while asleep on a subway train ...
X has added community notes that Amelia Carter is a fabricated identity. The victim has not yet been identified. The false claims of some Amelia Carter being the victim of the subway horror ...
Photos of at least two women have been misdescribed online as showing Debrina Kawam, the woman who died after being set on ...
A photo of the said Amelia Carter went viral on X as many social ... This photo has gone viral with the claim that an NYPD staff walked by the NYC subway horror victim without helping her.
While NYC police are yet to confirm the identity of the victim, a post made on X on December 23 claimed the victim was Amelia Carter. As NYC subway horror has drawn massive attention of netizens ...
The suspect later told police he had no memory of the attack, claiming he was intoxicated at the time. Surveillance footage ...
In posts that circulated widely on social media after Kawam's death on Dec. 22, users claimed without evidence that the victim was a 29-year-old named “Amelia Carter.” These posts ricocheted ...
Newsweek also reports that an entire fake background for “Amelia Carter” was created, including her employment as an NYC nurse and supposed internship with Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT).
Police Took Over a Week to Name the NYC Subway Burning Victim ... without evidence that the victim was a 29-year-old named “Amelia Carter.” These posts ricocheted across platforms, often ...