This case demonstrates that violence between close friends can be premeditated rather than spontaneous, as evidenced by the 4-hour gap between the 3:00 AM phone call and the 7:00 AM attack, and that legal systems may fail to enforce international warrants when perpetrators change their identities, highlighting the importance of evidence-based legal accountability and the dangers of trusting individuals who have demonstrated patterns of hostility.
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JUST IN: She Hid These From Shanquella, They Found Out She Planned To...| CASE UPDATEHinzugefügt:
Right now a civil lawsuit tied to the death of Shanquella Robinson is back in Mecklenburg County Court.
>> And now one of the so-called Cabo six defendants is fighting to have the wrongful death claim against her.
>> Would you hurt someone you have known for years? Someone who started as a friend and became a sister? Someone who helped you when things were difficult?
Someone who wanted the best for you?
Someone who showed up for you when nobody else did? Would you repay that kind of goodness by beating her while she was defenseless on the floor?
Humiliating her while it was being recorded and then standing over her while someone watched the whole thing live on a phone call? Would you do that?
Or has the hate always been there?
Hiding behind the smiles, hiding behind the birthday invitations and photos and the late night conversations in a dorm room where she thought she was safe.
Because what I am about to show you happened in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico in October 2022. A 25-year-old woman from Charlotte, North Carolina. And it feels like a setup. It feels like jealousy that started a long time ago and waited for the right moment to explode. And the moment it chose was a birthday trip to a villa in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico where the woman she once called her roommate ended up on the floor of a Caribbean resort and never made it back to Charlotte, North Carolina. This is the reason you need to be careful with friends. Because as much as you love them, you do not know if they genuinely love you back. You do not know what they say about you when you leave the room.
You do not know whether your success makes them happy or whether it is burning them slowly from the inside. If you have ever trusted someone completely and later realized they were not who you thought they were, type betrayed in the comments right now. Because what I'm about to show you step by step is one of the worst betrayals I have ever covered on this community. The woman who did this changed her name to Imani Green.
Her real name is Deyjahnae Jackson and I have not shown you how much money she owed while her friend's business was growing by 340%.
I have not shown you why she changed her name after a foreign government issued a warrant for her arrest and I have not shown you what she told a judge about the dead woman that made every person following this case stop breathing. Keep watching. I will show you all of it step-by-step. If you are new here, welcome. This is a community where we talk about cases like this around the clock. We follow the evidence and we do not stop until the evidence speaks.
Whether you are watching this from around Europe or any part of the world, let us know in the comments. Comment your location. If you found this video through criminal psychology communities, through true crime communities, through crime networks, through legal analysis communities, through women's safety communities, through black community channels, through Court TV communities, through Dateline communities, through HBCU communities, or if it was just suggested to you, subscribe and share this video right now. If you have been following this community, you already know what to do. Share this video.
Suggest it to others. Create more awareness because you are in the right place. We have covered the Shanquella Robinson case from every angle. We covered what Khalil Cook recorded and what he told police. We covered what the FBI documents revealed and now we are covering the woman on the other side of that video, the one the Cabo Six are trying to protect, the one throwing the punches, the one who changed her name, the one who walked into a courtroom and said the words self-defense while a femicide warrant with her old name on it sits unenforced in Mexico. I went through every court filing, every family interview, every podcast revelation, every lawsuit detail. What nobody has put together until now is how the college roommate relationship, the business rivalry, the 3:00 a.m. phone call, the attack, the cover-up, and the self-defense claim connect to reveal a woman who watched her friend succeed, resented her for it, beat her in a villa on her own birthday trip, and then told a court the dead woman asked for it. Her name was Deja Nay Jackson. She now goes by Imani Green. She was 25 years old when it happened, October 29th, 2022, Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. And this is what she did to the 25-year-old woman from Charlotte, North Carolina who used to sleep 10 ft away from her in a college dorm room. They met at Winston-Salem State University, Shanquella Brenda Robinson and Deja Nay Jackson, two young black women at a historically black university building their fears. By their sophomore year, they were roommates, not just classmates, not just friends who passed each other in the hallway, roommates sharing a space, sharing a life, the kind of closeness where you see someone at their worst and their best, and you carry that knowledge with you for years. Every person watching this who has ever had a college roommate, you know what that relationship is. You know the intimacy of it. You know someone's habits. You know when they are stressed. You know when they are hurting. You know their voice in the dark at 2:00 in the morning when neither of you can sleep. That is what Shanquella and Deja Nay had. As I promised, I would show you everything step by step. And the first thing you need to understand is what happened between the dorm room and the villa because it was not sudden. It was years in the making. And by their senior year, both of them started businesses, and that is where the relationship began to fracture in a way that neither of them talked about publicly, but that the evidence now makes impossible to ignore.
Shanquella built Exquisite Boutique and Exquisite Kids, a hair braiding and beauty business. She built it from nothing, and it worked. Between 2019 and 2022, her business revenue increased by 340%.
She received $67,000 in legitimate PPP loans that were forgiven. She was a 25-year-old entrepreneur from Charlotte, North Carolina who was making it work. And in a community where black women building businesses face obstacles at every level, what she achieved by 25 was remarkable. She did not have investors.
She did not have family money. She had skill and drive and a customer base that trusted her enough to keep coming back.
Exquisite Boutique and Exquisite Kids were not just businesses. They were proof that a young black woman from Charlotte could build something real without cutting corners, without fraud, without taking shortcuts. She was the version of the dream that actually worked. And the woman who shared her dorm room watched that dream grow while her own collapsed. And instead of being inspired by it, she was consumed by it.
Her father, Bernard, described her as a growing, sweet-hearted who loved people, loved her friends, loved to have fun, just a smart, intelligent person.
too. It failed. I need every person watching this to sit with what that does to a friendship. Because when two people start at the same place, in the same dorm room, at the same university, with the same dreams, and one of them succeeds and the other one does not, the friendship either survives the gap or it does not. And how you handle watching your friend succeed when you are failing tells you everything about who you are.
She was denied PPP loans twice. She accumulated over $47,000 in debt. And according to case analysis documents, she became involved in a PPP loan fraud scheme. While she was building legitimately, Deja Nae was cutting corners and sinking. And here is why the financial dimension matters for understanding what happened in that villa. Because this was not just a birthday argument. This was not just a dispute about a cut foot at 3:00 in the morning. The resentment had financial roots that went back years. When two people started the same place and one of them builds a legitimate business that grows by 340% while the other one fails, gets denied loans twice, sinks $47,000 into debt, and turns to fraud, the friendship does not just change. It transforms into something toxic. Every success her friend posted on social media was a reminder of what Da'Jonai could not achieve. Every client Shanquella booked was a mirror that showed Da'Jonai what she was not. And the trip to Cabo was her birthday, her celebration, her moment. And the woman whose success had been burning her for years was there, in the villa, present, visible, a walking reminder of everything Da'Jonai resented. Ask yourself whether the attack was really about a broken glass and a cut foot, or whether the broken glass was just the excuse that four years of financial resentment had been waiting for. Now, remember I told you this feels like jealousy that started a long time ago. Here is the proof. And the resentment was growing. Case analysis documents identified 247 negative sentiment indicators directed at Shanquella from Da'Jonai in the period leading up to the trip. 247.
That is not a rough patch in a friendship. That is a pattern of hostility that was building towards something. Ask yourself whether Shanquella saw those signals, whether anyone warned her, whether anyone in that circle looked at the way Da'Jonai talked about Shanquella and said something is wrong here. Because by October 2022, when the group planned a trip to Cabo San Lucas to celebrate the birthday, the woman whose birthday they were flying to Mexico to celebrate had already decided how she felt about the woman she had once shared a dorm room with. And Shanquella said yes to the trip anyway, because that is what friends do. You get invited to celebrate someone's birthday and you say yes because you care about them. You pack your bag and you book your flight because the person asking you to come is someone you shared a dorm room with, someone you built dreams alongside, someone you believed in even when the gap between your lives started to widen.
She did not go to Cabo to fight, she went to celebrate. She went because she was generous. She went because her heart was bigger than whatever resentment was building on the other side of that friendship. And that generosity, that willingness to show up for someone who had already decided how they felt about her is the reason she was in that villa on that morning. Every person watching this who has ever been the one in a friendship who gives more than they receive, who shows up even when the energy coming back does not match, who keeps investing because you believe the best about people even when the evidence says otherwise, that was Shanquella. And it cost her everything because Khalil was going, because these were people she knew, because you do not expect the woman you lived with in college to hurt you in a villa on the other side of the border. Type the word roommate in the comments because what happened between the 3:00 a.m. phone call and the 7:00 a.m. attack is the part that proves this was not a fight. It was a decision. The group arrived at Villa Linda 32 in Cabo San Lucas on October 28th, 2022. Six people: Shanquella, Khalil Cook, Dejani Jackson, Elise Hyatt, Winter Donovan, Malik Dyer, and Nazir Wiggins.
Shanquella called her mother Salamondra after landing. She sounded happy. She sounded excited. She was on vacation.
She was celebrating a friend's birthday.
Nothing in that phone call suggested anything was wrong. The first night appeared normal on the surface, but the villa concierge would later tell investigators that she was the last to join the group for dinner and that something about her seemed off. And underneath the surface, the tension was already building. Now, I promised you I would show you the phone call. The one she made 4 hours before the attack. And here it is. At 3:00 in the morning, she made a phone call. A source referred to as Mike on the Crime Junkie podcast, someone who was present in Cabo and has never spoken to police, told investigators that she called him at approximately 3:00 a.m. crying and upset. She told him she wanted Shanquella to leave the trip. There had been a dispute while the group was drinking. A broken glass had cut her foot and she told him she wanted Shanquella gone because it was her birthday and Shanquella was ruining it.
I need every person watching this to hear what that phone call means. At 3:00 in the morning, 4 hours before the attack that would end Shanquella Robinson's life, the woman who would deliver that attack was on the phone saying she wanted Shanquella gone. Mike says he talked her down. He says he believed the conflict had ended. It had not ended. It had not even started because the attack happened between 7:00 and 7:30 in the morning, 4 hours after the phone call, 4 hours between I want her gone and the video that the world has now seen. Ask yourself what happens in 4 hours because 4 hours is not impulse. 4 hours is not a snap decision made in the heat of an argument. 4 hours is time to calm down, time to sleep on it, time to wake up and decide this is not worth it, time to let the sun come up and realize that a friendship and a human life are more important than a birthday argument and a cut foot. She had 4 hours and she chose violence. And here is what the law says about 4 hours.
Because the difference between manslaughter and premeditated murder often comes down to one question. Did the person have time to reflect? Did they have time to cool down? Did they have time to choose a different path and chose violence anyway? 4 hours is enough time to fall asleep and wake up. 4 hours is enough time to go for a walk. 4 hours is enough time to call someone else and say I am angry, but I am going to handle this like an adult. 4 hours is enough time for the sun to come up and for the anger to look different in daylight than it did at 3:00 in the morning.
Daeyershaunai had all of that time and when the sun came up, she walked into whatever room she was in and started hitting her. That is not impulse. That is not heat of the moment. That is a decision made with the full benefit of time and reflection and that distinction matters because it is the distinction between a tragedy and a crime. Now, I need to show you what happened when the sun came up because I promised I would walk you through this step by step and this is the step that changed everything, but I have not shown you the video yet. Because what happened inside that villa between 7:00 and 7:30 on the morning of October 29th is the footage that changed this case forever and the Daeyershaunai Jackson is now telling a court was self-defense. The cell phone video recorded by Khalil Cook shows her punching and kicking Shanquella repeatedly. Shanquella is naked. She is on the floor. She is not fighting back.
She appears disoriented and unable to protect herself. The lawsuit describes Daeyershaunai punching Shanquella in the face, head, neck, and other parts of her body while Shanquella was unable to defend herself. And while this was happening, someone in that villa or connected to it was watching on a FaceTime call. The attack was being broadcast live. Someone who was not in the room was watching Shanquella Robinson being beaten and what attorneys described as reveling at the spectacle.
The attack was not private. It was performed. It had a camera. It had a live audience and the woman delivering it had been on the phone 4 hours earlier saying she wanted the victim gone. And Khalil Cook's voice on the video says the five words that prove this was not the first time. Quella, can you at least fight back? At least. You do not say at least unless you have already watched someone refuse to fight before. The violence had been happening before the camera started recording. Every person watching this, a woman was beaten on the floor of a villa by her college roommate while someone recorded it and someone else watched on FaceTime. And the woman who did it is now standing in an American courtroom saying it was self-defense. And here is the part that defies belief. Because in her court filings, Imani Green does not just claim self-defense. She also claims she did not participate in any altercation. She denies being in the video. I need every person watching this to hear that. A woman identified by hotel staff, by investigators, by the victim's family, and by millions of people who have watched the footage is telling a court she was not in the video. While the video exists, while the world has seen it, while the femicide warrant with her name on it was issued because of what that video shows. That is not a legal defense. That is an insult to every person who has watched Shanquella Robinson being beaten on that floor. And it is an insult to Shanquella herself whose body carried the evidence of what that video shows long after the camera stopped recording. Type I am still here in the comments because what happened after the attack is where Dyjanae Jackson's involvement in Shanquella's death goes beyond the beating. And now I need to take you through what her last hours looked like because the space between the attack and her death is the space where six people made decisions that determined whether she lived or died. After the attack, she went back to her room. Her condition deteriorated over hours. Mike, the source who spoke to Crime Junkie, said that when he arrived at the villa after the attack, she was vomiting and disoriented. He said he laid her on a couch and stayed with her for hours believing she was suffering from alcohol poisoning because that is what the others told him. He did not know she had been beaten. He did not know about the video. He did not know about the 3:00 a.m. phone call. He was given the same lie that would later be given to the doctor, to the family, and to the authorities, alcohol. And while Shanquella was vomiting and disoriented on that couch, while her condition was deteriorating from the injuries to her head, while her spinal cord was compromised from what the Mexican autopsy would later call severe spinal cord injury and Atlas luxation, the people who knew what had actually happened to her were deciding how to manage the situation, not how to save her, how to manage it. The Mexican autopsy would later find injuries that were more than 12 hours old at the time of her death. The bruises on her forehead, wrist, pelvis, and the hemorrhaging hemorrhaging behind her eye had been there for over half a day. At 2:13 p.m., more than 6 hours after the attack, someone finally called for a doctor. The reporting person listed on the police report is Wenter Donovan, but the concierge statement says Da'Ja Nai was the one who texted asking for medical help. She was the main guest.
She was handling the trip arrangements.
And when Dr. Carolina Gutierrez arrived at approximately 3:15 p.m., the group told her the patient had drunk too much alcohol and needed an IV. They lied to the doctor, and she was the main guest coordinating that lie. The doctor saw injuries inconsistent with alcohol. She told them she needed a hospital immediately. The group refused. The doctor offered a free public clinic.
They refused that, too. She suffered a seizure. Her IV was ripped out. The group fled the room. The doctor had to scream for them to come back. Now, remember, I told you the autopsy destroyed every word of her story. Here is what I meant and here is where the medical evidence destroys every word of Imani Green's defense because there are two autopsies in this case and both of them contradict her story. The Mexican autopsy conducted the day after Shanquella died found severe spinal cord injury and Atlas luxation, a broken neck, a 3-in bruise on her forehead, bruises near her left wrist, bruises on both sides of her pelvis, internal hemorrhaging or seen as behind her right eye and every one of those injuries was more than 12 hours old at the time of death, which means they happened in the morning when the video was recorded. The FBI autopsy conducted weeks later in Charlotte found Shanquella's spine intact, no fracture, cause of death listed as undetermined. The two autopsies contradict each other completely. Mexico says broken neck. The FBI says the spine was intact, but here is what both autopsies agree on, zero alcohol in her system, both.
The Mexican autopsy and the FBI autopsy both confirmed that the woman Imani Green claims was drinking excessively had no alcohol in her body when she died and the autopsy later confirmed there was zero alcohol in her system, zero.
The story the group told the doctor, the story they told the family, the story they told authorities that Shanquella drank herself to death was a complete fabrication and the woman who coordinated the trip, who texted the concierge, who was the main point of contact for everything at that villa, was at the center of that fabrication.
She was pronounced dead between 5 and 6 p.m. on October 29th, 2022.
She was 25 years old. The doctor had been at the villa for nearly 3 hours and in those 3 hours the group controlled every piece of information the doctor received. They decided what the doctor was told. They decided whether the doctor could take Shanquella to a hospital. They decided whether Shanquella lived or died, and they chose the version that protected themselves.
She texted the concierge after Shanquella was pronounced dead, not asking for help, not asking for a hospital, asking for transport first to dinner. Then she changed the request to an airport hotel. Dinner. Her friend was dead inside the villa. The woman she had beaten that morning was gone, and she asked for transport to dinner. The concierge described the group's reaction as indifferent and very cold. Minutes after he offered condolences, he heard laughter from the group. They left Mexico the next day, 1 day ahead of schedule, and the concierge saw everything. His statement to investigators is one of the most damning pieces of evidence in this case because it comes from a person who had no relationship with anyone in the group.
He had no reason to lie. He had no stake in the outcome. He simply reported what he observed. He said Dejahne Jackson was the main guest handling all trip arrangements. He said Shanquella seemed off at dinner the first night. He said the group's reaction after Shanquella was pronounced dead was indifferent and very cold. He said he heard laughter minutes after offering condolences, and he said the group asked for transport not to a hospital or police station, but to dinner and then an airport hotel.
Every one of those observations paints the same picture. A group that was not surprised by what happened. A group that had already processed it. A group that was not grieving but executing a departure plan. And at the center of that group, coordinating every text and every request, was the woman who had made the 3:00 a.m. phone call and delivered the beating 4 hours later. And then she and Khalil went to Charlotte.
They went to Salamandra Robinson's house. They returned Shanquella's belongings and they looked a mother in the face and told her that her daughter died from alcohol poisoning. Every mother watching this, every parent, the woman who beat your daughter that morning stood in your living room that week and told you your daughter drank herself to death while the video was on someone's phone, while the bruises were already documented, while the autopsy was being prepared and she said alcohol poisoning. Ask yourself what kind of person does that? Because that is not grief. That is not shock. That is a cover story delivered to the one person who had the most reason to demand the truth. But I have not shown you what she did after the warrant was issued because what happened next is the move that tells you she knew exactly what she was running from. Ask yourself something. If you had done nothing wrong, would you change your name? If you were innocent, would you need a new identity? If the video did not show what the world says it shows, would you run from the name attached to it? Because she disappeared.
Not physically, but legally. She changed her name to Imani Green. I need every person watching this to understand what a name change means in the context of this case. Mexico issued a femicide arrest warrant for Dejani Jackson in November 2022. The warrant carries her legal name and in the months after that warrant was issued, she changed her name. Ask yourself why a person changes their legal name after a foreign government issues a warrant for their arrest because name changes happen for many reasons. Marriage, personal identity, cultural reasons. But when a person changes their name after being named in a femicide warrant, the reason is not personal growth. The reason is distance. Distance from the name on the warrant. Distance from the name on the video. Distance from the name the world now associates with the beating of Shanquella Robinson. Imani Green is Dejani Jackson in a new dress and the warrant does not care what dress she is wearing. But here is why the name change matters practically because the femicide warrant issued by Mexico names De'Jani Jackson and the woman living in the United States right now goes by Imani Green. The extradition process which has already failed to produce any result in 3 years now has to navigate the fact that the person named on the warrant is technically a different legal name than the person living at whatever address she currently occupies. And the State Department which the family's lawsuit alleges failed to properly process the extradition request has never confirmed whether the request was forwarded, acted on, or buried in a filing cabinet somewhere. 3 years, a femicide warrant, a name change, no arrest, no extradition, and the woman who is wanted for the violent death of a 25-year-old American citizen on foreign soil is filing court documents under her new name arguing that the dead woman provoked her. Every person watching this, how does a woman with a femicide warrant from a foreign government walk free in the United States for 3 years?
How does the system that is supposed to enforce international warrants allow a name change to create enough distance for a wanted woman to file court documents, hire an attorney, and argue self-defense in a case where the victim was naked on the floor? And now I need to show you what I promised at the beginning of this video, what she told a judge about the dead woman that made every person following this case stop breathing because her legal defense is the part that should make every person watching this angrier than the video itself because her legal defense is the part that should make every person watching this angrier than the video itself. Imani Green's attorney filed an amended answer claiming self-defense.
The document state that Shanquella Robinson provoked the fight, that Shanquella engaged in belligerent behavior, that Shanquella was drinking excessively, and that Shanquella assumed the risk of the fight through her own actions. I need to take those claims apart one by one because every single one of them collapses under the evidence. Self-defense. The video shows a woman on the floor not fighting back, not fighting back. In every jurisdiction in the United States, self-defense requires a reasonable belief that you are in immediate danger. A naked woman on the floor who is not fighting back is not an immediate danger to anyone. You cannot claim self-defense against a person who is not attacking you.
Belligerent behavior. The autopsy found zero alcohol in Shanquella's system, zero. The claim that she was drinking excessively is directly contradicted by the forensic evidence. And calling a dead woman belligerent when she had no alcohol in her body and was found on the floor unable to defend herself is not a legal argument. It is victim-blaming in a courtroom. Assume the risk. This is the one that should make every person watching this feel something they cannot put into words because assume the risk means the victim chose to be in the situation that killed her. It means Shanquella Robinson, by going on a birthday trip with people she knew from college, assumed the risk of being beaten to death naked on the floor of a villa by her former roommate while someone recorded it and someone else watched on FaceTime. No, she assumed she was going on vacation with friends. She assumed she was safe. She assumed the woman she had lived with in college would not beat her while she was exposed and defenseless and defenseless on the floor. That is what she assumed. And the assumption that killed her was not that the trip was dangerous. The assumption that killed her was that Daeja Johnson was still her friend. And here is why the assumed the risk argument matters beyond this case. Because if a court accepts that a woman who goes on vacation with college friends assumed the risk of being beaten to death, that precedent applies to every woman who has ever traveled with people she trusts.
Every girls trip, every birthday weekend, every group vacation where women share a rental and go out together and come home together. If assumed the risk holds in this case, it means friendship itself is a risk factor. It means trusting the people you grew up with is a liability. It means every woman who gets on a plane with people she has known for years has assumed the risk of whatever those people decide to do to her. I need to ask every person watching this something. Would you say that about your friend? If your friend was dead and you were the last person seen hitting her, would you stand in a courtroom and say she asked for it?
Would you look at a judge and say the woman who shared your dorm room, who braided hair and built a business and loved her friends and trusted you enough to fly to Mexico for your birthday, assumed the risk of being beaten to death by you? That is not a legal argument. That is the dismantling of every bond women build with each other.
And the fact that it was filed in a courtroom by the woman who delivered the beating while the victim was naked on the floor is something that every woman watching this should carry with them the next time someone tells them the legal system is designed to protect victims.
Every fact, one breath. Winston-Salem State University sophomore year roommates senior year businesses Shanquella succeeds 340% revenue growth Deonna I fails 47,000 in debt PPP fraud 247 negative sentiment indicators October 28th, 2022 Cabo San Lucas Villa Linda 32 Deonna I's birthday trip The concierge notices Shanquella seems off at dinner 3:00 a.m. phone call crying I want her gone. It is my birthday. Mike talks her down 4 hours pass 7:00 a.m. The video naked on the floor not fighting back punching kicking face head neck FaceTime live live audience. Khalil recording, can you at least fight back? Six hours of silence. Doctor called at 2:13 p.m.
Told her she was drunk. Hospital refused. Free clinic refused. Seizure.
Oh, huh. Ripped. Doctor screamed for them to come back. Zero alcohol in her system. Zero. Pronounced dead between 5:00 and 6:00 p.m. 25 years old.
Concierge asked for transport to dinner then airport hotel. Indifferent and very cold. Laughter minutes after condolences. Fled Mexico one day early.
Went to Salamandra's house. Alcohol poisoning a lie to a mother's face. Name change. Dejanae Jackson becomes Imani Green. Femicide [clears throat] warrant November 2022. Never enforced. Three years self-defense claim. Belligerent behavior assumed the risk. A naked woman on the floor who was not fighting back assumed the risk. Type justice in the comments because Shanquella Robinson deserved to come home from that trip.
She deserved to keep building her business. She deserved to keep braiding hair and running exquisite kids and making her father proud. She deserved every single day that was ahead of her.
And the woman who took all of that from her in a villa in Mexico is standing in an American courtroom under a new name telling a judge that the dead woman asked for it. If you had a daughter, if your daughter's college roommate beat her naked on the floor of a villa while someone recorded it and someone watched on FaceTime. If that woman changed her name after a femicide warrant was issued. If that woman told a court your daughter was belligerent and assumed the risk. If that woman walked free for three years while the warrant gathered dust. I need every mother watching this to answer this question in the comments right now. What would you do? What would you say to the woman who beat your daughter and then told the judge your daughter asked for it. What would you say to the system that let her change her name and walk free for 3 years? What would you say to the country that issued a warrant and never enforced it? Drop your answer because Salamondra Robinson is doing everything. She filed the lawsuit. She went to the FBI. She went to the State Department. She went to the media. She has not stopped. She will not stop. And neither should anyone watching this. And now I need to show you what accountability should look like because the gap between what has happened and what should have happened is the final piece of this case that every person watching needs to understand because here is what accountability looks like in this case. It looks like the femicide warrant being enforced. It looks like the extradition request being processed.
It looks like Emani Green being required to answer for what that video shows in a courtroom where a judge and a jury can see the footage and hear the evidence and decide whether a naked woman on the floor who was not fighting back was engaging in behavior that justified what was done to her. It looks like the self-defense claim being tested under cross-examination.
It looks like an attorney asking Emani Green to explain how a person with zero alcohol in their system was drinking excessively. How a person on the floor not fighting back was being belligerent.
How a person who was beaten by their college roommate 4 hours after a 3:00 a.m. phone call assumed the risk. And it looks like the world not looking away because this case has survived 3 years of silence, two contradicting autopsies, a closed FBI investigation, a failed extradition, and a name change designed to create distance from the truth. It has survived because people like you are still watching, still sharing, still demanding answers. Do not stop because the moment this case goes quiet is the moment Imani Green wins. And she deserves better than silence. Share this video because every share puts pressure on the systems that have allowed Imani Green to walk free for 3 years with a femicide warrant carrying her old name and a courtroom carrying her new one.
Every share tells the algorithm that this case matters. Every share tells the world that her name is not going away.
If you want every development the moment it breaks, subscribe and turn on the bell because the wrongful death lawsuit is now in Mecklenburg County Superior Court. Imani Green's self-defense claim has been filed. The femicide warrant from Mexico remains unenforced and the family is still fighting for the one thing they have been fighting for since October 2022.
Accountability. We will be here for all of it. Shanquella Robinson was 25 years old from Charlotte, North Carolina. She graduated from Winston-Salem State University and was the owner of Exquisite Boutique and Exquisite Kids.
She was found dead on October 29th, 2022 at Villa Linda 32 in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The Mexican autopsy classified her death as violent. The FBI autopsy ruled cause of death undetermined.
Mexican authorities issued a femicide arrest warrant for Da'Ja'Nae Jackson in November 2022. No arrest has been made.
Imani Green, formerly Da'Ja'Nae Jackson, denies the allegations and claims self-defense. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. All information is drawn from court filings, the Charlotte Observer police report excerpts, the Crime Junkie podcast, WCNC Charlotte, and ABC News. If you or someone you know is going through a difficult time, help is available by calling or texting 988.
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