A Washington woman who died with her husband when a stalker from Texas broke into their home and opened fire told a judge days earlier she'd just had spinal surgery and was struggling with limited mobility as her harasser ignored requests to leave her alone.
"I have had major back surgery and my mobility has been affected, and I need care 24/7," Zohreh Sadeghi, 33, wrote in an application for an order of protection. "This makes me fear about my ability to respond to a crisis."
Ramin Khodakaramrezaei, a 38-year-old trucker who previously lived in Houston, listened to Sadeghi's broadcasts and initially became a friend, according to court documents. But he soon began calling her repeatedly, sending flowers and other gifts, and showing up at her home uninvited.
"Mr. Khodakaramrezaei's voice messages have been the cause of anxiety and insomnia for me," Sadeghi wrote to the court. "They include him crying and begging for me to pick up, him threatening to burn himself and the tree in front of my house, also telling me to either delete my Instagram or make it public so he could see the content that I post."
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She said Khodakaramrezaei was "completely delusional" and showed explosive anger problems.
"These delusions make me fear for my life and the lives of my loved ones," she wrote.
She blocked his number, but he continued to leave her voicemails. Khodakaramrezaei also began calling Sadeghi's friends and neighbors and even attempted to hack one of their WhatsApp accounts.
At one point, the accused stalker called Sadeghi's husband, Mohammad Milad Naseri, while the couple was in bed and demanded he put his wife on the phone.
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"The fact that you have the nerve to call me and ask the phone to my wife so that you can tell her you love her is incredible," Naseri told the stalker in January. "That you expect me to actually do it makes me incredulous. I don't know in what culture, where in the world that would be considered OK."
Days before the murders, Khodakaramrezaei left Sadeghi "vulgar, angry and threatening" voicemails between 1 and 2 a.m. During this time, he told Naseri that the communications would only stop if he killed himself or died, according to the court filings.
Khodakaramrezaei was charged with stalking and harassment just a week before police say he broke into the couple's $1.3 million home in Redmond, 15 miles east of Seattle, and killed them and then himself Friday morning, court records show.
Sadeghi's mother, who was also at the home at the time of the attack, escaped and called 911 from a neighbor's house around 1:45 a.m., according to authorities.
Responding officers found Sadeghi's 35-year-old husband, Naseri, unresponsive on the floor. They attempted CPR but could not revive him.
Deeper inside the home, they found Sadeghi and Khodakaramrezaei dead.
Court records show that Sadeghi and Naseri's lawyer told a judge last week he wasn't sure whether Khodakaramrezaei owned weapons but believed he might.
The court granted a temporary order of protection and an order for Khodakaramrezaei to surrender his weapons.
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Redmond Police say detectives were already familiar with the victim due to the ongoing stalking investigation.
Texas court records show Khodakaramrezaei leaves behind a 7-year-old daughter, who is living with his ex-wife.