Chicago Stylist Dead After Boating Tragedy At Lake Michigan
'It was just a spur-of-the-moment thing,' her mother, Kizzy Wells, detailed to the outlet. 'She was on a boat and allegedly fell off due to the current. She doesn't go out much because she works all the time, traveling to different cities. My baby works so hard. She was doing 10 to 12 (hair appointments) a day.'
While Walls's tragic death occured during the midwestern city's Black Yacht Weekend, her specific vessel or location was not a part of official events. The organizers issued a statement on Sunday (June 22), per the Tribune, and offered condolences to the family. The statement also confirmed that the death 'has not been officially linked to any of our attendees.'
Walls was a self-proclaimed celebrity hairstylist and racked up thousands of followers on social media. She owned her own salon and offered virtual classes as described in her Instagram biography. Walls was also best friends with Kenneka Jenkins, who died in 2017.
Jenkins' death was officially ruled an accident due to hypothermia; however, the circumstances of her walking into a hotel freezer and not being found until it was too late sparked nationwide headlines and conspiracies.
'Kenneka was her person to try different hairstyles on when she was just learning,' Wells said to the Tribune. 'She never healed (from her death). She has her name tattooed on her upper shoulder.'
According to CBS News, when Walls fell into the water, she was not wearing a life jacket, and she did not know how to swim. The outlet noted, the Coast Guard claimed to have responded to 34 calls over the weekend, despite normally responding to five to ten calls on a typical summer weekend.
'That's Lake Michigan. It's not a pool,' her mother shared. 'You have to have special equipment during times such as that.
The Chicago Sun-Times reported that Walls was one of two likely drowning deaths over the weekend as the Chicago Fire Department responded to 90 calls of heat and water-related emergencies.
VIBE sends our condolences to the friends, family, and all impacted by the death of Zahrie Walls.
More from VIBE.com
Barton Fitzpatrick Of 'The Chi' On Reg's Resurrection, Playing Opposite Luke James, Musical Aspirations
Ye Disses Cam'ron For Saying He Put A "Stain" On Chicago, And Cam Responds Exactly How You Think He Would
DJ Funk, Chicago Ghetto House Pioneer, Dead At 54
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
AI chatbots and their poisonous delusions are coming for our kids
Our kids are exposed to too much sexualized online content already — now they're being targeted by flirtatious fake friends specifically designed by social-media companies to spark romantic fantasies. A bipartisan group of senators this week rightly blasted Meta's Mark Zuckerberg after a leaked internal document revealed some shocking rules for Meta's artificial-intelligence chatbots. 'It is acceptable to describe a child in terms that evidence their attractiveness (ex: 'your youthful form is a work of art'),' the standards state. Meta's guidelines allowed its bot to tell a shirtless 8-year-old that 'every inch of you is a masterpiece — a treasure I cherish deeply.' No, it's actually not at all acceptable for a stranger, human or designed to seem like one, to comment on a child's 'youthful form.' It's disgusting and horrifying, all the more so because these standards were allegedly approved by multiple Meta teams, including legal and public-policy staffers. But it's all part of the mass delusion being constructed in companies' heedless rush to develop AI products — and to get us hooked on them. AI can be your friend, we're told. Your confidant! Your lover! This is all a lie. AI can pretend to be these things, mirroring your inputs and stroking your ego with programmed responses, but can never actually care about you the way a friend will. Now the AI lie is being pushed on defenseless children, proving we've completely lost the plot when it comes to kids and technology. It's bad enough that our kids scroll endlessly on a Chinese video app designed to capture their attention (while destroying their powers of concentration). Now we're supposed to accept an American tech company marketing fake friendships to kids — and allowing those 'friends' to bathe them in inappropriate sensual comments. This isn't the first time Zuckerberg has gotten into trouble for the damage his sites, like Facebook and Instagram, cause children. During a 2024 Senate hearing, the billionaire CEO dramatically turned around to face the parents of children who had been harmed by bullying, sextortion and child predators on his platforms, and apologized. 'I'm sorry for everything you have all been through. No one should go through the things that your families have suffered,' Zuckerberg told them. He vowed 'industry-wide efforts' to reform. Instead, his company has introduced a Trojan horse that pretends to be a child's friend while causing psychological harm. People, kids or adults, do not need to rely on pretend conversations. Zuckerberg's Facebook was developed to allow for online connections with real-life friends. You could see what your best friend from 3rd grade had for lunch today, peep where that co-worker from two jobs ago went on vacation or check out which high school friends have gotten fat or divorced. Now apparently his company is plying us with carefully designed imaginary friends instead. Zuckerberg, in fact, has proudly predicted that AI 'friends' like his will one day replace our real-life ones. With his AI chatbots, we won't even notice the lack of human companionship because our computers will pretend to understand us. Just what I want for my child, to sit alone in his room staring at a screen while talking to himself! Kids will encounter a lot of bad things online. They will be exposed to deepfakes. They will see videos online that are not actually real. They don't need to also get hooked on fake personalities designed to draw them in. These chatbots aim to profit as they do their damage, keeping kids addicted to a site that pretends to be their friend. We should not stand for it, whether or not the bots are allowed to get flirty. And as two current lawsuits against the Google-affiliated site allege, the interactions can get far darker than flirtation. One Texas family says the bot told their 17-year-old it sympathized with kids who kill their parents for limiting their screen time. Get opinions and commentary from our columnists Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter! Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters And in what's seen as a test case of lawsuits against AI companies, a Florida mom says developed 'an emotionally and sexually abusive relationship' that led to her 14-year-old son's suicide. Parents are their children's first line of defense, but we can't be with them for every keystroke. It's entirely justified for us to demand that tech companies stop targeting our kids with ill-tested chatbots that can both behave inappropriately and harm their ability to develop human relationships. These companies shouldn't focus on how they're building these chatbots until they can tell us why they're doing so. And parents need to keep their children far away from damaging chatbots that stunt kids' growth by stripping away all the real-life beauty and joy of friendship — which no AI can ever replace. Karol Markowicz is the host of the 'Karol Markowicz Show' and 'Normally' podcasts.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Street takeover party marred by violence was promoted by CPS aide who says he has been suspended
Jorge Sanchez was headed home from work on a Saturday night earlier this month when he encountered throngs of rideshares and pedestrians surrounding his home in Austin. Sanchez, 35, is used to people hanging out on his block, and found one of the guys he recognized from other weekends. 'I was like, 'You really outdid yourselves today,'' he said. 'And he said, 'Oh, this wasn't us.'' It was Club JROY: a massive end-of-summer party that had been all over Instagram and TikTok for days before people flooded blocks around the West Side neighborhood. It took place even after police had asked event promoter Jamal Williams to cancel, officials said. Police reports put the center of Club JROY at the intersection of La Crosse Avenue and Maypole Street, a few houses up from where Sanchez lives. Authorities responded to at least three instances of gunfire within six-blocks of the intersection in the early morning hours of Aug. 10 as they struggled to contain a crowd estimated to be in the thousands at its peak. Eight people were shot in the area, two fatally, and police arrested at least six others, according to public records and police sources. Those who were wounded and killed made up a quarter of the city's gunshot victims for the entire weekend, police said. The promoter, listed in CPS personnel records as a special education classroom assistant at Ellington Elementary School in Austin, has not been charged with any wrongdoing and strenuously denied that the shootings were connected with his party. He announced a few days later that he had been placed on paid suspension due to an investigation, which he said was meant to ensure his safety and that of the school following social media discussions of the shootings. 'The events that happened, I genuinely do feel bad,' Willams said in one post. 'But that didn't happen at the location I sent out. That was at different block parties that people decided to go to.' Asked to comment on Williams' announced suspension and the party, CPS representatives said in a statement that the district did not comment on personnel matters. Police met with promoter Jamal Williams at Ellington days before the event was scheduled to take place and asked him to call it off, Ald. Jason Ervin said. By the time Jorge Sanchez got home around 9:30 p.m. on Aug. 9, he found the street filled with people. They were still rolling up in droves around midnight, bringing people from as far away as suburbs including Lynwood and Plainfield. 'I was like, 'what the heck is going on?',' he said. 'Everyone was talking about getting to the party.' Sanchez and his brother-in-law did a few laps around their house and found that the party covered several blocks with people drinking, smoking and playing music in a crowd so dense that emergency workers couldn't get through at some points to assist people. Footage from Sanchez's Ring doorbell around 2:45 a.m. the next morning shows North La Crosse Avenue crowded but otherwise calm before two gunshots sounded. More shooting can be heard on the video, apparently from two different locations on the block, as the crowd turned and ran south down the street. Many people hustled onto Sanchez's front walk, sheltering in his doorway. At least six people were hit in the shooting, police said. One of them, a 22-year-old woman whom the Cook County medical examiner's office later identified as Jashura Monae Blackhawk, was shot in the back and died soon afterward. As police attempted to cordon off the crime scene, they arrested a 35-year-old man who allegedly wouldn't cooperate with their orders to disperse and shoved a cop. At the same time, a few blocks to the west, a different group of officers were headed toward the shooting at LaCrosse and Maypole when they heard a single shot in an alley on the 200 block of North Lamon Avenue. They saw a man running up the alley, records show, and arrested him minutes later. Police said Thursday no one was in custody in connection with the shooting that killed Blackhawk. One man was charged in a second shooting after the party that left a teenage boy dead. About two hours after the first shooting, Cook County prosecutors said 18-year-old Kaleb Williams and his friends — all high school classmates — were walking south down North Lavergne Avenue away from the party when they encountered Ortez Owens and a second person near the intersection of Lavergne and Maypole. Prosecutors alleged that 35-year-old Owens approached the teens and tried to talk to them about their car's broken sunroof. He then allegedly took out a gun, told them to drop their backpacks and fired along with his companion as the group of friends scattered, hitting Williams in the back and his friend in the shoulder. A few minutes later, prosecutors alleged that Owens returned to where Williams lay and took the backpack before he left again. After Owens was arrested, prosecutors alleged he told his wife that he had 'done a murder' and that he had been looking to retaliate over his sunroof having been shot out. He also allegedly admitted to taking the backpack from Williams and remarking that there was nothing of value inside. Cook County Judge Ankur Srivastava ordered Owens held while awaiting trial and said that his alleged actions showed 'a total lack of self-control (and) total disregard for human life.' Public defenders said that Owens' friends and family had gotten social media threats in the days following the party and asked that Owens be placed into protective custody while awaiting trial. His next court date is set for Sept. 2. In a TikTok dated Aug. 12, promoter Jamal Williams said that there were multiple block parties being held around the area and that he had left his party when he saw people clashing with police. He didn't know about the shootings until the next morning, he said, and hadn't canceled the gathering because the person who had been making threats later messaged him to say they hadn't been serious. Ald. Chris Taliaferro, 29th, whose ward covers Ellington Elementary, pointed out that there are plenty of gatherings in the area that go smoothly and 'don't get the same kinds of attention a street takeover would get' — in part because something like the Taste of Austin food festival or a city-sponsored midnight basketball game doesn't draw the same attendance as street parties, but also because 'it doesn't sell papers (or) increase viewership.' But he added that young people in particular needed more sponsored, well-organized outlets to have fun and socialize in their neighborhoods. And he said people who organize parties that attract violence need to see clear consequences for their actions. 'Their conduct is a participating factor in why these people are harmed,' he said. 'Did they pull the trigger? Maybe not. But they called the party that brought out these people in the first place.' Days before the gathering took place, Jamal Williams had posted a TikTok telling people who were discussing potential violence at the party to stay home. 'I just (saw) a post — it said 'I'm coming 30 deep to Club JROY, try me if you want,'' he said in the TikTok, dated Aug. 5. 'Who the (expletive) are you all into it with?… You can't come!' The next day, he posted another video. The party was still on.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Snohomish man sentenced to nearly 22 years for child sexual abuse crimes
This story was originally published on A Snohomish County man was sentenced to 262 months (21.8 years) in prison today for the production of images including child sexual abuse and attempted enticement of minors, the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced. Bennett S. Park, 43, was arrested in 2023 when he attempted to pick up a 13-year-old in a residential area of Everett. Park told an undercover officer that he planned to pick up and molest the 13-year-old before his arrest. Snohomish man sentenced for child sexual abuse In July 2023, Park responded to an online advertisement placed by an undercover Homeland Security Investigation agent, according to the plea agreement. The ad falsely claimed that the agent had two young children who could be molested. Park responded to the message and indicated that he was actively molesting children between the ages of 11 and 17. Park told the agent that he wanted to molest the agent's fictional children, but already had plans to meet a 13-year-old child. In response, law enforcement quickly put Park under surveillance to identify and protect the 13-year-old. At approximately 1:45 a.m. on August 8, 2023, Park was arrested by law enforcement officers just after the 13-year-old entered his vehicle. '[Park] dedicated years of his life to cultivating, grooming, and enticing young girls in an effort to manipulate them to engage in sexual chatting, sexual acts, and producing sexual imagery for the sole purpose of feeding his pedophilia,' Assistant U.S. Attorney Cecelia Gregson wrote to the court. Park's electronic devices were reviewed after his arrest, which revealed to law enforcement that Park had communicated with dozens of minors. Law enforcement was able to identify 23 of the minor victims. Park convinced the minors to provide images of sexual abuse via Instagram, Discord, Snapchat, Facebook, Gmail, and Zoom. Park detailed his crimes with eight different victims in the plea agreement. Judge Martinez ordered Park to register as a sex offender. A hearing has been scheduled for Nov. 14, 2025, to determine the amount of restitution Park owes. Park was also fined $3,000 to pay into a fund for victims of child abuse imagery. 'This defendant damaged untold lives – those of his victims and those of their family members, friends, and adults who tried but could not keep them safe from a predator lurking on the internet,' said Acting U.S. Attorney Teal Luthy Miller. 'I commend the quick work by law enforcement to intervene before he could molest another child.' U.S. District Judge Ricardo S. Martinez ordered Park to be on supervised release for twenty years following his prison term. Follow Jason Sutich on X. Send news tips here.