Her death is now a national political prop.
Sometime Thursday morning, the President of the United States posted surveillance footage of a woman being beaten to death with a hammer. He did not post it quietly.
Donald Trump shared the video on Truth Social alongside a lengthy caption identifying the attacker as a Haitian national and directing blame at former President Joe Biden and what he called the Radical Democrats in Congress. The killing took place last week at a gas station in Fort Myers, Florida. Security camera footage captured a man smashing a woman's car windshield, then approaching her and striking her repeatedly in the head with a hammer, killing her in broad daylight. The victim, a store clerk at the gas station, has not yet been publicly identified.
The attacker has been. Court documents obtained by CNN identify him as Rolbert Joachin, 40, a Haitian national who has been charged with murder. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed in a statement issued Tuesday that Joachin will be deported.
Trump's post framed the killing as a direct consequence of immigration policy. He wrote that Joachin had been allowed to remain in the country because the Biden administration extended Temporary Protective Status to Haitians — a program Trump described as massively abused and fraudulent. He also claimed that federal district court judges he labeled deranged liberals were blocking his administration's efforts to strip Haitians of that status.
The president acknowledged the footage was extreme. He wrote that he did not recommend watching it, calling it so terrible, but said he felt an obligation to post it so the public could see what he characterized as what Democrats are protecting. He added a note that the video was not for children.
The decision to post graphic homicide footage from an official presidential account is without modern precedent. Trump has long used violent imagery and crime statistics involving immigrants as political tools — most notoriously during his 2024 campaign, when he falsely claimed that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were eating residents' pets. That claim was debunked, but it circulated widely and shaped the national conversation around immigration in the final weeks of the race.
The timing of Thursday's post drew immediate attention. Trump shared the video just hours after First Lady Melania Trump held an unexpected press conference addressing her past connections to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Questions about the president's own relationship with the convicted sex offenders have persisted throughout the administration, and the White House has faced sustained pressure on the issue for months.
Whether the timing was deliberate or coincidental, the effect was to flood the information space with something visceral and politically charged at a moment when the White House was fielding uncomfortable questions on a different front entirely.
The Fort Myers killing is now embedded in a larger political argument about immigration enforcement, judicial authority, and the limits of executive power — and the president has made clear he intends to keep it there. The deported status of Joachin, the ongoing legal battles over Temporary Protective Status, and the unidentified victim at the center of it all are threads that will continue to pull in the weeks ahead.
Notable Quotes
I don't recommend you watch this tape, because it is so terrible, but felt I had an obligation to put it up so that people can see what Democrats are protecting.— President Donald Trump, via Truth Social
Surveillance footage showed that Joachin smashed the victim's car windshield, approached her, and repeatedly hit her in the head with a hammer — violently killing her in broad daylight.— Department of Homeland Security press release
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
What's the actual news event here — the murder, or the president posting the video?
Both, but the posting is the story. Murders happen. A sitting president broadcasting graphic homicide footage to millions of followers is something else entirely.
Is there a precedent for this kind of thing?
Not really. Politicians have long used crime as a political cudgel, but sharing raw surveillance footage of someone dying — that's a different register.
Trump said he felt an obligation to post it. Do you take that at face value?
He also posted it hours after his wife was fielding questions about Epstein. Whether that's coincidence or calculation, the effect was the same — the conversation moved.
What's the legal situation with the attacker?
Rolbert Joachin, 40, has been charged with murder. DHS says he'll be deported. The criminal case is moving forward.
And the victim?
Still unidentified publicly. She was a store clerk. That's almost all we know about her as a person — and yet her death is now a national political prop.
Trump mentioned judges blocking his immigration moves. What's that about?
He's been trying to end Temporary Protective Status for Haitians. Federal district courts have issued rulings slowing that effort. He's framing those judges as obstacles to public safety.
The Springfield pets claim was false. Does that history matter here?
It matters for context. He's used Haitian immigrants as a political symbol before, with invented details. That pattern shapes how people receive this new post.
What should readers watch for going forward?
The identity of the victim, the outcome of the TPS legal battles, and whether other officials or platforms push back on the decision to post the footage at all.