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Stepbrother climbed ‘on top of’ cheerleader in video call before cruise death, ex-boyfriend says

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Stepbrother climbed ‘on top of’ cheerleader in video call before cruise death, ex-boyfriend says

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TITUSVILLE, Fla. — As the FBI investigates 18-year-old Anna Kepner’s mysterious death aboard a cruise ship, a custody battle involving her 16-year-old stepbrother has unveiled allegations of inappropriate behavior, family turmoil and disputed claims that underage drinking occurred in international waters.

No criminal charges have been announced, but her stepmother Shauntel Kepner’s ongoing legal fight with her ex-husband Thomas Hudson revealed Anna’s 16-year-old stepbrother has been eyed as a suspect.

Anna’s ex-boyfriend witnessed creepy interactions with the stepbrother visiting her bedroom at 3 a.m. FaceTime calls, a source close to the family told Fox News Digital.

“When I was on FaceTime with her, and she was lying down, and her brother tried to go on top of her,” the 15-year-old ex-boyfriend told reporters after Anna’s memorial service.

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STEPMOTHER IN CRUISE SHIP DEATH MYSTERY FEARS CHILD COULD BE INCRIMINATED: COURT DOCS

Christopher Kepner (center, red hat) arrives at a memorial service for his daughter, Anna Kepner, at the Grove Church in Titusville, Florida, Thursday, November 20, 2025. (Mark Sims for Fox News Digital)

He said he reported the encounter to Anna’s parents and said she had complained about being “uncomfortable” around her stepbrother before. He went on to describe Anna as his “first love” and said he would have been on the cruise with the Kepner family earlier this month if they hadn’t broken up.

“She was scared of him,” the ex’s father, Steven Westin, told Inside Edition separately. “Because he always carried around a big knife.”

WATCH: Anna Kepner’s ex-boyfriend breaks silence on her cruise ship death

After Anna’s death, the stepbrother’s father demanded a custody hearing, accusing his ex-wife of alienating their two youngest children from him after a violent altercation involving their oldest. He argued that his lack of involvement in their lives is having a serious impact on them.

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The teen stepsiblings had access to alcohol in international waters despite being under 21, Hudson alleged at a hearing Thursday morning, according to Click Orlando, a local news site. Shauntel’s lawyer denied the claim.

FBI INVESTIGATES CARNIVAL CRUISE SHIP DEATH IN MARITIME MYSTERY THAT CAN BE ‘VERY COMPLEX,’ FORMER AGENT SAYS

Anna Kepner was identified by her family as the passenger who died onboard the Carnival Horizon. (Instagram/Anna Kepner)

“The [16-year-old]’s future has been put in jeopardy because of the choices made by [Shauntel],” according to Hudson’s filing.

Carnival requires that guests under 21 travel with someone 25 or older. Kids 14 and under have to be in the same or a connecting cabin. Teens 15 to 17 can be in a nearby stateroom, within about three cabins of the adult, and 18- to 20-year-olds can be booked anywhere on the ship as long as they’re linked to an adult over 25.

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The teen’s current whereabouts are unclear. According to the filing, he has been released from custody and is staying with an unnamed third party.

Anna Kepner, her father, stepmother and several siblings in a family photo. (Shauntel Kepner/Facebook)

At some point during the course of the week, Anna’s obituary was also edited to change which family members were reflected.

The name of her dad’s second ex-wife, Tabitha Kepner, was removed entirely after initially being identified as her mother. The current version lists her mom as Heather Wright. A reference to the Donohue family was removed. So was a reference to her 16-year-old stepbrother, who is now believed to be the suspect.

Anna’s stepmother, Shauntel Kepner, formerly Shauntel Hudson, is her father’s current wife. In an emergency motion filed in Brevard County, she asked a judge to postpone a December hearing in a proceeding with her ex-husband due to the FBI investigation into Anna’s death aboard a Carnival cruise ship on Nov. 7.

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“The Respondent (Shauntel) has been advised through discussions with FBI investigators and her attorneys, that a criminal case may be initiated against one of the minor children of this instant action,” her attorney, Millicent Athanason, wrote to a Brevard County judge on Nov. 17.

The 16-year-old was hospitalized “immediately after the incident” on the ship for an undisclosed reason, according to Athanason, and is now living with one of his mother’s relatives, according to ClickOrlando.com.

CRUISE SHIP DEATH: CHEERLEADER’S STEPMOM COULD BE FORCED TO TESTIFY AGAINST HER OWN SON

A still image shows 18-year-old Anna Kepner’s cryptic final TikTok post, posted eight days before she was found dead on a cruise ship. (@fl.anna18/TikTok)

Relatives say they have received few official answers since the ship docked. Anna’s birth mother, Heather Wright, told WESH 2 she learned of her daughter’s death through an online search. She has not responded to Fox News Digital’s attempts to reach her.

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“I found out through Google. I ended up Googling it, because the only information I had was that my daughter was on a cruise,” she told the local outlet.

Similarly, Anna’s stepgrandfather, Christopher Donahue, 53, told Fox News Digital Wednesday that he too learned about her death through social media.

CRUISE SHIP DEATH MYSTERY: CHEERLEADER’S FINAL POSTS HINT AT HEARTBREAK AND RESILIENCE AS DAD BREAKS SILENCE

“I don’t know why Anna was staying in a room with her stepbrother,” Donahue said. He said he learned about the arrangement from a news article. 

“All I know is that she went on that boat, and she never came back,” he added. “You don’t go 0 to 100, but we weren’t on the boat. Everyone is heartbroken. There are questions. I don’t think we’ll ever know.”

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The swirl of public claims around Anna’s death has revived long-simmering disputes. In a March 31, 2023, divorce petition filed in Brevard County and obtained by Fox News Digital, Anna’s former stepmother, Tabitha L. Kepner, alleges that Christopher Purcell Kepner, Anna’s father, had a “history of physical and mental abuse toward the minor children and toward the Petitioner,” and she sought sole parental responsibility for the children she shared with him and supervised time-sharing. 

She was married to Christopher Kepner after he split with Anna’s mother and before he met his third wife, Shauntel.

READ THE FILING – APP USERS, CLICK HERE

In 2024, Michelle Johnson filed a small claims suit in Brevard County against Shauntel Hudson seeking the return of several firearms, including a 12-gauge shotgun and two rifles, which she alleged Hudson refused to hand back.

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The filings include a series of emails in which Johnson accused Hudson of “manipulating and alienating” her children from their father, describing the situation as “a very sad and heartbreaking ordeal.”

“Prior [sic] to you, manipulating controlling and brainwashing them for the past month,” Johnson wrote to Hudson. “It’s devastating and upsetting. Please step back and look at what’s the best for these kids? They need their family…”

That case was later dismissed after Johnson missed a service of process deadline.

Together, the records paint a portrait of a fractured family now thrust into the spotlight following Anna’s mysterious death aboard the six-day Carnival cruise.

Anna’s family and friends attended a service at The Grove Church in Titusville, Fla., on Thursday evening. One of the Kepners’ neighbors told Fox News Digital Thursday that their street has been quiet since Anna’s death. He described the Kepners as a friendly family.

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Two vehicles, a Dodge truck and Chevy SUV, were parked in the Kepners’ driveway, but no one answered the door. Investigators have not disclosed a cause or manner of death, and prosecutors have not filed charges.

Anna Kepner’s family said she had dreams of joining the military. (Instagram/Anna Kepner)

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Hundreds of mourners gathered Thursday at The Grove Church in Titusville, Florida, to celebrate the life of Kepner. Guests were greeted by her graduation photos and invited to leave a fingerprint on a poster bearing her picture. Inside the church’s auditorium, a slideshow traced her life through images of karate lessons, Disney trips, lake days, beach outings, cheerleading fundraisers, and carefree flips at a bounce house.

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Florida serial killer fears spread after three women found dead in three days

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Florida serial killer fears spread after three women found dead in three days

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Florida authorities are pushing back on social media rumors about a “serial killer on the loose” in Jacksonville after three women were found dead in separate incidents over three days.

The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office (JSO) addressed the speculation directly on Tuesday, emphasizing that the cases are unrelated and urging calm as investigations continue.

“JSO is aware of rumors circulating about a serial killer on the loose in Jacksonville. We can confirm these claims are FALSE,” the agency wrote Tuesday on social media.

The department added that detectives are investigating each case individually, “following the facts and evidence,” adding “there is no danger to the public related to these incidents.”

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PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR CHALLENGES HOUSTON OFFICIALS ON BAYOU SERIAL KILLER THEORY AFTER 16 DEATHS THIS YEAR

A Jacksonville sheriff’s officer stands watch as FBI and IRS agents conduct a search. (Bob Self/Florida Times-Union/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

Despite that clarification, speculation continued to spread online, with many users drawing comparisons to crime thrillers or past serial killer cases.

“Isn’t this what the police say in every serial killer movie?” one Facebook user wrote.

NEW ENGLAND SERIAL KILLER ACCUSED OF NEW MURDERS AS AUTHORITIES UNCOVER DECADE-LONG CRIME SPREE: DA

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Theodore Bundy, seated in court in July 1979, was charged with the murders of two Florida State coeds. (Getty Images)

Others invoked infamous cases like Ted Bundy and John Wayne Gacy, arguing that police in those eras also downplayed initial warnings.

Worries spread over the weekend after three women were found dead in different parts of Jacksonville within three days.

On Saturday, 24-year-old Cherrish Nunley, a mother of two, was found fatally shot in a parking lot, according to News4Jax. A GoFundMe page created for her family described her as a devoted mother and “a bright, beautiful girl” who was “killed in cold blood.”

FORMER DETECTIVE SAYS STRING OF HOUSTON DEATHS MAY BE LINKED TO ALLEGED ‘SMILEY FACE’ KILLER NETWORK

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Cherrish Nunley, 24, was found shot and killed in a parking lot in Jacksonville on Nov. 15, according to a post from family members on a GoFundMe page. (GoFundMe)

The following day, a fisherman discovered the body of Tiffany Felton beneath a bridge on Blanding Boulevard, FirstCoastNews reported.

“This was an unnecessary killing,” AJ Jordan, outreach coordinator with MAD DADS, told the outlet. “Him or her left this lady under a bridge, under a bridge. It’s just, it’s just sad.” 

On Monday, deputies were called to a rooming house in the city’s Phoenix neighborhood, where another woman was found unresponsive, according to FirstCoastNews. A sheriff’s sergeant told the outlet that details surrounding her death were not immediately clear.

HOUSTON POLICE DISCOVER 16 BODIES IN BAYOUS THIS YEAR AS MAYOR DISMISSES SERIAL KILLER SPECULATION

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A body of a mother of two, Cherrish Nunley, was found dead behind a business near the 3800 block of Sunbeam Road in Jacksonville, Fla. (Google Maps)

Investigators say that, at this stage, the cases do not appear connected. Police have not confirmed whether any suspects have been identified or taken into custody.

While online speculation remains intense, authorities reiterated that there is no evidence linking the deaths or suggesting a broader threat.

“3 bodies in 3 days? Forgive me, but you can’t credibly say it’s not a serial killer if you haven’t solved it yet,” one skeptical user wrote.

Another commented, “Well… honestly there probably is one or two, but we just don’t know about it yet.”

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“Our detectives are investigating recent homicide cases that involve female victims, following the facts and evidence in each case. We will share updates as soon as we are able to, but we want to reassure the community there is no danger to the public related [to] these incidents,” the department said.

Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.

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State attorney general involved in SCOTUS trans athlete case responds as 130 Dems back males in women’s sports

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State attorney general involved in SCOTUS trans athlete case responds as 130 Dems back males in women’s sports

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West Virginia Attorney General John McCuskey weighed in on his state’s upcoming Supreme Court case against trans athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson after 130 congressional Democrats filed an amicus brief backing Pepper-Jackson. 

Pepper-Jackson filed the West Virginia v, B.P.J. case in July 2024, to challenge the state’s law, The Save Women’s Sports Act, to compete on a girls high school cross-country and track and field team. But the case will now be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in January. 

“The Save Women’s Sport Act is about making sports fair and safe for all involved. It is not about banning anyone from competition. Biological males can compete against biological males but not against biological females,” McCuskey said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital through the law firm Alliance Defending Freedom. 

 

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“Women and girls have lost places on sports teams, surrendered spots on championship podiums and suffered injuries competing against bigger, faster and stronger males. This case is about preserving the hard-earned victories afforded in Title IX and, more than anything, protecting our female athletes.”

The lawsuit was brought against the state of West Virginia by trans athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson, who was initially granted a preliminary injunction allowing the athlete to participate on the school’s sports teams. The 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the law violated Title IX and the equal protection clause. Now, the Supreme Court has agreed to hear the state’s appeal.

In a response brief, the athlete’s mother, Heather Jackson, argued West Virginia’s law that prohibits transgender athletes from competing in women’s sports violates Title IX.

However, Title IX does not explicitly protect the right of biologically male transgender people to identify as women. The Trump administration and West Virginia state government do not interpret Title IX as protective of that right.

LEGAL DEFENSE TO PROTECT WOMEN’S SPORTS IN SCOTUS BATTLE OVER TRANS ATHLETES RESPONDS TO ATTEMPT TO DROP CASE

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Becky Pepper-Jackson attends the Lambda Legal Liberty Awards June 8, 2023, in New York City.  (Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Lambda Legal)

The 130 Democrats who have thrown their support behind Pepper-Jackson include nine Senators and 121 House members. 

The list of signees features prominent figures on the party’s left wing, including Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Ilhan Omar, D-Minn. The list also includes House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Rep. Nancy Pelosi. The list does not include noted moderate Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., or Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

“Categorical bans — such as the bans in West Virginia and Idaho — undermine those protections and the ability of transgender students to be part of their school community,” the brief says.

The amicus brief also expressed support for another trans athlete, Lindsay Hecox, whose case will also be heard by the Supreme Court in January. 

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The Little v. Hecox lawsuit was initially filed by trans athlete Lindsay Hecox in 2020, when the athlete wanted to join the women’s cross-country team at Boise State and had the state’s law to prevent trans athletes from competing in women’s sports blocked.

Hecox was joined by an anonymous biological female student, Jane Doe, who was concerned about the potential of being subjected to the sex dispute verification process. The challenge was successful when a federal judge blocked Idaho’s state law.

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A 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel upheld an injunction blocking the state law in 2023, before the Supreme Court agreed in July to hear the case. Hecox then asked the court last month to drop the challenge, claiming the athlete “has therefore decided to permanently withdraw and refrain from playing any women’s sports at BSU or in Idaho.”

Hecox tried to have the case dismissed in September after the Supreme Court agreed in July to hear the case, but U.S. District Judge David Nye, appointed by President Donald Trump in 2017, rejected Hecox’s motion to dismiss the case. 

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Florida executes Richard Barry Randolph, convicted of raping, killing former convenience store manager

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Florida executes Richard Barry Randolph, convicted of raping, killing former convenience store manager

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Florida executed a man Thursday who was convicted of raping and killing his former manager at a convenience store in 1988, marking the state’s record 17th execution this year.

Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office told The Associated Press that 63-year-old Richard Barry Randolph was pronounced dead at 6:12 p.m. after receiving a three-drug injection at Florida State Prison near Starke.

A year later, in 1989, Randolph was convicted of murder, armed robbery, sexual battery and grand theft and sentenced to death.

A spokesperson for the governor said there were no complications during the procedure and that Randolph had no last words.

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FLORIDA CONTINUES TO EXTEND RECORD EXECUTION YEAR WITH MAN PUT TO DEATH FOR KILLING WIFE’S FAMILY

Richard Randolph in an undated photo released by correctional authorities ahead of his execution. (Florida Department of Corrections via AP)

Randolph woke at 6:30 a.m. and later ate a cheeseburger, fries and ice cream, according to a state Department of Corrections official. He had one visitor during the day but did not meet with a spiritual advisor.

Three members of the victim’s family were expected to attend the execution, which began around 6 p.m.

Randolph’s death extended Florida’s record for executions in a single year to 17.

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The U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976, and, until now, the highest annual total in Florida was eight in 2014.

Court records show Randolph tried to break into a safe at a Palatka convenience store in August 1988, according to the AP. Randolph, a former employee, was spotted by manager Minnie Ruth McCollum, and the two struggled.

FLORIDA SETS RECORD WITH 15TH EXECUTION AS MAN DIES FOR 1998 RAPE, MURDER OF NEIGHBOR

Richard Randolph was put to death Thursday for the rape and murder of his former manager at a Florida convenience store in 1988. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File)

Randolph beat, strangled, stabbed and raped McCollum before fleeing the store in her car.

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Three women saw Randolph leaving and called the sheriff’s office after noticing the store was in disarray.

A responding deputy found McCollum still alive and took her to a hospital, where she remained in a coma. She died six days later of severe brain injuries, doctors said.

Randolph was arrested soon after at a Jacksonville grocery store while trying to borrow money and cash in stolen lottery tickets. Investigators said he admitted to the attack and led them to bloody clothing he had discarded.

The Florida Supreme Court last week denied Randolph’s appeal to overturn his conviction. He argued the lower court abused its discretion by denying him access to public records and that his lawyers acted without his consent.

FLORIDA EXTENDS RECORD EXECUTIONS WITH DATE SET FOR MAN WHO FATALLY STABBED COUPLE DURING ROBBERY

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The entrance of Florida State Prison in Starke (AP Photo/Curt Anderson, File)

Florida has carried out more executions than any other state this year, followed by Alabama, South Carolina and Texas with five each. Two more executions are planned next month under death warrants signed by Republican Gov. DeSantis.

Mark Allen Geralds, 58, is scheduled for Florida’s 18th execution Dec. 9. He was convicted of fatally stabbing a woman during a home invasion robbery.

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Frank Athen Walls, 58, will become Florida’s 19th executed prisoner on Dec. 18. He was convicted of fatally shooting a man and a woman during a home invasion robbery and later confessed to three other killings.

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Florida’s lethal injections use a sedative, a paralytic and a drug that stops the heart, according to the Department of Corrections.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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