Florida – In a disturbing escalation of a former friendship turned hostile that took place in Florida, a 29-year-old Texas woman, identified as S. Jenkins, has been charged with attempted first-degree murder after stabbing a woman she used to be friends with in the face during a planned physical confrontation. The violence, captured on social media and confirmed by multiple witness accounts and video evidence, led to Jenkins’ arrest by the police department.
The charge comes after Jenkins reportedly agreed to meet the victim—someone she once called a friend—for a fight. But what was expected to be a mutual physical altercation turned near-deadly when Jenkins pulled out a concealed knife and slashed the woman across the face. In a series of social media videos following the incident, Jenkins was seen taunting viewers, displaying the weapon, and expressing no remorse for the attack.
According to police reports, Jenkins and the victim first met in 2023 through social media and quickly became close, often seen together at social gatherings. But by early 2024, a public argument at a party put an end to the friendship. On July 15th, 2025, the two encountered each other again at an upscale nightclub. An argument broke out, which led to both women being removed from the venue. The confrontation continued online on social media, where both agreed to meet and fight. The women arrived separately at a parking lot around 3:30 a.m. Once out of their vehicles, they approached each other, but within moments, the confrontation spiraled into violence. The victim reported feeling sharp stabs to her face and screamed before fleeing the scene and driving herself to the sheriff’s department for help.
When Officer T. Watson responded, he found the victim bleeding heavily from facial wounds. Fire Rescue crews quickly transported her for medical treatment. A full investigation was launched, and Detective N. Hernandez began gathering evidence, including video footage from an unknown bystander, which clearly showed Jenkins wielding a small black knife. In the aftermath, Jenkins went live on social media, broadcasting from various locations, including the airport and even after landing back in Texas. Her social media comments painted a disturbing picture. In one video, she was heard saying, “Call me Chucky and Michael Myers ho”—an open declaration that aligned with the stabbing. In other recordings, she boasted about hiding the weapon in her wig, mocked the victim’s survival, and made chilling remarks such as “I should have finished that ho off.”
Police reviewed numerous recordings, posts, and live videos where Jenkins repeatedly expressed satisfaction with the attack, referred to prior stabbing incidents, and compared herself to real-life killers, including making her profile picture one of a woman who had committed a fatal stabbing days earlier. Authorities also discovered Jenkins had a criminal past with felony convictions for grand theft in Florida and fraud in Texas. She was arrested on August 1st by the Felony Apprehension Team in Florida, then read her constitutional rights. During interrogation, she claimed the weapon used was a pen—not a knife—but the visual and video evidence contradicts that account.
Jenkins now faces a serious charge of attempted first-degree murder and is being held without bond. Her online confessions, graphic threats, and violent boasts have become central to the prosecution’s case, painting a chilling portrait of a woman who took social media antagonism to real-world violence. The victim, whose name has not been released, survived the brutal assault, but the physical and emotional scars are likely to remain long after the livestreams have ended.
