A woman kills her boyfriend for infidelity

After seeing him with another woman, a lady in Indiana allegedly used an Apple AirTag to track down her lover at a bar and killed him by driving him over three times with her car.

Gaylyn Morris, 26, reportedly hit her boyfriend Andre Smith, also 26, with her car in the parking lot of Tilly’s in Indianapolis at 12:30 a.m. on June 3.

According to a probable cause statement for Morris’ arrest, a witness said Morris told her about how she tracked down Smith using an AirTag.

According to the Indianapolis Star, she also claimed to be in a relationship with the victim and believed he was cheating on her with another woman.

‘Officers arrived and located Mr. Smith laying on the ground underneath a vehicle,’ Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department said in a news release. ‘It appeared he was struck by the vehicle. Indianapolis Fire Department (IFD) Engine Company 6 responded and unfortunately pronounced the Mr. Smith deceased at the scene.

Morris allegedly grabbed an empty wine bottle and swung it at the other woman after arriving at Tilly’s. Because Smith intervened and caught the bottle, it did not hit her.

Staff requested the three of them to leave a short time later.

A witness later told police that she was at a pub when she saw Morris pull forward in the parking lot and clip Smith with her car.

‘And he went down, at which time… [Morris] then backed over him and then pulled forward and hit him for the third time,’ the probable cause affidavit states.

After exiting her vehicle, Morris allegedly attempted to run after the woman, but police intervened and arrested her. The woman who had been at the pub with Smith at the time of the incident was unharmed.

Morris is being held in the Marion County Jail as of Sunday night, according to online jail records, and has been charged with murder.

According to local authorities, the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office will assess the charges and determine whether any more should be filed.

According to Law and Crime, the suspect is set to appear in court for the first time on Tuesday.

Apple AirTags are coin-sized gadgets that may be attached to keys, backpacks, handbags, and other items to help people find them if they’re missing using their iPhone.

Stalkers are also using the $30 device to track people. Apple assured customers that AirTags would prevent “unwarranted tracking” by informing a nearby iPhone when an AirTag was separated from its owner when it was released in April 2021. For example, if someone places an AirTag on a car but does not get in, the driver of the car should be notified that an AirTag is nearby or going with them.

The AirTag should then start making a sound to alert individuals in the vicinity of its location. Some users, on the other hand, claim that the alarm and sound can take hours or even days to be sent out, and that they can even be turned off.

According to Apple’s website, the AirTag’s location is also sent to the user’s iCloud, where it can be viewed on a map. The system uses the ‘Find My’ app to give its owner step-by-step instructions on how to locate the tag before finally collecting it.

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