A 25-year old Nigerian based in the United States of America, Michael Egwuagu is assisting the police to unravel the mystery behind his stabbing his 32-year-old pregnant sister to death. Egwuagu was arrested and charged in the fatal stabbing of his sister at a home north of Austin.
“I killed Jennifer,” he allegedly told a woman whom his sister had summoned for help.
Martin Egwuagu got the first text message from his twin sister before sunrise Friday. Their younger brother, Michael, was having a crisis.
He tried to calm Michael, once a standout college football player, over the phone. But by midafternoon, his sister was asking for help again, authorities say. So Martin Egwuagu headed to her house near Pflugerville, Tex., a suburb of Austin.
He was too late. Less than an hour after getting his sister’s second text message, he found her dead on the kitchen floor.
Thirty-two years old and in the first trimester of pregnancy, Jennifer Ebichi was covered with stab wounds.
Michael Egwuagu was kneeling in the street as if praying. His confession had already been made, according to a Travis County Sheriff’s Office arrest report, captured by a doorbell camera as he walked out of Ebichi’s house.
The crime unfolded while Ebichi’s two children were in the house, investigators say. It shook the quiet subdivision that was home to the growing family, where Christmas lights shined as police processed the scene Friday night.
“This was a shock for us,” neighbor Ben Nguyen said. “It’s not something we expected to happen here. They were good people.”
Michael Egwuagu, 25, was arrested on a murder charge — a stunning turn for the once widely admired University of Texas at San Antonio defensive captain who went by the nickname “Egg.”
Part of a family of football players, with former Buffalo Bill Ikemefuna “IK” Enemkpali as a cousin, he had been closely watched since his days at Pflugerville’s John B. Connally High School. He dreamed of playing in the National Football League,telling reporters in 2017, a year after graduating from college, that being drafted “would mean the world to me and my family.”
More recently, Egwuagu was focused on trading stocks and pursuing another old dream of becoming a rapper, according to report that described him as a “Renaissance man.”
It is not clear what led to Friday’s attack. A spokeswoman for the sheriff’s office, Kristen Dark, said she could not respond to inquiries about whether the former football player had a history of mental illness.
According to the arrest report, authorities got a 911 call summoning them to the house just before 5 p.m. Friday. Deputies found Ebichi with more than a dozen stab wounds. Her alleged attacker was nude in the street. On the ground near him was a bloody knife.
The woman Ebichi had asked for help told investigators that when she got to the house, she heard the mother and her children screaming and Egwuagu yelling inside. She said he walked out smiling and holding a knife. That was when he confessed to killing his sister, the report says.
“Michael then walked out into the street and got onto his knees as though he was praying,” it continues.
Martin Egwuagu arrived soon after. He told police he saw one of Ebichi’s children covered with blood in the front yard, accompanied by the woman Ebichi had asked for help. The other child was in the house with her mother, crying. Martin Egwuagu gathered the children and then encountered his brother, who told him he was “one of the good ones,” according to the report.
Police took Michael Egwuagu into custody that night. Sheriff’s office records show he is being held at the Travis County Correctional Complex on a $500,000 bond. His attorney, Krista Chacona, could not be reached for comment Tuesday