“THE INTERNET NEVER FORGETS”: The Chilling Final Post of Jacky ‘Amazing’ Feng. 📱🌑

Behind the username “Jacky Amazing” was a man spiraling into a digital abyss. Investigators have just recovered a series of “ghost posts”—content Jacky Feng obsessively deleted and reposted in a frantic loop just hours before the Rosemeadow Massacre.

What was he trying to hide, or better yet, what was he trying to broadcast? One specific line, posted exactly 24 hours before the first blow was struck, has left detectives cold. It wasn’t a cry for help; it was a cryptic “final notice” to the world. Why did he keep hitting the delete button, and what did he mean by “The reset begins tomorrow”?

The digital trail leads straight to the heart of a monster. See the recovered screenshots that Jacky thought were gone forever. 👇

Long before the floorboards of Juliet Close were stained with blood, the digital world was witnessing the slow-motion collapse of Jacky Feng. New forensic analysis of the social media accounts linked to the 32-year-old—who styled himself online as “Jacky Amazing”—reveals a disturbing pattern of behavior that investigators believe serves as a “psychological roadmap” to the murders.

The ‘Ghost’ Activity

Digital forensic experts from the New South Wales Police have spent the last 48 hours recovering a trove of deleted content from Feng’s Facebook and Instagram profiles. The data shows that in the seven days leading up to the attack, Feng was engaged in a “manic loop”: posting cryptic, often aggressive status updates, only to delete them minutes later and repost them with slight, chilling variations.

“This isn’t just erratic behavior; it’s a display of extreme cognitive dissonance,” says Dr. Aris Thorne, a leading forensic profiler. “The constant deleting and reposting suggests he was ‘rehearsing’ his narrative, testing how the world would react to his darkening thoughts before he finally acted on them.”

The 24-Hour Warning

The centerpiece of the investigation is a post made exactly 24 hours before the Triple Zero call. Recovered metadata shows Feng posted a single, stark line of text that remained live for only 120 seconds before being scrubbed:

“The bloodline is a cage, and the only way out is to break the bars.”

Detectives believe this “one-liner” was the final psychological break. “It shows a clear intent to target his family,” a police source told Fox News. “He viewed his parents and brothers not as loved ones, but as jailers. This post proves the massacre wasn’t a sudden snap—it was a jailbreak in his twisted mind.”

The “Jacky Amazing” Persona

On platforms like X and Discord, former school acquaintances have begun sharing their own interactions with the “Jacky Amazing” persona. While he presented an image of success and “amazing” lifestyle choices, his private messages tell a different story.

Leaked screenshots from a Sydney-based gaming Discord show Feng becoming increasingly paranoid, claiming his family was “sabotaging his greatness” and “monitoring his every move.” One user, who went by the handle SydSquid, noted: “He started posting these weird loops of him just staring into the camera in the dark. No sound. Just him breathing. We thought it was a joke. Now we know it was a countdown.”

Scrutiny on the Granny Flat ‘Studio’

The investigation into his social media has led police back to the granny flat, which Feng reportedly used as a “content studio.” Inside, police found tripod setups and lighting aimed at a wall covered in what can only be described as a “schizophrenic collage” of family photos and cryptic symbols.

It is now believed that Feng may have even attempted to live-stream or record parts of his psychological descent. “We are looking for a specific device,” Commander Grant Healey confirmed. “There is evidence to suggest he wanted an audience for his ‘reset’.”

The Legal Fallout: Premeditation vs. Insanity

This digital trail is a double-edged sword for the legal proceedings. While the “manic loop” of posting could support a mental health defense, the specific wording of his “final notice” post points directly toward premeditation.

“You don’t talk about ‘breaking the bars’ of a bloodline if you aren’t planning to eliminate that bloodline,” a prosecutor noted. “The delete-and-repost cycle shows he was conscious of his actions, trying to hide his tracks even as he was laying them.”

As Sydney prepares for the funerals of Charles, Ruvena, and Justin Feng, the digital ghost of “Jacky Amazing” continues to haunt the investigation. The man who wanted to be seen as “amazing” is now immortalized as one of the city’s most calculated family killers.