THE BRAIN SCANS THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING: What Happened 36 Hours Before the Bloodshed? 🧠💉

Just when we thought we knew the “monster” of Rosemeadow, a bombshell discovery has left Sydney investigators in a total tailspin. While friends admit Jacky “Amazing” Feng was drowning in personal problems, it’s a series of neurological examinations on the victims—conducted just 36 hours before they were killed—that is causing the real headache.

Why were his mother, father, and brother all undergoing brain scans and neurological tests at the same time? A single, chilling conclusion from those medical reports has been leaked, and it suggests the family wasn’t just “quiet”—they were hiding a medical reality that might have pushed Jacky over the edge. Was he a killer, or was he reacting to something terrifying happening inside his own home?

The “Single Conclusion” is finally out, and it flips the script on everything Jason Feng told the police from his ICU bed. 👇

The investigation into the Rosemeadow triple homicide has entered uncharted territory. While detectives have been focused on the psychological state of Jacky Feng, a stunning new discovery regarding the three victims—Charles, Ruvena, and Justin Feng—has paralyzed the prosecution’s initial narrative.

Medical records obtained by the NSW Homicide Squad reveal that all three victims underwent intensive neurological examinations just 36 hours before they were slaughtered. The result? A “single conclusion” that has investigators questioning if they are looking at a murder case or something far more complex.

The Friend’s Testimony: A Man in Crisis

A close confidant of Jacky Feng has broken silence, detailing a laundry list of “problems” that plagued the 32-year-old. Far from the “Amazing” persona he projected online, Feng was reportedly struggling with debilitating debt, a failed business venture, and a sense of “suffocation” within the family home.

“Jacky wasn’t just ‘gentle,’ he was a pressure cooker,” the friend stated. “He was carrying the weight of the entire family’s secrets. He told me a week ago that ‘something was wrong with the house,’ and that he couldn’t breathe under their roof anymore.”

The 36-Hour Anomaly

The true “headache” for authorities, however, lies in the victims’ final 36 hours. Why did an entire family unit seek neurological testing simultaneously?

Sources close to the forensic medical team indicate that the tests were not for a common virus, but for symptoms of acute neurological deterioration. The “single conclusion” reached by the examining physicians—now a key piece of evidence—reportedly suggests that the victims were suffering from an unidentified environmental toxicity that affected their cognitive functions and behavior.

A New Direction: The ‘Toxin’ Theory

This medical revelation has shifted the focus back to the property on Juliet Close, specifically the granny flat and the ventilation systems.

“If the victims were experiencing neurological impairment 36 hours before death, it changes the dynamic of the ‘hunt’ described by the survivor, Jason Feng,” says forensic analyst David Vance. “Were they unable to defend themselves? Or more chillingly, was Jacky Feng also a victim of the same neurological ‘glitch’ that triggered a violent psychotic break?”

The Headache for Investigators

This conclusion complicates the “calculated cruelty” charge. If Jacky Feng can prove that he—and his family—were suffering from a medically documented neurological crisis caused by an external factor (such as a toxin or undiagnosed shared condition) just hours before the event, the “intent” required for a murder conviction becomes almost impossible to prove.

On X (formerly Twitter), community speculation is rampant. Some are questioning if the “granny flat studio” where Jacky spent his time was contaminated with hazardous materials used in his “content creation” or if there was a deeper, more sinister medical experiment occurring within the household.

Jason Feng’s ICU Silence

Detectives are now eager to re-interview the surviving brother, Jason Feng. They need to know: Did he also undergo testing 36 hours before the attack? And if so, why did he omit this crucial detail from his initial account of his brother “hunting” the family down?

The “Single Conclusion” has turned a suburban tragedy into a medical thriller. As the July court date approaches, the question is no longer just what Jacky Feng did, but what was happening to the brains of every person inside that house before the first drop of blood was spilled.

The Rosemeadow case, once a straightforward triple-murder, is now a race to uncover a hidden medical truth that could set a killer free—or reveal an even greater horror.