NO ONE WILL CLAIM THE BODY: The ultimate rejection of the Shreveport Monster… 🚨🚫

Shamar Elkins sits alone in a cold morgue, but it’s not just the city that has turned its back. His own blood—the parents who just gave away their life savings—have officially REFUSED to claim his remains. What was in the final “Death Row” phone call and the disturbing series of encrypted messages that made a mother choose to let her son be buried in a nameless grave?

The family has reached their breaking point, and the “Digital Will” Elkins left behind is so dark it’s forced a complete and decisive rejection. You won’t believe the final words that made his own flesh and blood say: “He is not ours anymore.” 👇🔥

In a chilling final chapter to the Cedar Grove massacre, the body of 31-year-old Shamar Elkins remains unclaimed in a Caddo Parish morgue. In a move that has stunned both legal experts and social psychologists, Elkins’ own parents—who only days ago begged for forgiveness on his behalf—have officially refused to take possession of his remains. This decisive rejection reportedly follows the discovery of a “final phone call” and a series of “disturbing digital messages” that have shattered the last remnants of family loyalty.

The Morgue Stand-off: A Body Without a Name

As of Thursday, May 7, 2026, the statutory limit for claiming the body of Shamar Elkins is fast approaching. Typically, even in cases of mass casualty, families provide a private burial. However, the Elkins family has signaled to the Coroner’s Office that they will not be coming forward. If unclaimed, the man who “completely lost control” and took eight lives will be buried in a “potter’s field”—a nameless grave provided by the county.

“This is the ultimate social excommunication,” reported a Fox News digital exclusive. “To be rejected in life is one thing; to be rejected in death by the very mother who pleaded for your soul is unprecedented in recent Louisiana history.”

The Final Phone Call: 120 Seconds of Horror

The catalyst for this sudden shift is believed to be a final, recorded phone call Elkins made just hours before the massacre. While the contents have not been officially released by the DOJ, leaks within the “True Crime Noir” community on Discord suggest the call was to his mother.

Sources claim Elkins didn’t sound “broken” or “confused” during the call. Instead, he allegedly detailed his “vision” for the morning of April 19 with a “robotic, chilling euphoria.” This “Information Gap” has finally been bridged for the family; they no longer view him as a man who suffered a mental break, but as someone who looked them in the eye and lied about the “demons” he was supposedly fighting.

The “Disturbing Messages” and the Digital Will

Further complicating the narrative are a series of encrypted messages found on Elkins’ phone, which federal investigators reportedly shared with the family this week. On platforms like X and Reddit’s r/TrueCrime, rumors are swirling that these messages contain a “Digital Will” that expressed zero remorse for the children.

“The messages changed everything,” a family spokesperson told the New York Post. “They realized the person they were defending in the media didn’t exist. The Shamar they loved died long before the first shot was fired.” The “Mystery Loop” creators on TikTok have seized on these reports, suggesting the messages link Elkins to extremist underground forums where he discussed “cleansing” his legacy—a detail that has turned public pity for the parents into a grim respect for their decision to walk away.

The Impact on Shaneiqua Pugh

For the surviving mother, Shaneiqua Pugh, the family’s rejection of Elkins’ body provides a different kind of closure. Recovering from her “hospital bed confession” and the subsequent depression, Pugh reportedly expressed that she “did not want him near her children, even in the earth.”

The decision to sell the house for $3,000 and give her the life savings was the first step; refusing the body is the final nail in the coffin of the Elkins legacy. “A home soaked in blood is being demolished, and the man who spilled it is being erased,” wrote one columnist for the Shreveport Community Ledger.

A Nameless Grave for a Notorious Killer

As the clock ticks down, the city of Shreveport prepares for a state-mandated burial. There will be no “eight tiny coffins” for Shamar Elkins. There will be no “heartbreaking words” spoken over his grave. The man who made a neighborhood “drown in tears” will likely be laid to rest in a plain wooden box in an undisclosed location.

The “Shocking Hospital Bed Confession” and the “Final Rejection” have created a narrative arc that America is watching with bated breath. It is a story of a family choosing justice over blood, and a community that refuses to give a monster a place to rest. In the end, Shamar Elkins took everything from his family—and in return, they have given him exactly what he left them: nothing.