A North Carolina teacher who was allegedly attacked by a homeless man in her own home managed to describe the sickening ๐ถ๐๐๐ถ๐๐๐ before dying.
โHe hit me with a brick,โ were Zoe Welshโs haunting final words to a 911 dispatcher after career criminal Ryan Camacho, 36, allegedly forced his way into her home and attacked her, according to investigators.
โA man just broke in through the window. He is a homeless man. I have seen him in the park at Fred Fletcher,โ she said โ referring to Fred Fletcher Park in Raleigh โ following the terrifying home invasion in Raleigh around 6:30 a.m. Jan. 3, US Weekly reported.
Teacher Zoe Welsh told 911 dispatchers, โHe hit me with a brick.โFacebook
โHe is in the house right now. He hit me with a brick. He hit me with a brick. I am on the floor in my bedroom.โ
The dispatcher asked Welsh repeatedly if she was still on the line โ but there was no answer.
Camacho, a career criminal with six arrests in the past four years, has been charged with murder and felony burglary in the killing of Welsh, a beloved educator at Ravenscroft School in Raleigh.
He has yet to enter a plea to the charges and is next due in court Jan. 26.
Ryan Camacho, a homeless career criminal, has been charged with Welshโs murder.Raleigh Police Department
At the time of Welshโs murder, he was out on a sweetheart plea deal.
In 2016, he threw a rock and broke a neighborโs car window and tried to enter his vehicle, later pleading guilty to property damage.
He has yet to enter a plea.WRAL
Welsh called 911 after Camacho allegedly broke in through the window of her Raleigh, NC, home.WRAL
The man accused Camacho of stalking his family for months, but this charge was dismissed by a judge, and he spent just two and a half months in jail with post-release mental health treatment.
In 2017 alone, he was arrested four times and charged with seven non-violent misdemeanors, WRAL reported.
In 2019, Camacho allegedly fired four bullets into a womanโs home in Raleigh, and was hit with eight felony charges, six of which were dropped as part of a plea deal.
He was sentenced to a minimum of two years in prison with nine months of post-release supervision and a following five years of probation.
Camacho was sent back to prison after allegedly violating his supervision and served a total of five and a half years for the case.



