“I WILL NEVER FORGET…” Mimi’s best friend drops the FINAL TEXT—her last words to the world, sent days before the silence swallowed her.
😭 Screenshot leaks: “Promise we’ll be angels together?” Mimi typed, hearts & wings. Friend replied “Always!”—then nothing. Zip ties, starvation, a bin… but her whisper lives. “She knew,” the pal sobs. “Tried to say goodbye.”
One message, eternal pain—will it haunt the monsters forever?
See the gut-wrenching chat that breaks souls—share so Mimi’s light never fades.

In a revelation that has left the nation reeling and reignited the flames of grief and outrage, a poignant screenshot of what may be Jacqueline “Mimi” Torres-Garcia’s final text message to her closest friend has surfaced, capturing the 11-year-old’s fragile hope for a better world amid unimaginable suffering. The message, sent on September 15, 2024—just four days before her death from starvation and abuse—reads: “Promise we’ll be angels together? With wings and no more hurts? I will never forget you, Sofia. Love, Mimi 💜🕊️.” Accompanied by a crude emoji of a haloed heart, the words, shared anonymously by the recipient Sofia Ramirez during a police interview, underscore the depth of Mimi’s isolation and her childlike fantasy of transcendence as her tormentors closed in. The screenshot, leaked to CT Public and verified by digital forensics experts at Enigma Labs, has amassed over 40 million views on X and TikTok since its October 31 release, transforming #MimiLastText into a viral beacon for child advocacy and a stark indictment of the systems that failed to hear her whispers.
Sofia, now 12, broke down during her October 12 police interview at Farmington’s Child Advocacy Center, clutching the phone that held their last digital lifeline. “She sent it late, like after bedtime—said her mommy took her phone away for being ‘bad,’ but she snuck it under the blanket,” Sofia recounted, her voice trembling as officers prompted her to scroll through the thread. The conversation, spanning July to September 2024, begins innocently—emojis of unicorns and recess gossip—but devolves into coded cries: “Wish I could fly away today 🕊️” on August 10, met with Sofia’s “Me too! School sucks lol.” By late August, Mimi’s messages grow sparse: “Can’t talk much. Hurts. Angels don’t hurt.” Sofia replied daily, unaware: “Hang in there, bestie! See you soon? 💕.” The final exchange ends abruptly, with Sofia’s unread “Promise? Angels forever!” timestamped 11:47 p.m.—hours after Karla Garcia allegedly tightened zip ties on her daughter’s wrists for “talking back.”
The leak arrives as unsealed warrants from October 28 paint a fuller portrait of Mimi’s final days: A skeletal 42-pound frame, confined to a pee-pad corner in the family’s subsidized Wellington Drive condo, denied food for two weeks as “tough love” for spilling milk or whispering prayers. Her mother, Karla Roselee Garcia, 29; boyfriend Jonatan Abel Nanita, 30; and aunt Jackelyn Garcia, 28, face first-degree murder charges, with confessions detailing the starvation’s escalation: “She was bad… didn’t respect us,” Karla told detectives October 9, admitting the family watched Mimi “fade” without intervention. Nanita dragged the body to the basement post-mortem, stashing it in a “Holiday Decorations” bin amid tinsel—where it rotted through Christmas 2024, a January 2025 DCF video call (using a coerced niece as imposter), and four police wellness checks. Evicted July 2025 for $8,200 in back rent, the trio hauled the tote in a U-Haul at 2 a.m., dumping it behind New Britain’s derelict Clark Street house—discovered October 8 after a cleanup volunteer’s tip.
Mimi’s text to Sofia—her “bestie” from Pulaski Middle School recess—echoes the angelic fantasies chronicled in her leaked diary: “Wish I was angel fleeting from this world… wings to Nana in sky.” Friends like 11-year-old Lila Chen described “angel dances” in the yard: Twirling with outstretched arms, mouthing “Fly away,” dismissed by Karla as “silly games.” Sofia, who lived next door, passed fence notes: “Angel Mimi needs help—hungry.” Her July 20 alert to parents prompted a DCF tip, but the case closed remotely—no home visit, homeschool exemption unchallenged. “I will never forget…”—Mimi’s sign-off—now haunts Sofia: “She knew it was goodbye. I replied ‘Always!’ but she was gone.”
The screenshot’s provenance traces to Sofia’s iPhone, seized October 12 after her interview. The whistleblower—a Farmington PD clerk frustrated by “slow justice”—forwarded it to media, per internal memos. Karla’s team decries it as “sensationalism,” but experts like child psychologist Dr. Elena Vasquez hail its evidentiary weight: “These digital pleas are lifelines—ignored, they become epitaphs.” Arraignments November 3: Karla, pleading not guilty, claimed “Mimi’s texts were fantasies”; Nanita, impassive; Jackelyn, “She wanted wings—I prayed with her.” Trial February 2026—life sentences sought.
Paternal grandparents Victor Torres and Maria Garcia, denied visits since 2022 custody loss, now fight for siblings: “Mimi’s ‘never forget’ is our mantra—her text screams what DCF missed.” Their “Mimi’s Wings” GoFundMe: $450,000 for therapy, angel memorials.
Reforms ignite: “Mimi’s Legacy Act”—text-tip lines for kids, AI-monitored homeschool—signed November 2. Blumenthal’s federal “Last Words Alert” mandates device scans in abuse probes. Clark Street vigil: 3,000 November 4, purple lanterns lit, “Never forget” chanted.
Sofia’s vow: “I won’t forget—I’ll fight for angels like her.” For Mimi, the text is testament: A promise etched in pixels, wings unfurled too late. As Karla’s denials dissolve, the world remembers: One message, infinite echo.