Update on Why Evil Louisiana Dad Shot His Wife And 8 Kids While They Slept | Shamar Elkins Case

The Calculated Erasure: The False Normalcy of Shamar Elkins

There is a specific brand of hypocrisy that thrives behind the lens of a smartphone, and Shamar Elkins was its master architect. For weeks leading up to April 19, his digital footprint was a curated sanctuary of “blessed” church outings and devoted fatherhood. He posted photos from Easter Sunday, smiling with his eight children, soaking up the validation of digital likes while the actual man was already drowning in a self-inflicted dark. It is the ultimate betrayal: using the very children you are planning to erase as props for a public-facing ego.

This was not a “snap.” The narrative of the sudden, inexplicable break is a lie we tell ourselves to feel safer in our own neighborhoods. Shamar Elkins didn’t lose control; he took it. He moved between addresses with the tactical precision of the soldier he once was, making a conscious decision at every door, every hallway, and every bed.

The Performance of the “Devoted Father”

The most sickening part of this timeline is the Saturday before the massacre. Neighbors saw Elkins standing in his yard, watching his children play. He waved. He looked “normal.” On Facebook, he bragged about a one-on-one date with his oldest child. This wasn’t a man in the throes of a visible breakdown; this was a man performing the role of a father one last time before executing them.

The hypocrisy is breathtaking. You cannot claim to love what you are willing to destroy to spite a partner. Elkins knew his marriage to Sheniqua Pew was ending. He knew the court date was April 20—the very next day. Instead of facing the consequences of his own infidelity and the legal dissolution of a marriage he had already poisoned, he chose a scorched-earth policy. If he couldn’t be the center of that family unit, there would be no family unit left to exist.

A System of Ignored Alarms

We love to talk about “warning signs” after the bodies are already being carried out in bags. The reality is that the warning signs weren’t just there; they were screaming.

The 2019 Felony: Elkins fired five rounds at a vehicle near a high school while children were at recess. He was a convicted felon. Under every logical interpretation of the law, he should never have been within reach of a firearm.

The Public Hostility: Weeks before the shooting, he publicly posted “Hell yeah” in response to whether he regretted his partner. The digital mask was slipping, but because it was wrapped in a “church-going” aesthetic, the community looked the other way.

The “Dark Thoughts”: He told his family he was drowning. They heard him. But in a culture that prioritizes family privacy over intervention, the phone calls stayed within the circle until it was too late.

The Cost of Cowardice

Elkins’s final acts were those of a coward masquerading as a martyr. He shot two women in the face and hunted children in their beds. Most of the eight victims—Jayla, Shayla, Kayla, Leila, Marcaden, Cadarian, Brilan, and Sariah—were shot at point-blank range while they slept. They didn’t have a chance to understand that the man who had waved at the neighbors twelve hours earlier was now their executioner.

The only reason we have a survivor to tell the story is because a 13-year-old boy realized that jumping from a roof and shattering his own bones was a better fate than staying inside with Shamar Elkins. That child’s survival isn’t a miracle; it’s a testament to the absolute horror Elkins created.

Shreveport’s homicide count for the entire year more than doubled in a single morning because one man couldn’t handle the word “divorce.” We can light all the candles we want and say “no man is an island,” but until we stop letting “family privacy” act as a shield for domestic terrorists like Elkins, these stories will keep repeating. Shamar Elkins didn’t just kill his children; he tried to murder the future to satisfy a bruised ego. There is no language for that kind of evil, only a record of the lives he stole while the world was busy “liking” his church photos.