Two Florida high schoolers – 14-year-old Lois Olivios Lippert and 15-year-old Isabelle Aurelia Valdez (who went by “Jimmy”) – got busted January 22, 2026, for allegedly plotting to stab a classmate to death at Lake Brantley High in Altamonte Springs. Their sick motive? “Resurrect” Sandy Hook shooter Adam Lanza with a “blood bond” because the victim looked like him.

Lake Brantley High School
Cops say Valdez planned a bathroom ambush – slit the throat or stab the stomach, leave flowers, smoke a cigarette after. Lippert drew dead sketches of the victim hanging, plus explicit stuff.

Discord messages leaked the plan: “holy s–t im gonna make a blood ritual for adam lanza LMAOOOO,” “it’s gonna be over by tomorrow.” A tipster snitched.
In the patrol car, these girls laugh and joke about their mugshots. Valdez: “I wanted to wear makeup to look attractive in my mugshot but couldn’t find any.” Lippert: “I’m glad I don’t look too bad today.” They giggle about becoming a “lesbian couple in jail,” cracking up like it’s a TikTok trend. No remorse. Zero. Just excitement for “true crime” fame.
How does a teen get so twisted she thinks killing for a mass shooter “resurrection” is funny?

Bond denied after prosecutors played the footage – judge saw the danger clear. Both face attempted first-degree murder as adults. This isn’t edgy teen angst; it’s a red-flag parade ignored until almost too late.

The victim’s safe. The girls are locked up. But the video lingers – a chilling reminder how online poison can turn kids into monsters who laugh at murder.
