Contradictory State Narratives Raise Fears of Secret Services’ Involvement
The body of Elaheh Hossein-Nejad, a 24-year-old nail artist from Islamshahr, was discovered on the outskirts of Tehran—11 days after she vanished on her way home from work. Her death has sent ripples of outrage across Iranian society.
Elaheh Hossein-Nejad was known as a kind and diligent young woman. She had graduated in accounting but worked at a beauty salon in Tehran’s upscale Saadat Abad district; she returned home to Islamshahr, where she helped care for her disabled brother. On the evening of Sunday, May 25, 2025, she called her family from the Islamshahr Prayer Square to say she was almost home. Moments later, her phone went silent. She was never heard from again.
After nearly two weeks of frantic searching by her family, friends, and concerned citizens, her body was found in a remote area near the airport. According to forensic reports, she had been stabbed multiple times in the chest. Police later announced they had arrested a suspect who had allegedly posed as a rideshare driver and murdered Elaheh during a robbery attempt.

But this official account is increasingly viewed with suspicion. Early reports from judiciary-linked outlets such as Rokna cited sexual assault as the motive, a claim that was abruptly scrubbed from later narratives. The alleged killer’s identity remains undisclosed, and the state’s shifting explanations have only deepened public mistrust.