The double tragedy involving University of South Florida (USF) doctoral students Zamil Limon and Nahida Bristy continues to unfold with new layers of forensic, digital, and eyewitness evidence. As authorities build their case against roommate Hisham Abugharbieh, 26, a passerby’s observation has emerged as a potentially pivotal piece: someone reportedly saw Limon engaged in conversation with another individual close to the Howard Frankland Bridge — the very location where Limon’s remains were later discovered in trash bags.

This testimony, combined with the phrase allegedly overheard, is said to have provided investigators with a critical clue that helped connect timelines, challenge initial statements, and strengthen the chain of evidence in what prosecutors describe as a premeditated double homicide.

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Zamil Limon and Nahida Bristy, the 27-year-old Bangladeshi doctoral students whose disappearance shocked the Tampa Bay academic community.

The Final Known Movements and the Bridge Discovery

Limon and Bristy, both pursuing advanced degrees at USF (Limon in geography/environmental science/policy and Bristy in chemical engineering), were last seen on the morning of April 16, 2026. Limon left the off-campus apartment he shared with Abugharbieh around 9 a.m., while Bristy was captured on surveillance inside the Natural and Environmental Sciences building around 10 a.m. Their failure to respond to family calls — especially Bristy’s daily check-ins with relatives in Bangladesh — quickly raised alarms.

Limon’s remains were recovered on the morning of April 24 on or near the Howard Frankland Bridge spanning Tampa Bay. The body showed signs of multiple sharp-force injuries, including stab wounds, and was contained in industrial-style black trash bags. Human remains later recovered from nearby waterways are believed to be Bristy’s, though formal identification and cause-of-death details for her remain pending as dive and marine teams continue operations.

Phone location data had already placed Limon’s device in the Clearwater Beach area earlier that night, with signals later moving toward the bridge. Crucially, Limon’s phone stopped transmitting roughly 27 minutes before the discovery of his remains, with the final ping coming from a spot on or near the bridge that historical data showed he had never visited with Bristy before.

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The Howard Frankland Bridge over Tampa Bay, where Zamil Limon’s remains were found in trash bags on April 24, 2026.

The Passerby’s Account: A Conversation Near the Bridge

According to law enforcement sources familiar with the investigation, a passerby contacted authorities after Limon’s remains were identified and reported seeing a man matching Limon’s description engaged in what appeared to be a conversation with another individual in or near the bridge area in the hours leading up to the disappearance of location data.

The witness described the interaction as seemingly calm at first but noted a specific phrase uttered by one of the parties that stood out as unusual or out of context. While the exact wording has not been publicly released to protect the integrity of the case, officials have described it internally as a “crucial detail” that aligned with other evidence — including vehicle tracking, Abugharbieh’s shifting statements, and digital searches on his devices.

This testimony reportedly helped investigators narrow the window of Limon’s final movements and raised questions about why he would be at that specific bridge location with someone, especially given that phone records and prior patterns suggested it was unfamiliar territory for him and Bristy as a pair.

Abugharbieh’s own phone data allegedly placed him in the same bridge vicinity shortly after midnight on April 17, and his vehicle had been tracked near Clearwater Beach earlier. When first questioned, Abugharbieh denied giving Limon or Bristy a ride or visiting those areas, only to later revise his account when confronted with location evidence.

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Clearwater Beach area, where cell phone data indicated activity involving Limon and Abugharbieh’s vehicle on the night of April 16.

How the Witness Phrase Fits into the Broader Evidence

Prosecutors argue the case shows signs of planning. Court records and affidavits cite Abugharbieh’s searches on ChatGPT in the days prior, including queries about disposing of a body in a black garbage bag, how long it might take to be discovered, changing a vehicle’s VIN, and related topics. A CVS receipt from April 16 for trash bags, Lysol wipes, and air fresheners was recovered, and significant blood evidence — consistent with two human-sized shapes — was found in Abugharbieh’s bedroom and trails through the apartment.

The passerby’s observation adds a human element to the digital and forensic trail. The overheard phrase is said to have helped corroborate or contradict elements of Abugharbieh’s interviews, where he initially claimed limited contact with the victims that day before adjusting his story to say Limon had asked for a ride to Clearwater with his girlfriend.

Blood spatter analysis, the timing of the phone going silent (27 minutes before discovery), and the unfamiliar bridge location all form a mosaic that investigators say points to the apartment as the likely site of the initial violence, followed by transport and disposal at the bridge.

Abugharbieh now faces two counts of first-degree premeditated murder with a weapon, plus charges including tampering with evidence, unlawfully moving a dead body, false imprisonment, and failure to report a death. He is being held without bond.

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Hisham Abugharbieh (left) faces murder charges in the deaths of his roommate Zamil Limon and Nahida Bristy.

Community Impact and Ongoing Search

The Bangladeshi community in Florida and families back home have been left devastated. Relatives described Limon and Bristy as responsible, ambitious scholars who were romantically involved and discussing a future together while prioritizing their doctorates. They have requested Islamic burial rites for the remains and called for a USF memorial to honor the students and support international scholars.

As of the latest updates, search efforts for full closure on Bristy continue in the Tampa Bay waterways near the bridge. Authorities urge anyone with information — particularly anyone who may have been in the bridge or Clearwater area on the night of April 16 or early April 17 — to contact the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office at (813) 247-8200.

The witness testimony, especially the specific phrase noted during the observed conversation, underscores how seemingly small details from the public can intersect with modern investigative tools like cell data, vehicle tracking, and digital forensics to build a compelling case.

This remains an active investigation. Abugharbieh is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Further details, including the precise content of the passerby’s statement and autopsy results, are expected to emerge as pretrial proceedings advance.