Influencer Beauty GUNNED DOWN By Thugs in Lamborghini

The most chilling part of DreamDoll Brii’s killing is not the bullets, but the terrified voices on 911 as her bright green Lamborghini became a trap instead of a trophy.

Story Snapshot

  • Police say the Lamborghini with influencer DreamDoll Brii was ambushed in a targeted drive-by shooting.
  • Surveillance video shows muzzle flashes from a white car as it pulls alongside and opens fire.
  • Harrowing 911 calls capture neighbors first mistaking shots for fireworks, then begging for help as the car slams into a house.
  • Social media rumors about “setups” and gangs race ahead of the facts, while police still have no named suspects.

A targeted ambush on a quiet street

Miramar police say the attack was not random. Officers believe the people inside the bright green Lamborghini were followed and specifically targeted as they drove along Sunshine Boulevard around 5:30 a.m. A white sedan pulled up alongside the luxury SUV, then gunmen opened fire, unleashing rapid shots into the driver’s side. The Lamborghini, now full of bullet holes and blood, lost control and crashed into a nearby house, turning a sleepy neighborhood into a war zone in seconds.

Three people were inside the Lamborghini: 21-year-old influencer Brianna Johnson, known online as DreamDoll Bri or ItGirlBri, and two male relatives. Police and local reports say all three were shot. Brianna later died at the hospital, while the two men were critically injured but survived. For neighbors waking up to the sound, the chaos felt unreal. Some first thought the noises were leftover Fourth of July fireworks before realizing they were hearing gunfire tear through a car.

What the cameras and 911 callers captured

Home surveillance cameras picked up the attack. Video shared by Miami outlets shows a white car pulling up beside the Lamborghini, muzzle flashes firing in rapid bursts, then that white car speeding away into the dark. The Lamborghini veers, slams into a house, and stops mangled. At almost the same moment, frantic 911 calls begin. Callers describe repeated shots, screaming, and then the crash. Their voices shake as they explain someone is bleeding out in a bright green truck outside their window.

Shot detection technology, known as ShotSpotter, also flagged the incident and helped bring officers to the scene fast, but not fast enough to save Brianna. When police arrived, they found shell casings scattered on the road, clear evidence of a rapid-fire attack. Investigators say this was a textbook drive-by style ambush: the shooters used a vehicle to get close, fire fast, and escape before anyone could react or identify them.

Rumors, “setups,” and the fight over Brianna’s story

Within hours, social media turned the tragedy into a true crime circus. Some online accounts claimed Brianna was “set up” by a hairstylist who had been dropped off before the shooting. Others pushed gang theories, saying the hit tied to local groups with names like Murder Gang or A40, even though police have not named any gang link or motive. Many of these claims chase clicks and emotion, not evidence, and exploit the fact that officers admit they still have “limited suspect information.”

Family representatives pushed back. A relative and influencer known as Woo Lady went live to tens of thousands of viewers and said Brianna was riding with “blood cousins,” not gang members or strangers. Woo Lady refuted the hairstylist-setup story and said the real beef involved one of the men in the car, not Brianna herself. Her message was simple and conservative in spirit: stop lying online about a dead young woman and stop endangering innocent people with careless rumors. Until police release real motive evidence, anything more is speculation.

Drive-by shootings, influencers, and a wider American problem

Brianna’s killing fits a larger pattern. Studies show more than 700 drive-by mass shootings have hit the United States since 2012, most using assault-style weapons and involving more than one person in the shooter vehicle. Experts at Arizona State University’s Center for Problem-Oriented Policing explain that cars make it easy for attackers to sneak up, fire, and escape fast, whether the motive is a personal beef, road rage, or gang rivalry. The car is both a weapon platform and a getaway tool.

Social media fame adds another layer. Public figures show their lives, cars, homes, and relationships to millions of strangers. That visibility can attract deals and fans, but it can also draw jealousy, fixation, and violent grudges. Research into targeted violence against public figures finds many attacks follow a period of unhealthy obsession or “fixation” on the victim. When that kind of dark focus meets an easy weapon and a car, you get what happened on Sunshine Boulevard.

What happens next, and what common sense demands

Miramar police still have no named suspects. They are asking people to call the homicide tip line or Broward Crime Stoppers with any leads. The best chance to catch the gunmen will likely come from more video of the white sedan, ballistics tying shell casings to specific guns, and cell phone data showing whether the shooters followed the Lamborghini from earlier stops. Each step needs facts and patience, not viral theories and clout chasing.

For many Americans watching this story, the frustration is simple. A young woman did everything our culture tells her to do: work hard, build a brand, enjoy success. Yet she died in a hail of bullets on a street that should have been safe. That is why the 911 audio hits so hard. Her neighbors did what good neighbors do. They called, they begged for help, but they could not stop a drive-by ambush that never should have happened in the first place.

Sources:

nypost.com, local10.com, cbsnews.com, ndtv.com, fox35orlando.com, wsvn.com, instagram.com

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