Mother’s Shocking Double Life: The Twisted Two-Year Catfishing Nightmare Uncovered

Mother's Shocking Double Life: The Twisted Two-Year Catfishing Nightmare Uncovered

Imagine finding out the anonymous bully tormenting your teenage daughter for two years was none other than… her own mom. Yeah, it sounds like the opening scene of a mind-bending thriller, but nope—this is the chilling reality unpacked in Netflix’s latest documentary, Unknown Number: The High School Catfish. At just 13, Lauryn Licari and her then-boyfriend Owen were bombarded with vicious, venomous text messages escalating into outright death threats. The FBI’s involvement led to an unsettling revelation that turned their world upside down: the harassing messages originated from Lauryn’s mother, Kendra Licari. How does a mother juggle fear, past trauma, and the lengths she’ll go to keep her child close—even if it means stalking her own kid? This bizarre, heart-wrenching story raises uncomfortable questions about family, secrecy, and the dark side of digital life. Curious to dig deeper into this real-life saga? LEARN MORE

This article contains spoilers for Netflix’s new documentary, Unknown Number: The High School Catfish

Netflix has shared a series of text messages that a mother secretly sent to her own daughter in a horrifying catfish case.

The documentary focuses on a young girl who, in late 2020, began receiving bizarre text messages from an anonymous person.

Lauryn Licari, 13, and her at-the-time-boyfriend Owen began receiving numerous text messages and, in 2021, these escalated to full on regular death threats.

Eventually this led to the FBI becoming involved and the trail lead back to Lauryn’s Mum, Kendra Licari.

At one point in the documentary, Isabella County Sheriff Mike Main confronts Kendra, telling her: “The messages coming were originating from you… your number even though it was being hidden was showing up on every message.”

Now, Netflix has released a video, sharing some of the real messages that were sent.

The teaser explains: “All of the text messages in this film are real. WHO exactly was anonymously cyberbullying this high schooler for 2 years?”

The messages include ‘you are the ugliest person I’ve ever seen’, ‘U are worthless n mean nothing’, ‘get lost b***h’, ‘sorry, not sorry!’, ‘we will make everyday miserable’ and ‘finish yourself or we will’.

At the time she was confronted, Kendra claimed she didn’t start the messages but had sent some of them.

Dave Barberi, the prosecutor who eventually led the case in which Kendra was found guilty of two counts of stalking a minor that earned her up to five years in jail, said that it wasn’t a ‘clear confession’, though Kendra didn’t deny it.

Speaking after she was released from jail, Kendra explains in the doc: “Every single one of us makes mistakes, not a single one of us has lived a perfect life and, realistically, a lot of have probably broke the law at one point or another and not got caught.

Lauryn and Owen were receiving vile messages from Lauryn's Mum (Netflix)

Lauryn and Owen were receiving vile messages from Lauryn’s Mum (Netflix)

“I know to some I’m a headline; I’m a villain I’m a bad mum, I’m a whatever. But that’s because they know one little piece of my story, they don’t know my whole story.”

Kendra states in the doc that she was assaulted when she was around her daughter’s age at the time of the messages, and that she was scared of her growing up and so wanted to keep her close.

Kendra becomes upset in the documentary (Netflix)

Kendra becomes upset in the documentary (Netflix)

Lauryn now lives in Michigan with her dad, who has full custody.

Unknown Number: The High School Catfish is available to watch on Netflix now.

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