Man Sh0t His Ex-Wife, When He Found Out She Has Lost Over 500 Pounds, About to Remarry & Now Happy | HO!!!!

PART ONE — The Woman He Tried to Leave Behind

The first time Dominique Wallace lost everything, no one pulled a trigger.

The second time, a man did.

What follows is not a story about weight loss, nor redemption clichés, nor the viral shorthand of “glow-ups.” It is an investigation into ownership, entitlement, and the moment a man decided that a woman’s happiness—because it no longer involved him—was an act of betrayal.

1. Who Dominique Was Before the Collapse

Dominique Wallace was born in September 1989 in Atlanta, Georgia, the youngest of three daughters. Her mother was a school principal. Her father, a postal worker, died suddenly when Dominique was sixteen. Family members say that loss shaped her early adulthood: she became the organizer, the emotional anchor, the one who checked in on everyone else.

At Georgia State University, Dominique studied social work. Professors described her as perceptive, empathetic, unusually attuned to people who felt invisible. She danced with a campus group, ran 5Ks for fun, and volunteered on weekends at homeless shelters. She was, by every account, active and socially connected.

That version of Dominique would later be erased—not by time, but by grief.

2. Raymond Wallace and the Marriage That Looked Stable

Dominique met Raymond Wallace in the summer of 2011 at a church cookout. He was older, confident, well-paid, and outwardly attentive. Friends recall the early relationship as conventional: dinners, family gatherings, talk of stability.

They married in April 2013. A small wedding. Eighty guests. Nothing extravagant.

For the first two years, the marriage appeared functional. Raymond traveled frequently for work. Dominique worked at a youth counseling center. They discussed children casually, without urgency.

What no one recognized then were the subtle patterns: Raymond’s focus on appearance, his offhand remarks about food, his comparisons—small comments that accumulated quietly.

3. Pregnancy, Loss, and the Beginning of Isolation

In January 2015, Dominique became pregnant.

At eleven weeks, she miscarried.

Raymond returned her home from the hospital and went back to work. He took no time off. He encouraged her to “move forward.”

Six months later, Dominique became pregnant again.

At nine weeks, she miscarried again.

This time, Raymond did not come to the hospital at all.

Medical records would later show a diagnosis of depression. Dominique did not pursue therapy. She withdrew. She stopped going to church. She stopped answering calls. She ate alone, late at night, in silence.

Weight gain followed—not suddenly, but relentlessly.

Raymond’s patience did not.

4. The Body as Evidence of Failure

By the end of 2016, Dominique had gained more than 150 pounds. By early 2017, she weighed over 420 pounds.

Raymond moved into the guest room. He told her she snored. He told family members he “didn’t sign up for this version.” He stopped wearing his wedding ring.

Friends noticed the contempt before Dominique did. By the time she recognized it, she was too depleted to fight it.

In 2018, Raymond filed for divorce without warning. The papers were delivered to Dominique’s door.

The divorce proceedings were brief. Raymond kept his assets. Dominique kept the townhouse—and the debt attached to it.

In the parking lot after the final meeting, Dominique asked him why.

“I can’t watch you destroy yourself,” he said.

5. The Years of Disappearance

After the divorce, Dominique vanished socially.

By August 2018, she weighed nearly 490 pounds. She stopped leaving the house except for medical appointments. She avoided mirrors. She avoided people. Her mother visited and cried privately.

This period would later be misrepresented as weakness. In truth, it was survival at its thinnest margin.

6. The Night Everything Shifted

On August 3, 2018, Dominique left her house for the first time in weeks and attempted to walk around the block.

She made it halfway before collapsing onto the curb, gasping for air.

That is where Terrence Bishop, a physical therapist out for his nightly run, stopped.

He did not lecture. He did not comment on her body. He sat beside her and waited.

That moment—documented later in sworn testimony—marked the beginning of a transformation that would take nearly three years and involve more than 500 cumulative pounds lost, regained, and lost again.

Not all at once. Not cleanly. But persistently.

7. Recovery as Relationship, Not Punishment

Terrence walked with Dominique three times a week. Then four. Then five.

He introduced her to a nutritionist. He adjusted expectations. He refused payment.

More importantly, he reframed her body not as a problem to be fixed, but as a system responding to trauma.

By December 2018, Dominique was under 400 pounds. By late 2019, she had lost nearly 200 pounds.

She returned to work—this time at a community mental health center. She began speaking publicly about trauma, grief, and embodiment.

Terrence and Dominique fell in love slowly, cautiously, with full awareness of each other’s histories.

8. The Engagement

In March 2022, Terrence proposed on the same walking trail where Dominique once believed she could not continue.

The wedding was scheduled for July 1, 2023.

For the first time in a decade, Dominique described herself as “happy.”

9. The Man Who Could Not Accept the Rewrite

Raymond Wallace encountered Dominique again by accident in early 2023 at a bakery in Decatur.

She did not recognize him immediately.

He recognized her instantly.

Thin. Confident. Engaged. Laughing with another man.

Witnesses later described Raymond as stunned, then visibly unsettled. He stared longer than appropriate. He asked intrusive questions. He shook Terrence’s hand too firmly.

That night, Raymond searched Dominique’s name online. He found her social media. He studied photographs. He constructed a narrative in which her transformation belonged to him—because he had left her.

Investigators would later describe this as retrospective ownership: the belief that a former partner’s growth validates the person who abandoned them.

10. Obsession Escalates

Raymond contacted Dominique under the pretense of “closure.”

They met once, publicly, in a coffee shop. Dominique was explicit. She was not interested. She was engaged. She was done.

Raymond did not hear rejection.

He heard theft.

Within weeks, Raymond canceled his own engagement. He began tracking Terrence’s routines. He researched anonymity tools. He contacted individuals who offered illegal services online.

Financial records show large cash withdrawals converted to cryptocurrency.

By May 2023, Raymond had arranged an alibi.

11. The Night of the Shooting

On a Saturday evening in May 2023, Terrence stayed late at his gym. Dominique decided to meet him there so they could go home together.

That decision saved her life—and placed her directly in the line of fire.

Surveillance footage later confirmed that a masked man approached under the guise of a robbery. Within seconds, Terrence was shot multiple times.

Dominique was shot once and survived.

Terrence did not.

12. What PART ONE Establishes

This case is not about jealousy alone.

It is about control, entitlement, and the violence that can emerge when a man believes a woman’s happiness invalidates his identity.

In PART TWO, the investigation will follow:

how police traced the shooter back to Raymond

the unraveling of the alibi

the digital evidence trail

Dominique’s testimony

and the legal reckoning that followed

PART TWO — When Ownership Turned Violent

When police arrived at the gym parking lot that night, they were not looking for a jealous ex-husband.

They were looking for a robbery suspect.

That assumption would last less than twenty-four hours.

13. The Crime Scene That Didn’t Behave Like a Robbery

The initial 911 call described an armed robbery gone wrong. Surveillance footage showed a masked figure approaching Dominique Wallace and Terrence Bishop as they exited the gym. Shots were fired within seconds. The assailant fled on foot.

What investigators noticed immediately was what didn’t happen.

No demands were made

No property was taken

The shooter moved with certainty, not panic

This was not opportunistic violence. It was targeted.

Ballistics tied the weapon to a single firearm. Witnesses reported the shooter’s height and gait. The mask concealed the face, but not intent.

Terrence Bishop was pronounced dead at the scene.

Dominique Wallace was transported to the hospital in critical condition.

14. The First Question Detectives Asked

At the hospital, detectives asked Dominique a question survivors often dread:

“Is there anyone who would want to hurt you?”

She answered immediately.

“My ex-husband.”

She had not seen him in weeks. There had been no direct threats. But his reaction at the bakery, his insistence on “closure,” and his fixation on her life changes had unsettled her.

That intuition redirected the entire investigation.

15. Reconstructing Raymond Wallace’s Timeline

Detectives pulled Raymond Wallace’s phone records, financial transactions, and location data.

The story they revealed contradicted his account at every turn.

Raymond claimed he had spent the evening at home, watching television. His phone’s location data placed him miles away. Traffic cameras captured his vehicle near the gym. A prepaid phone—activated days earlier—pinged towers in the same area.

Digital silence became evidence.

Raymond had powered down his primary phone during the window of the shooting. The burner phone filled the gap.

16. Following the Money

Financial investigators traced a series of withdrawals in the weeks before the shooting.

Large cash amounts. Cryptocurrency purchases. Transfers routed through anonymizing services.

One payment stood out: a transfer to an account linked to a known weapons intermediary operating illegally across state lines.

Raymond had not pulled the trigger himself.

He had hired someone to do it.

17. The Shooter Identified

Ballistics and witness descriptions eventually led detectives to Marcus Lee, a man with prior convictions for armed robbery.

When arrested, Lee initially denied involvement. Then detectives presented the evidence: surveillance footage, the firearm, the payment trail.

Lee broke within hours.

He identified Raymond Wallace as the person who hired him. He described their meetings, the instructions, and the motive as Raymond explained it:

“She ruined my life by becoming someone else.”

That sentence would later be read aloud in court.

18. The Arrest

Raymond Wallace was arrested without incident at his apartment three days after the shooting.

He appeared calm.

He asked whether Dominique had survived.

When told she had, he looked away.

Prosecutors would later argue that this reaction was not relief.

It was disappointment.

19. Dominique’s Recovery and Statement

Dominique survived after multiple surgeries.

When she was strong enough, she gave a recorded statement.

She spoke slowly. Deliberately.

“I didn’t leave him to become this,” she said. “I became this because I survived him.”

Her statement reframed the narrative. This was not a crime triggered by sudden jealousy. It was the culmination of a belief that her body, her happiness, and her future were still subject to her former husband’s approval.

20. Charges Filed

Raymond Wallace was charged with:

First-degree murder (for Terrence Bishop)

Attempted murder (for Dominique Wallace)

Conspiracy to commit murder

Use of a firearm in the commission of a felony

Marcus Lee was charged as the shooter and later accepted a plea deal in exchange for testimony.

21. The Trial: Control Disguised as Love

The trial began in February 2024.

Prosecutors focused not on weight loss, but on control narratives—how Raymond framed Dominique’s transformation as betrayal, not autonomy.

Expert witnesses explained intimate-partner violence escalation after separation. Digital analysts walked jurors through the burner phone data. Financial experts detailed the payment trail.

Raymond’s defense argued emotional distress.

The prosecution answered with planning.

22. The Moment That Changed the Jury

The most pivotal moment came during Dominique’s testimony.

She described seeing Raymond at the bakery.

“He looked at me like I was something he lost,” she said. “Not someone who chose to leave.”

The courtroom was silent.

Jurors later said this was when the case stopped being abstract.

23. Verdict and Sentence

After two days of deliberation, the jury returned guilty verdicts on all major counts.

Raymond Wallace was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, plus additional consecutive sentences for conspiracy and attempted murder.

Marcus Lee received 35 years under the plea agreement.

The judge addressed Raymond directly:

“You mistook another person’s healing for an insult to your ego. That belief cost an innocent man his life.”

24. Aftermath and Impact

Dominique Wallace postponed her wedding.

She later married in a private ceremony attended by close family.

She returned to advocacy work, focusing on post-separation violence and body autonomy.

The case prompted renewed discussion about how women’s transformations—physical, emotional, or social—can provoke lethal responses from former partners who equate change with loss of control.

25. Final Assessment

This was not a crime driven by appearance.

It was driven by entitlement.

Raymond Wallace did not act because Dominique became happier.

He acted because her happiness proved she no longer needed him.

And for a man who measured worth in ownership, that realization became intolerable.