New details from a police incident report have shed light on the final hours of Darrell Sheets, the beloved “Storage Wars” cast member who died April 22 at 67 — including a handwritten suicide note that pointed directly to cyberbullying as a source of unbearable anguish in the time leading to his death.
The Lake Havasu City Police Department recovered the note from a basket inside a bathroom closet near where Sheets was found. In it, Sheets expressed that online harassment had pushed him past his breaking point. The note read, in part, “I could not take anymore the Facebook bulling, f*** you [redacted],” police said. The department concluded he died of “what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.”
The details emerged more than two months after Sheets’ death and were reported by journalist Adam S. Levy on July 8, 2026, drawing widespread attention to the circumstances surrounding one of reality television’s most recognizable personalities. Police records revealing the new information were reported widely beginning July 9, 2026.
A Restless Final Night
The incident report indicates the night of April 22 followed a pattern that had become painfully familiar for Sheets in the months before his passing. His girlfriend told investigators that stress had long plagued him with insomnia, leaving him unable to rest on countless nights leading up to his death. That final night was no different — Sheets complained he could not sleep and eventually rose from bed, positioning himself near his home office.
His girlfriend later heard the sound of a gunshot. She told investigators that sleeplessness driven by stress had been a persistent struggle for Sheets, not an isolated episode. The pattern, she indicated, had worsened in the time preceding his death.
The Note and What It Revealed
Finding the handwritten note tucked inside a basket in a bathroom closet, investigators pieced together what Sheets had been carrying privately. Beyond the direct reference to Facebook bullying, the note also included the phrase “go back to bed” — words that paint a quiet, devastating picture of a man who perhaps did not want to disturb those around him even in his final moments.
The note’s explicit mention of social media harassment has prompted renewed focus on the destructive toll cyberbullying can exact on public figures, who often appear, to outside observers, insulated from ordinary pressures by their visibility and success. Sheets had been a fan favorite on “Storage Wars,” the A&E competition series that follows buyers who bid on the contents of abandoned storage units. His charisma and expertise made him one of the show’s most enduring presences.
Months of Mounting Pressure
The picture that emerges from the incident report is one of a man quietly struggling beneath a public persona. His girlfriend’s account to investigators described chronic insomnia that had persisted for months, not just in the days immediately before April 22. Stress, she told authorities, was the engine behind his inability to sleep — a detail that, combined with the content of the suicide note, suggests Sheets had been enduring significant internal turmoil well before that final night.
Cyberbullying on social media platforms has become an increasingly recognized crisis, and Sheets’ case offers a stark reminder that fame can amplify, rather than buffer, a person’s exposure to online cruelty. For someone already prone to stress-induced sleeplessness, the relentless nature of social media harassment may compound existing vulnerabilities in ways that are difficult for outsiders to detect.
Remembering Darrell Sheets
Sheets was 67 years old at the time of his death. Over the course of his years on “Storage Wars,” he cultivated a loyal following who admired his sharp eye for valuable finds and his larger-than-life energy on screen. News of his passing in April prompted an outpouring of grief from fans and fellow cast members, and the release of new details from the police report on July 8 and July 9, 2026 reignited that grief — this time, with a clearer and more troubling picture of what he faced privately.
If you or someone you know is struggling, contact the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988. Help is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.










