Miraculez-Jurni, Daughter of Tamesha Miles, Death Hoax
In 2010, a quiet stretch near U.S. Highway 92 and Noel Drive in Plant City, Florida, became the site of a life-altering tragedy.
Tamesha Miles, then four months pregnant, was sitting in a parked car when she was shot five times.
Doctors warned she might never walk again—and that her unborn child might not survive. Both predictions proved wrong.
More than a decade later, Miles is alive, mobile, and known to many as Fye Redd,
Miles’ daughter, Miraculez-Jurni, was born alive but with lifelong medical challenges. She lives with cerebral palsy and epilepsy, conditions Miles believes are connected to the trauma of the shooting.
“There are days I just break down,” Miles said in a recent interview. “She’s going to be seven and I’ve never heard ‘I love you.’ I’ve never gotten a kiss.”
Miles is now a rapper and community advocate using music as a form of survival, testimony, and outreach.
Her story matters not only because of what she endured, but because of what she has built in the aftermath, at a time when communities across the United States continue to grapple with the ripple effects of gun violence.
Out of her own pain, Miles has launched a nonprofit aimed at supporting families affected by violence and trauma, offering emotional support, resources, and a sense of solidarity.
“When you survive something like that,” she said, “you want to help others who are still fighting.”





