Influencer Hilde Lynn Helphenstein's Tragic Death Linked to Traumatic Boarding School Experience
Influencer found dead in hotel was ‘forced to eat her vomit’ in 'cult' boarding school

Image: Dailystar Co Uk
Hilde Lynn Helphenstein, known as Jerry Gogosian, was found dead in a hotel in São Paulo, Brazil, following plastic surgery. She detailed a traumatic experience at a US boarding school, alleging severe abuse, including being forced to eat her vomit, which she described as a 'cult'.
- 01Hilde Lynn Helphenstein, an influencer, was found dead on May 31 in São Paulo, Brazil, after plastic surgery.
- 02In her Substack autobiography, she described her traumatic experience at Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy, alleging severe abuse.
- 03She claimed to have been subjected to humiliation rituals, including being forced to eat her own vomit in front of others.
- 04Her friend, Meaghan Richter, highlighted the unjust treatment Hilde received, stating she was a normal child facing family issues.
- 05Hilde's family background was lower-middle class, and she struggled with her mental health after returning from living in Russia.
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Hilde Lynn Helphenstein, known as Jerry Gogosian, tragically passed away on May 31 in a luxury hotel in São Paulo, Brazil, following cosmetic surgery. New revelations from her Substack autobiography, titled "Hilde’s Story," have surfaced, detailing her traumatic experiences at the Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy in Missouri. Helphenstein described her time there as a 'hellish' ordeal, claiming she was subjected to degrading and abusive rituals, including being forced to eat her own vomit in front of peers. This treatment left her deeply traumatized, with Helphenstein stating she believed she would never fully heal from her experiences. Friends have corroborated her accounts, emphasizing that she was a normal preteen struggling with her parents' divorce, and the abuse she faced at the boarding school was unwarranted. Helphenstein's story sheds light on the darker aspects of such institutions, raising questions about the treatment of vulnerable children in similar environments.
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