
Ex-Government Official Charged after His Girlfriend's Passing – What We Know
Near a San Francisco high school, a late-night emergency call pulled police to an apartment where a young woman's future had just been cut short in the most peculiar way.
Authorities later identified the woman as 22-year-old Samantha Emge and the man charged in her death as 25-year-old Nation Wood, her boyfriend. In the days that followed, court proceedings and public records revealed what happened that night, and it's almost impossible to believe.

Samantha Emge from a post dated March 31, 2026 | Source: Facebook/Mark Dohner
Inside the Apartment That Night
According to The Standard, San Francisco police responded at about 10:43 p.m. on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, to a residence on the 2200 block of 22nd Avenue. When officers arrived, they found a woman suffering from a gunshot wound.
Emergency responders transported her to a hospital, but medical staff declared her dead upon arrival. A resident later informed the news outlet that they witnessed a person bleeding on the sidewalk near the entrance of Abraham Lincoln High School. Unfortunately, authorities didn't clarify where exactly they discovered Emge's body.

Samantha Emge from a post dated March 31, 2026 | Source: Facebook/Mark Dohner
Then came the explanation that changed how the public began to read the case.
An individual close to the investigation reported that Wood told officers he was "dry-firing" his weapon inside the apartment. He allegedly believed the gun was empty and only realized it was loaded after a bullet passed through a wall and struck Emge while she was in the shower.
The Charge Reflects What Prosecutors Believe
As a result, Wood was arrested and charged with involuntary manslaughter. That charge, along with the language in the court documents, suggests prosecutors do not believe the shooting was intentional, but do believe his actions caused Emge's death.

Nation Wood in a post from March 27, 2026 | Source: Facebook/Mario Vallejo
The San Francisco District Attorney's Office filed charging documents that claim he killed her, though they specify the act occurred "without malice."
Even so, District Attorney Brooke Jenkins made clear in court that investigators are still working through the evidence and trying to determine exactly what happened inside the apartment that night.
Jenkins further explained that only Wood and Emge were in the residence when the shooting took place. She declined to discuss the nature of their relationship, though a friend told the outlet the two were dating and living together.
A Courtroom Filled with Family
When Wood appeared in court on Friday, the grief inside the room could not be reduced to legal terms. He sat beside his lawyer with his head bowed, wearing an oversized orange jail shirt.
Additionally, members of his family, including his father, were present for the arraignment, and Emge's parents and siblings were there too.
Doug Welch, the public defender representing Wood, requested that the judge release his client into the care of a local relative. Welch further noted that Wood planned to begin his National Guard service the next week, though he admitted this detail did not directly affect the court's current decision.
Ultimately, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Christopher Hu set bail at $300,000. He also ordered that if Wood pays the money, he must be placed on electronic monitoring, stay in California unless the court gives permission otherwise, and waive extradition if he is arrested outside the state.
The court scheduled a bail review hearing for Wednesday, April 1. It also set a second hearing for April 9 to discuss the conditions of his pretrial release, such as the requirement that he surrender his passport.
Samantha Emge Had Just Started Building Her Future
Away from the courtroom, Emge's own story told something far more personal. On her LinkedIn, she described herself as a recent Interior Design graduate eager to bring her skills into professional practice.
She wrote about having a strong passion for creating spaces that improve the way people live. Her profile also highlighted the values she brought to her work, including safety standards, efficient space planning, attention to detail, and care for a client's well-being.
The experience section reveals that she had been working since September 2025 as a full-time design assistant at Chantal Lamberto Interior Design in San Francisco. Before that, she was employed as a design consultant at Joybird and as a sales associate at Gap.
She graduated from San Francisco State University in 2025 with a Bachelor of Science in Interior Design and Architecture. According to the university information on her profile, the program prepared students for careers in residential and commercial interior design, ending with a senior thesis project in the final semester.
Nation Wood's Background Drew Attention for a Specific Reason
Wood also graduated from San Francisco State University in 2025, according to a school spokesperson cited by The Standard. But his professional background, at least publicly, pointed somewhere very different from Emge.
On his LinkedIn, Wood described himself as an "independent pre-event site security adviser" who conducted assessments for events involving VIP attendance. His profile also said he had worked on the White House advance team and had experience with the U.S. Secret Service.
A White House spokesperson confirmed to the outlet that Wood had been employed as part of the Biden administration.
That fact drew immediate attention because of the role weapons knowledge can play in a case like this. A man connected to security work is now at the center of a fatal shooting case involving a gun he allegedly believed was unloaded. That contrast is hard to shake.
Still, the human side of this story is what stays with you. We offer our condolences to all those affected by this tragedy.
And unfortunately, such violent incidents between couples aren't isolated. As previously reported, police say an adult son dialed 911 shortly after noon earlier this year, reporting that something unthinkable had happened in his parents' home and that his youngest sibling could not be found.
By the time officers arrived, the gravity of the situation was already apparent. What began as a welfare check quickly escalated into a far more serious criminal case.

Aerial view of Jefferson City, Missouri. | Source: Getty Images
A Son's 911 Call
According to court documents cited by WAFB, at 12:25 pm on Monday, January 12, the adult son told dispatchers that his father had called him moments earlier and confessed to killing his mother, "I killed your mom, and I left the house."
When he rushed home, he found her bleeding on the kitchen floor. Emergency responders pronounced the woman dead at the scene. The son also reported that his 18-month-old sibling, who had been home with their mother, was missing. He told police his father was likely driving the family vehicle, a blue 2015 Honda Odyssey.
The information quickly became a central focus of the search and guided the next phase of the investigation.

Policemen conducting a search. | Source: Getty Images
Missing Child Leads to AMBER Alert
With a toddler unaccounted for and a suspect believed to be on the move, authorities issued a statewide AMBER Alert for the child and the Honda Odyssey.
Within hours, state officials located the vehicle traveling west on Highway 50 near Sedalia. The driver was taken into custody without incident, police said. Investigators later learned through family members that the child was no longer with him.
Officers soon confirmed that the 18-month-old had been dropped off safely at a relative's home before the suspect left Jefferson City.

A view of a Honda Odyssey. | Source: Getty Images
What Investigators Say Happened Inside the Home
With the child located and the suspect in custody, detectives turned their attention back to the events that unfolded earlier that day. After his arrest, detectives interviewed the suspect with the help of an interpreter. According to investigators, he admitted to killing his wife following an argument earlier that day.
Court documents state that he told police he believed his wife was cheating on him and tampering with his food. During the confrontation, he allegedly grabbed a knife, and after she began screaming, he stabbed her.
Investigators say he told them he laid her on the floor, placed a pillow under her head, and remained with her as she bled. He then picked up the youngest child, said a prayer, and left the residence.

A pillow. | Source: Getty Images
Police also allege that he called his adult son and several other relatives after the stabbing to tell them what he had done and to ask them to check on his wife, per the court document.
"I loved her. I sacrificed everything for her. I made a mistake. I do regret this. There was no other option for me," he told detectives, according to court documents cited by People.
Charges and Attorney's Statement
As details of the alleged confession emerged, authorities formally identified the suspect as 46-year-old Malang Jan Akbari. Akbari has been booked into the Cole County Jail on multiple felony charges. They include first-degree murder, first-degree endangering the welfare of a child, unlawful use of a weapon, and armed criminal action.
In a statement to People, his attorney, David Moen, said his client is "innocent until proven guilty."
Moen added that he entered a not-guilty plea on Akbari's behalf "based upon [Akbari's] mental condition," which he described as "severely impaired." The attorney also said Akbari served in the Afghan Army for many years and sustained numerous injuries during that time, noting that the family moved to the Jefferson City area about four years ago.
"He and his family have a lot of friends in this town, a lot of good connections," Moen told People, before asking for prayers for the family, "especially the children who lost their mother."
What Comes Next
With Akbari now formally charged, the case is moving into the next phase of the legal process. Court records show that Akbari is scheduled for a bond review on Wednesday, January 21, 2026, followed by a preliminary hearing on Thursday, February 19.
As the legal process unfolds, investigators say the case remains centered on the events inside the family's kitchen and the swift actions of an adult son whose 911 call first alerted authorities to the crime.
As the court dates approach, the case continues to reverberate beyond the courtroom, leaving a family fractured and a community grappling with the sudden violence that unfolded behind closed doors.
While prosecutors prepare to present their evidence and the defense raises questions about Akbari’s mental state, investigators say the sequence of events on that January afternoon, from a son's urgent phone call to a statewide AMBER Alert, remains central to understanding how a domestic dispute escalated into a fatal crime.
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