Crime + investigation

Why a Coast Guard Vet Modeling on OnlyFans Lured a Man to an Airbnb and Killed Him

Chelsea Perkins murdered Matthew Dunmire in March 2021, which caused his mom to start her own investigation into what happened, leading to another murder.

Mahoning County Sheriff's Office; Getty Images
Published: March 24, 2026Last Updated: March 24, 2026

The salacious tabloid headlines practically wrote themselves. Chelsea Perkins was a young Coast Guard veteran who was making ends meet selling adult content on OnlyFans. Police accused her of luring her alleged rapist to a wooded area within an Ohio national park and firing a single slug into his skull.

In May 2025, Perkins, then 35, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and using or carrying and discharging a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence on federal property for the revenge killing father and aspiring musician Matthew Dunmire, 31.

Perkins claimed Dunmire raped her in 2017 when they were in a relationship. Police never pressed charges against Dunmire, citing a lack of evidence in the case.

Dunmire’s attack would be the fourth sexual assault Perkins claims she’s survived since she was 4 years old. It also marked the fourth time she reported such a crime to authority figures, and her alleged abusers weren’t held accountable for their actions.

“Victims all over the world aren’t being supported or listened to, which can create then a chilling effect for the next survivor to speak out about what happened to them,” explained Caitlyn Benzo, an attorney for the Ohio Alliance to End Sexual Violence, tells A&E Crime + Investigation.

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The U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics states that, as of 2023, only 21.5% of sexual assaults are reported to police. Nearly one in five U.S. women has been a victim of attempted or completed rape, according to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.

“In cases where the survivor is not believed, especially by people in positions of authority, it creates this whole new layer of trauma,” Benzo says. “They’re already feeling shame, they’re already feeling unworthy, and may feel like they did something wrong to cause this abuse, so that can be compounded by law enforcement, the judicial system and prosecutors who won’t pursue justice for them for one reason or another.”

According to investigators, Perkins, who was married, arranged to meet Dunmire in Ohio, with plans to share an Airbnb overnight and then go hiking in the morning at Ohio’s Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

Once they were deep into the woods, Perkins ended Dunmire’s life, shooting him once in the back of the head. The day after the murder, Perkins got a tattoo of a noose in Michigan. Dunmire’s remains were found three days after his March 6, 2021, killing.

Police said they used GPS data, DNA and ballistics evidence from the murder weapon, and social media and phone records to identify Perkins as the killer. Detectives analyzing her phone would later recover a fake suicide letter from Dunmire that Perkins wrote—and then deleted—around the same time his body was discovered.

Frustrated with the pace of the police investigation, Dunmire’s mother initiated her own probe into her son’s killing. Tommie Lynn Dunmire eventually came to the incorrect conclusion a 30-year-old woman who was living in Washington, D.C., was responsible for her son’s murder.

Tommie Lynn and Dunmire’s dad, John McQuillen, drove to the woman’s home on November 5, 2021, and Tommie Lynn shot the innocent women twice in the abdomen. The two fled the scene before stopping to switch the car’s plates. Hours later, Tommie Lynn died by suicide. The woman was treated for her wounds and recovered. In 2022, McQuillen pleaded guilty to helping Tommie Lynn flee and avoid apprehension after the murder attempt and received 42 months in prison.

Past Trauma Becomes Present

In September 2025, before a judge sentenced Perkins to 22.5 years in federal prison, she apologized to Dunmire’s relatives, saying, “I take full responsibility for what I’ve done.”

Perkins’ attorney argued at trial that PTSD from prior sexual violence drove her murderous actions. They told the court how, before she was even 5, a babysitter allegedly molested Perkins and how in high school, she claimed to be raped by a male student. Then, Perkins alleged she was abused by a superior while serving with the U.S. Coast Guard. She reported the sexual assaults to her parents, to school officials and to military police, but no further action was taken.

“There are so many layers of trauma when you’re a victim of gender violence, and nothing is done,” Benzo says. “There is the actual act itself, which causes a whole host of immediate and long-term effects like PTSD, depression, anxiety and disassociation along with the secondary effects to cope with those things—substance abuse, lower self-worth, trust and intimacy issues, eating disorders. They’re also more prone to revictimization.”

Since Perkins claims she was repeatedly victimized, “her trauma was compounded with each and every subsequent abuse period in her life,” Benzo adds. “There is a third layer of trauma that comes when not one of your abusers is held accountable, and you feel like you’re never believed.”

Data maintained by the non-profit Council of State Governments Justice Center showed between 2022 to 2024, fewer than 30% of reported rape cases were closed by law enforcement. In Ohio, only about 13.5% of rape cases are closed.

Survivors “will ‘do it the right way’ by going to police, getting a forensic examination, going to court for protection orders, and yet, they are still not believed, because of either misogyny or bias,” Benzo offers. “It is a whole system designed to silence victims and protect abusers, and it’s really unfortunate. We are trying to chip away at that system one day at a time.”

Not all victims of gender or sexual violence want to see their abusers arrested.

“The end goal isn’t to ruin someone’s life with a rape conviction,” she says. “Real survivors want to be believed, and to make that person look them in the eye and say, ‘What I did to you was wrong.’”

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Citation Information

Article Title
Why a Coast Guard Vet Modeling on OnlyFans Lured a Man to an Airbnb and Killed Him
Website Name
A&E
Date Accessed
March 24, 2026
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 24, 2026
Original Published Date
March 24, 2026
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