What Taylor Swift's Stalker Wrote Will Haunt You

Taylor Swift at the 2019 American Music Awards. Photo courtesy of Cosmopolitan UK under CC BY 3.0.
Taylor Swift has survived her fair share of drama, but one of the darkest chapters in her story didn't come from the tabloids — it came from a man named Eric Swarbrick, who drove more than 900 miles with letters laced with threats and delusions. A chilling new episode of "Hollywood Demons" on Investigation Discovery, titled "Stalking the Stars," unpacks the terrifying details of his obsession and the toll it took on one of the world's most famous women.
Love Letters From a Would-Be Killer
In 2018, Swarbrick began hand-delivering letters to Swift's former record label, Big Machine Label Group, demanding an introduction. The letters started strange — then escalated. Over two years, he sent more than 40 messages. His notes shifted from lonely pleas to violent ultimatums. He wrote about killing Swift and himself, calling himself a "cultural sword." According to the Daily Mail, one note warned, "Give her my letters or I'm gonna kill myself. And I'm also gonna kill her by the way."
Swarbrick didn't just write. He showed up — three times — at Big Machine's Nashville office. After one arrest for trespassing, he kept going, flooding the label with messages that detailed rape and murder fantasies. He reportedly vowed to die by suicide in front of label employees. His fixation didn't just cross lines — it bulldozed them.
The Brother Who Saw It Coming
The episode features emotional commentary from Swarbrick's brother, Matthew, who described a steady unraveling. As reported by the Daily Mail, he said, "I remember wishing there was a hotline that I could call and really just being helpless and not knowing what to do was the worst part." In high school, Eric had been outgoing and well-liked. But in college, he drifted into isolation and began sharing disturbing tweets about being a prophet and soulmate — tweets that, in hindsight, read like red flags waving in a storm.
The family knew he needed help but couldn't find a way to intervene. When the threats reached Swift, it was already too late.
What Justice Looks Like When It's Too Late
Federal agents finally stepped in. Swarbrick pleaded guilty to interstate stalking and sending threatening communications. The court sentenced him to 30 months in prison followed by mandated psychiatric care. According to Matthew, therapy helped Eric slowly return to fragments of his former self, but the damage — emotional, psychological, and public — left a scar.
Swift's Reality: Fear in the Limelight
While fans saw glitter and Grammys, Swift quietly stocked her purse with military-grade bandages designed for gunshot or stab wounds. In a 2019 essay for Elle, she wrote, "You get enough stalkers trying to break into your house and you kind of start prepping for bad things," according to the Daily Mail. That one sentence says more about her daily reality than any bodyguard detail ever could.
When Fame Invites Fear
"Stalking the Stars" doesn’t just tell one woman's story, it raises urgent questions about mental health, celebrity security, and how obsession festers in silence. For Swift, the spotlight still shines — but shadows like Swarbrick's remind us that fame comes with a price, and sometimes, a threat you can't sing away.
References: Taylor Swift stalker's twisted letters threatening to kill the singer revealed in chilling new documentary | Chilling letters from fan who threatened to kill Taylor Swift come to light