Darrell Sheets’ apparent suicide note has been revealed.
“I could not take anymore, the Facebook bullying,” Sheets, who died by suicide at age 67 in April, wrote in the note, according to a new police report obtained by Us Weekly on Wednesday, July 8.
The Storage Wars alum added, “F*** you, [redacted].”
According to the police report, the note was found in a black basket in a bathroom, on top of a pile of other documents. It was written on the back of a document dated February 20, 2026.
The report also stated that police made contact with someone whom Sheets appeared to claim was bullying him. The person was allegedly “extremely uncooperative,” according to the report, and told police he was “nowhere near” Lake Havasu City or Arizona in the days leading up to Sheets’ death. The man also claimed that he was receiving “death threats” and allegedly refused to provide additional information.
Sheets died in Lake Havasu City, Arizona, on April 22, a spokesperson for the Lake Havasu City Police Department told Us at the time. The reality star’s death was later ruled a suicide, and his toxicology analysis came back negative for drugs, according to an autopsy report.

One month before his death, Sheets took to Facebook to slam alleged cyberbullies.
“I have been hacked by a very evil person,” he wrote in March. “The clown. [The posts] are not done by me, they are being done by … very evil people. I’m not gay, I have made no posts about any children’s arcade owner, etc. I’m extremely sorry and sick over this.”
Sheets also claimed the alleged bullies “ruined” him.
“He said he would, please understand it is not me,” he stated. “People are showing up to my work and wanting to harm me. The police are aware of this but [their] hands are tied because Facebook allows this and it is very bad.”
Sheets later claimed his “cyberbully stalker” also victimized others via social media.
“He has been going after other small businesses in town and harassing them, using my name,” he wrote in another post. “It is not me! He has extorted money from many people in this town acting like a handyman. This has been going on for three years with him, and the things he says are very damaging. This is a felony called cyberbullying.”
The Lake Havasu City Police Department told Us in April that they were “aware of the cyberbullying accusations” in connection with Sheets’ death, noting that “these claims are a part of the active investigation.”
Sheets, known as “The Gambler,” appeared on A&E’s Storage Wars from 2010 to 2023.
“We are saddened by the passing of a beloved member of our Storage Wars family, Darrell ‘The Gambler’ Sheets,” a spokesperson for A&E told Us after his death. “Our thoughts are with his family and loved ones during this difficult time.”
If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.







