ONSLOW COUNTY, N.C. – Onslow County EMS has fired two workers while a third resigned a month before The North Carolina Beat exposed a vile private group chat filled with racist slurs, homophobic rants, and sick “pure gene pool” jokes.
Rebecca “Becca” Davis and Joshua “Meta” Mullin were both fired on Thursday, March 26, 2026, according to termination letters and county records obtained by The North Carolina Beat.
Read the messages here in case you missed the story!
Onslow County EMS Fires Paramedic Captain Rebecca “Becca” Davis
Rebecca “Becca” Davis, the Paramedic Captain, started with Onslow EMS on September 11, 2017 and was earning $74,948.12 in her most recent salary as Paramedic Captain.
Davis had climbed the ranks extremely fast, moving from Paramedic Trainee on September 16, 2021, to full Paramedic on April 17, 2022, and then being promoted to Paramedic Captain on September 10, 2024. She had no previous disciplinary actions on record before the racist chat scandal ended her career.
Onslow County EMS EMT-Basic Joshua “Meta” Mullin Terminated
Joshua “Meta” Mullin, the EMT-Basic, began working for Onslow EMS on March 18, 2024 and was earning $43,306.38 in his position. Mullin had no promotions listed and no prior disciplinary actions before the group chat exposure led to his termination.
Onslow County EMS Paramedic Kyle Wenner Resigns After Demotion
Kyle Wenner, another Paramedic, was demoted on February 4, 2026 before voluntarily separating from the department on February 27, 2026. He originally started with Onslow EMS on February 13, 2023 and was making $59,397 at the time he left.
Wenner had earned a promotion to Paramedic Field Training Officer on March 12, 2025. He was already on the ropes after the demotion hit just weeks before our story published, and he bailed voluntarily less than a month later as the full investigation kicked off.
These terminations come directly on the heels of the Onslow County Emergency Services internal investigation launched.
Public servants. Paid with taxpayer dollars. Caught red-handed.
The North Carolina Beat will continue following this story as more details emerge. Onslow County has not issued a new public statement on the firings as of this update.