Tag Archives: murdersuicide

Police release video of murder-suicide at North Olmsted store Sunday, but many questions still unanswered – News 5 Cleveland WEWS

  1. Police release video of murder-suicide at North Olmsted store Sunday, but many questions still unanswered News 5 Cleveland WEWS
  2. Police investigate murder-suicide at Giant Eagle in North Olmsted WKYC Channel 3
  3. Body camera video released in North Olmsted Giant Eagle murder suicide Cleveland 19 News
  4. Murder-suicide closes North Olmsted Giant Eagle, pharmacy stays open WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland
  5. Police say ex-husband shot his ex-wife while she was working at Giant Eagle in North Olmsted before turning gun on himself, and more: 3News Daily WKYC.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Son and 8-year old grandson of former Red Sox star George ‘Boomer’ Scott found dead in apparent murder-suicide – CNN International

  1. Son and 8-year old grandson of former Red Sox star George ‘Boomer’ Scott found dead in apparent murder-suicide CNN International
  2. Son of Red Sox Hall of Famer found dead in apparent murder-suicide 4 years after child’s mother went missing Yahoo News
  3. Son of former Red Sox player killed 8-year-old son, then himself, police suspect Fox News
  4. New Bedford man allegedly kills 8-year-old son before taking his own life, authorities say The Boston Globe
  5. Son of former Red Sox star George Scott kills his 8-year-old boy before taking own life New York Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Police investigated Utah man for abuse before murder-suicide

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Utah man who police say fatally shot his wife, her mother and their five kids before turning the gun on himself had been investigated two years prior for child abuse, but local police and prosecutors decided not to criminally charge him, new records released Tuesday show.

Police records obtained by The Associated Press shed light on warning signs and a previous police investigation into a violent pattern of behavior Michael Haight exhibited toward his family.

Authorities said they were aware of previous problems in the home but didn’t elaborate during a news conference following the Jan. 4 killings in the small town of Enoch, citing an ongoing investigation.

In a 2020 interview with authorities, Macie Haight, the family’s eldest daughter, detailed multiple assaults, including one where she was choked by her father and “very afraid that he was going to keep her from breathing and kill her.”

The child abuse investigation followed an Aug. 27, 2020, police call from a non-family member reporting potential child abuse. Macie, then 14, told investigators that her father’s violence started in 2017 and had included choking and shaking, including a recent incident where he grabbed her by the shoulders and banged her into a wooden piece along the back of the couch.

Two years later, police found eight bodies at the family’s home, including Macie’s. The murder-suicide rocked Enoch, an 8,000-person, southern Utah town on the outskirts of Cedar City where neighbors and members of the local Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints described the Haights as a loving family.

An obituary published in the St. George Spectrum last week described Michael Haight in glowing terms as an Eagle Scout, businessman and father who “made it a point to spend quality time with each and every one of his children.” The obituary made no mention of the killings and was taken offline after backlash.

Police believe Haight, 42, carried out the shootings two weeks after his wife had filed for divorce and just days after her relatives say he took guns from the house that could have been used to stop him.

Two years before, in his interview with investigators, Haight denied assaulting his daughter and said the report was a misunderstanding. He said Macie was “mouthy” and admitted to getting angry, attributing some struggles to his father’s death and brother’s divorce.

The investigator’s notes also shed light on Haight’s treatment of his wife, Tausha Haight. Macie told investigators that her father would often belittle her mother, a charge he denied. In his interview, however, Michael Haight said he had taken his wife’s iPad and cellphone to surveil her text messages to check if she had spoken negatively about his family.

Tausha Haight told authorities she didn’t want criminal charges filed against her husband and hoped the incident would be “a wake-up call” for him.

Though an investigator told Michael Haight that his behavior was “close to assaultive,” Enoch Police and the Iron County Attorney decided not to file criminal charges against him.

Enoch Police didn’t respond Tuesday to a request for comment about why charges were not filed. The Iron County Attorney’s office said in a statement Tuesday that their office had been called in 2020 and determined there was insufficient evidence to pursue charges against Haight.

“Although specifics are not articulated, this conclusion was likely based on an inability to prove each element of the offense(s) beyond reasonable doubt and/or statute of limitations barriers,” the statement said.

It added that prosecutors were not sent interview transcripts or police reports from the Enoch Police to review.

Matt Munson, the attorney representing Michael Haight’s family, was not immediately available to comment.

Police found the Haight family’s bodies after conducting a welfare check based on a call from a friend who said Tausha Haight had missed an appointment earlier in the week.

Officials said last week that law enforcement is continuing to investigate the Haight family deaths. The murder-suicide drew national attention and words of condolence from Utah officials and President Joe Biden. It underscored how family mass killings have become a disturbingly common tragedy across the United States, occurring on average every 3.5 weeks for the last two decades.

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8 dead in Utah murder-suicide after wife sought divorce

ENOCH, Utah (AP) — A Utah man fatally shot his five children, his mother-in-law and his wife and then killed himself two weeks after the woman had filed for divorce, according to authorities and public records.

Police also revealed during a Thursday news conference that officers investigated the 42-year-old man and his family a “couple of years prior,” suggesting possible earlier problems inside the household. Enoch Police Chief Jackson Ames did not elaborate.

Investigators know about the divorce petition but not if it was the motivation behind the killings, Mayor Geoffrey Chesnut said.

The killings rocked the small farming town of Enoch in southern Utah about halfway between Salt Lake City and Las Vegas. It’s in one of the fastest-growing areas of the country, and communities of new homes are made up primarily of large families that belong, like most in Utah, to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known widely as the Mormon church.

The deceased were members of the faith and well known in town. Many residents served in church alongside members of the slain family or went to school with the children, city officials said.

“This is a tremendous blow to many families who have spent many nights with these individuals who are now gone,” Chesnut said.

City Manager Rob Dotson said the community was “feeling loss, they’re feeling pain and they have a lot of questions.”

Officials said that they believe Michael Haight killed his wife, his mother-in-law and the couple’s five children. Each appeared to have gunshot wounds.

Court records show that Tausha Haight, 40, filed for divorce Dec. 21. Her lawyer said Thursday that Haight had been served with the papers Dec. 27. The reasons for the divorce were unknown, in part because Utah law keeps details of divorce proceedings sealed from the public.

Tausha Haight and other members of the family were seen the night before the killings at a church group for young women, Chesnut said. Police were dispatched to the family’s home Wednesday afternoon for a welfare check after someone reported that she had missed an appointment earlier in the week, city officials said.

The victims were found inside the house. The children, three girls and two boys, ranged in age from 4 to 17, authorities said. The other victim was Tausha Haight’s 78-year-old mother, Gail Earl.

Family mass killings have become a disturbingly common tragedy across the country. In 2022 there were 17 of them, according to a database compiled by USA Today, The Associated Press and Northeastern University. Ten were murder-suicides, and 14 were shootings. The database defines a mass killing as four or more people slain, not including the assailant.

James Park, who represented Tausha Haight in the divorce case, said she had not expressed any fear that her husband would physically hurt her. Park declined to elaborate, citing the investigation into the killings. He said he met with Tausha Haight only twice, mostly recently on Tuesday, and she “was an incredibly nice lady.”

The home where the victims were found was decorated with Christmas lights and located in a neighborhood of newly built single-family houses on a ridge overlooking Enoch. It has a view of houses with snow-covered roofs and mountains in the distance. Half the surrounding block was cordoned off by police tape.

The town is on the outskirts of Cedar City, a historically agricultural area being transformed by new subdivisions. Cattle and sheep line the highway at the edge of town, along with signs that advertise “Custom New Homes” and recreation in southern Utah’s famous national parks.

Sharon Huntsman of Cedar City came to the neighborhood with a bouquet of white flowers Thursday morning. She said the deaths had deeply rattled Iron County and cried as she propped up the bouquet in the snow.

“It’s just one big community,” she said. “We all have one heavenly father.”

Archives from the local newspaper capture moments in Michael Haight’s life beginning with a picture of him laughing as a baby in an announcement marking his first birthday. He was in the Boy Scouts and went on a church mission in Brazil.

In 2003, Haight married Tausha Earl at a church temple. She was from Overton, Nevada, about two hours south of Cedar City, where he grew up. As an adult, Haight worked as an insurance agent.

Tausha Haight’s Facebook page showed pictures of the family looking happy in picturesque settings of Utah, and in front of a large statue of Jesus.

Community members who gathered at Enoch City Hall to listen to Thursday’s news conference said it was wrenching to have to tell their own children that their peers may not be at school the next day.

“We told them last night,” said city councilman Richard Jensen, a father of eight. “We gathered them around for a family prayer type of thing. We told them a family in town, everyone had been killed and when they show up to school tomorrow it’s possible kids will be missing.“

___

Associated Press news researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York and reporter Colleen Slevin in Denver contributed to this report.

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New Mexico judge allegedly killed in murder-suicide

A Village of Los Ranchos, New Mexico judge was found dead in her home on Friday in what investigators believe was a murder-suicide.

Deputies with the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office conducted a welfare check at a home on Ranchitos Road in Albuquerque after a friend of Eric Pinkerton’s reported a troubling message.

Los Ranchos, New Mexico Municipal Judge Diane Albert was found inside a home on Friday in what police said appears to be a murder-suicide.
(Village of Los Ranchos Municipal Court)

When deputies arrived, the department said on Twitter, they located and confirmed two adults were dead inside the home, one of whom was 63-year-old Pinkerton.

WOMAN ATTACKS POLICE WITH CAR AFTER THEY QUESTION HER ABOUT STOLEN CREDIT CARD, SHERIFF SAYS

Los Ranchos Municipal Judge Diane Albert, 65, was also deceased along with several animals.

Police said Pinkerton is believed to have shot his wife Albert and several animals before turning the gun on himself.

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The Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to questions seeking additional information about the incident.

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Man kills ex-girlfriend and her family in murder-suicide in Maryland, authorities say



CNN
 — 

Five people were found dead in a southern Maryland home Friday in a murder-suicide incident, according to a Charles County Sheriff’s Office statement on Saturday.

The bodies were found in a house in La Plata, roughly a 35-mile drive south of Washington, DC, by law enforcement officers around 4 p.m. on Friday after a witness called 911 to report a shooting, Charles County sheriff’s spokesperson Diane Richardson said on Friday.

When police arrived at the house they found the homeowner at the front door who said he had returned home from work and discovered five people deceased inside.

Police said initial investigations showed that a suspect identified as Andre Sales, 28, came into the house and killed four people before shooting himself with a gun which was recovered at the scene.

The victims have been identified as his ex-girlfriend Sara Mann, 21, her mother Sommaly Mann, 48, and her younger brother Kai Mann, 18, authorities said. The fourth victim has been identified as Javon Watson, 23, but his relation to the other victims is not clear.

Authorities say autopsies will be conducted to determine the cause of death for each victim and investigators are interviewing family and friends to establish a motive for the killings.

Two children, who the sheriff’s office did not identify, were initially unaccounted for, but were later found safe at another location.

The sheriff’s office said the investigation is ongoing.

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Tulsa couple mourning suspected murder-suicide of son, daughter-in-law and six grandchildren in BA

“I think the stress was what got them,” a family member said. 


There was nothing out of the ordinary about the request Danny Nelson received in a phone call from his 34-year-old son, Brian, on Thursday.

Would you babysit at 3 o’clock?

Danny and his wife, Marilyn, frequently pitched in to watch their grandchildren. But Marilyn, 74, has health issues that keep her close to home, and there were six grandchildren to wrangle now — including a 1-year-old and 2-year-old.

Danny asked if the children could come over to their grandparents’ south Tulsa apartment instead, so he wouldn’t have to take on all six kids alone in their Broken Arrow home.

“OK,” Danny said Brian told him, “but we’ll bring them over at 5.”

“Five came and went. Then it was 6. I texted them — no responses,” Danny said. “I turned on the 6 o’clock news, and they said there had been a fire near Hickory and Galveston in Broken Arrow. That’s where my son lives.”

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Danny said he wasn’t worried — but he still felt compelled to go.

“I’ve had almost psychic feelings before, and dreams,” he said, explaining why he hopped in his car and made the 5-mile drive east.

When he pushed past the crime scene tape, he came upon a scene too horrifying even for a parent’s worst nightmares.

Broken Arrow Police said six children were found dead in a back bedroom of a 980-square-foot home that was on fire at 425 S. Hickory Ave.

But not from smoke or burns.

Two adults, whose bodies were found near the front of the house, are law enforcement’s prime suspects — meaning they could have been killing their children in the same time frame Danny was originally asked to come there to babysit.

Police have not released any more details or the identities.

But in their South Tulsa apartment home on Friday, the Nelsons told the Tulsa World in their first in-depth interview that their son Brian Nelson, 34, daughter-in-law Brittney Nelson, 32, and six grandchildren — Brian II, age 13, granddaughter Brantley, 9, grandsons Vegeta, 7, Ragnar, 5, and Kurgan, 2, and granddaughter Britannica, 1, are the deceased family.

“All night last night, I kept saying: `It’s not real! It’s not real! It’s not real!’ And I couldn’t stop. But today, I know it’s real — too real,” said Marilyn,” her voice catching in her throat. “I never dreamed this would happen.”

Financial strain and a head injury

A federal bankruptcy court listing in Tulsa reveals that Brian and Brittney Nelson had a crushing amount of debt.

The chapter 7 bankruptcy petition they filed on Dec. 31, 2020, reveals they had $8,803 in assets versus nearly $138,000 in liabilities, the vast majority — $127,081 — in unpaid student loans.

Both indicated they were unemployed at the time and their only income was from SNAP benefits, some limited government utility payment assistance and rental assistance from the Oklahoma Housing Authority.

Brian Nelson reported he grossed $4,510 in income in the previous year of 2019, while Brittney reported no income.

Among what little personal property they had to their names were nine firearms — five pistols valued altogether at $1,600, one .22-caliber rifle worth $100 and two shotguns worth $150.

Marilyn said Brian always had a pistol in his pocket, but “he had a permit,” she noted.

The Nelsons said they knew their son and daughter-in-law were struggling under the weight of growing financial pressures compounded by the births of their fifth and sixth children in very short order. And in the last year or so, they were more distanced from Danny and Marilyn.

But they helped the young family with utility bills as often as they could and readily babysat, noting Brittney had suffered from gallstones and more recently, seizures, so she often needed to go to doctor’s appointments.

Where did Brian say they were going on Thursday, when he had asked Danny to come over and babysit?

A doctor’s appointment for Brittney.

“I think the stress was what got to them — trying to figure out how to make it from one month, to one month, to one month,” Danny said of Thursday’s tragedy.

Then Marilyn interjected: “Then every time one of those headaches came around, he just would lose it because it was so excruciating.”

Danny and Marilyn agree their son was forever changed after sustaining a severe concussion in a workplace accident years ago at a large retail chain.

Neither could recall exactly how many years ago, maybe Brian was in his early to mid-20s when he was working an overnight shift, stocking the dairy refrigerators.

“One night when he got there, the guy who had just gotten off work before him had spilled something and did not mop the floor and Brian fell, and he hit his head really hard. The doctor said that it was a very rare concussion and told Brian that either it would go away or it would stay — and it stayed,” Marilyn said, her voice straining. “The headaches were horrible, and he never knew when he was going to get them.”

Danny shook his head, saying he wanted Brian to be able to continue with medical treatment for his head injury, but a lawyer told him to do so indefinitely was impossible so he accepted a settlement. He and Marilyn both said Brian never laughed as easily or seemed as happy afterward, and he had “episodes” related to the pain he experienced.

Of her daughter-in-law Brittney, Marilyn said was clearly stressed from caring for six children, including home-schooling.

“She basically went along with my son Brian, but she usually was OK,” she said.

Brian and Brittney

Brittney’s mother “had issues,” her in-laws said, and died early in her childhood. Her father wasn’t around, so Brittney had to live with relatives she claimed had been “mean” to her.

She and Brian met when they were both students at Tulsa’s East Central High School and quickly formed a bond so ironclad that Brian, who was a grade ahead of her, figured out a way to remain in high school for a fifth year so they could graduate together.

Were Danny and Marilyn ever aware of any violence in the younger Nelsons’ home?

Both gave an emphatic “No,” but then Marilyn recalled, “Well, the first couple years of marriage, when they just had a baby and they were very young, they struggled. They were just out of high school.”

Public records indicate Brian and Brittney married in November 2008 and their first birth announcement, for son Brian II, appeared in the Tulsa World just four months later.

Rather than holding down a job for very long, their son had devoted a lot of time to college over his adult life, taking courses at both Tulsa Community College and Oklahoma State University, possibly as recent as this semester, the Nelsons said.

“He was very intelligent,” Marilyn said. “Maybe too much so for his own good.”

Brittney also had some college classes under her belt but never worked outside the home.

Memories of the innocents

Marilyn got weepy and Danny’s eyes welled with tears as they talked, but they said they wanted the world to know their grandchildren were beautiful, happy, normal children.

And they adored and loved them.

Their tears were interrupted by broad smiles and laughter as they picked up framed photographs from a shelf in their living room and got out their cellphones, with their wall-to-wall grandbaby photos, and recounted each child’s personality or a funny anecdote.

Brian II was the only child to ever attend school. He went to kindergarten and one semester of first grade at a Broken Arrow elementary school but, “His father didn’t get along with what they were teaching,” Danny said.

“They wanted boys to dance like girls. That was the final thing,” Marilyn recalled.

Brian and Brittney opted for home-schooling from then on.

The two oldest children, Brian II and Brantley, doted on their younger siblings, Danny and Marilyn said.

They swiped through their cellphone images to show off videos of Brian II toy sword fighting in the backyard with Ragnar, who Danny and Marilyn said was the rough-and-tumble one of the bunch, and of their son Brian in a snowball fight with Brian II and Ragnar.

Brantley, they said, was the artist in the family, and Marilyn proudly showed off their refrigerator papered with Brantley’s many drawings of all manner of bears — her grandmother’s favorite. And she was over-the-moon happy to finally have a baby sister.

“She had really long eyelashes, and she knew how to bat them at you,” Danny said of baby Britannica, who was 19 months old.

The three youngest boys, they said, had rather unusual names thanks to their father’s favorite entertainment programs. “Vegeta the Prince” as he was known in the Nelson family, was named after a character in the Japanese anime television series Dragon Ball Z, while they were told Ragnar and Kurgan were named after Viking characters from something or other.

“My son has a weird sense of coming up with names,” Danny said.

Vegeta the Prince, they said, kept everyone on their toes. He was the only mechanically inclined grandchild, so he loved to watch YouTube repair videos with Danny, who prefers to figure out how to fix things around the house himself.

“I’d give him tools for his birthday instead of presents, and he liked that,” Danny said, beaming.

Both grandparents laughed hard at a picture of Vegeta from this summer, when he had gotten ahold of a pair of clippers and shaved a stripe of hair off the top of his head, from front to back.

“He asked if he could try the clippers on me and I said, `No, I’ve seen the way you give haircuts,’” Danny recalled, laughing.

Then their memories turned to their own son, because he had done something similar in kindergarten.

“He had cut clumps of hair off with scissors here and there. He wore a hat to school but apparently took it off,” Danny said. “They asked me, `Did you do that to him?’ and I said, `No, he did it to himself!’”

Never dreamed this could happen

Hindsight sometimes brings clarity, but it’s far too early for the Nelsons to have any of that.

What Danny hopes the public takes away from the senselessness that just wiped out an entire family of eight is to not put off seeking help for yourself or your loved ones.

“A lot of people say well, we’ll check into it tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow — and sometimes, tomorrow don’t ever come,” he said.

Marilyn said one memory of her son, in particular, keeps replaying in her mind.

When Brian was first attending Tulsa Community College after high school, he aspired to be an actor in plays and maybe even movies one day.

“He did a play in this big theater, and we were there to see it. In it, he played a soldier and of course, he was in an Army outfit or whatever, and he had a scene where he had broken down,” she said. “When the play was over with, people were swarming up to him telling him how great an actor he was.

“I asked my son, ‘How were you able to pull that off and it was so real?’ He said, ‘Mom, it’s those damn headaches.’”

Marilyn started to cry again just then.

“I want people to know that at one time he had all his brain together,” she said. “I just don’t understand why they did what they did. I just don’t understand why he ended up in that situation. I talk to God all the time — and I just don’t understand.”

Staff writer Curtis Killman contributed to this story.

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Deaths of 8 in Oklahoma home investigated as murder-suicide

The deaths of eight family members — including six children found in a burning Oklahoma home — are being investigated as a murder-suicide, authorities said Friday. Police are trying to determine whether both adults were involved in the killings.

The children, who ranged in age from 1 to 13, were the victims, Broken Arrow Police Chief Brandon Berryhill said during a news conference. He did not provide their identities, ages or explain their relationships to one another except to say they were family members believed to be living in the home.

Police said both adults who live in the home were considered “primary suspects” because they were found dead in the front of the home while the children were all found in a bedroom, where the fire was contained. A police spokesman declined to say whether authorities believe the two adults were both responsible for the killings or whether it could be just one of them.

“It’s because investigators are still trying to piece together what happened with eight people dead,” police spokesman Ethan Hutchins said in an email to The Associated Press.

Hutchins also said police would not be able to identify the dead adults until the medical examiner’s office has completed its work.

The causes of death are still under investigation, but Broken Arrow Fire Department Chief Jeremy Moore said it doesn’t appear that anyone died because of the fire. Guns were recovered from the home, the police chief said.

“To arrive on scene yesterday and to see the looks on our first responders’ and firefighters’ faces just absolutely broke my heart,” Moore said Friday.

Sara Abel, a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, said the agency is assisting local police in tracing guns found in the home but she did not have any details about the type or number of firearms.

The fire was reported about 4 p.m. Thursday in a quiet residential area of Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, 13 miles (20 kilometers) southeast of Tulsa.

The two adults found dead in the front of the house had injuries that “appeared to be criminal in nature,” Moore said.

The children were found dead in another area of the home, he said.

Kris Welch told the Tulsa World that the couple had rented the home from her for the past eight years. She said they seemed like “a regular family” but that she had gotten “some weird vibes from him.”

“He wore some T-shirts that were kind of dark and strange,” Welch told the newspaper. “And she was quiet. She hardly ever spoke, honestly. I always wondered about that.”

Neighbor Traci Treseler told the newspaper that the kids always kept to themselves. She had thought only three children lived in the house and was surprised to find out there were six, she said.

A week ago, a similar tragedy occurred in Wisconsin, where four children and two adults were found in a burning apartment in a suspected murder-suicide.

In Broken Arrow, Catelin Powers said she was driving with her children nearby when she saw a column of smoke near her house, so she drove past to investigate.

“When I got closer to the house, I saw smoke pouring out from the very top of the house, which looked like maybe the attic,” she told The Associated Press on Thursday.

Two men and a woman on her phone were standing in front of the house, Powers said, when another man emerged from the front door dragging an apparently unconscious, unresponsive woman. “Her arms were flopped to her sides,” she said.

Suspecting the woman was dead, Powers said she drove on so her children would be spared the sight.

Tragedy has struck before in Broken Arrow, which is Tulsa’s biggest suburb with almost 115,000 residents. In 2015, two teenaged brothers killed their mother, father, two younger brothers and 5-year-old sister at their home — which was about 6 miles (10 kilometers) south of Thursday’s fatal fire.

The home where the 2015 killings occurred was later demolished and the site was transformed into a community park.

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Associated Press reporters Jake Bleiberg, Terry Wallace and Jamie Stengle in Dallas contributed to this report.

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Connecticut mom Sonia Loja’s murder-suicide leaves Danbury community shocked

A mom who sent her kids to the Connecticut daycare of a woman accused of killing her own children before taking her own life said Thursday that she was shocked by the triple murder-suicide.

The woman attended a vigil for the slain family outside their Danbury home Thursday night and refused to believe Sonia Loja, 36, would strangle her three children.

“I can’t believe Sonia did this. I don’t believe what’s happened,” Nube Sucuzhanay, 33, told The Post. 

“Sonia was a good person. She loved and looked after her kids and was good with the kids she looked after.”

Sucuzhanay said Loja came to the US from Ecuador about 15 years ago. Sucuzhanay trusted Loja with her own two children and enrolled them in her daycare for seven years.

“I was very comfortable leaving my children with Sonia,” she said. “[She was] just so good with children and so very nice.”

Loja ran an illegal daycare out of her house and told the parents of roughly 10 kids that she couldn’t watch them Wednesday — the same day police believe she killed her own kids 12-year-old Junior Panjon, 10-year-old Joselyn Panjon and 5-year-old Jonael Panjon. Loja then took her own life.

A woman can be seen crying in front of Sonia Loja’s residence in Danbury, Connecticut on July 28, 2022.
Stephen Yang
Community members gather at the home of Sonia Loja on July 28, 2022 in Danbury.
Stephen Yang

Loja reportedly strangled each child one by one before she hanged herself inside a shed in the backyard of her home, police said. Her husband and father of the children, Pedro Panjon, found the bodies when he returned home and fainted at the grisly discovery.

Sucuzhanay was one of about 50 mourners who gathered outside the home Thursday night for a vigil organized by the area’s large Ecuadorian community. The mourners sang hymns, recited prayers and lit candles for more than an hour.

They created a makeshift memorial for the slain children by placing prayer candles, flowers, white balloons and a teddy bear on the home’s front steps.

Toys and other belongings are shown on Sonia Loja’s porch on July 28, 2022 in Danbury.
Stephen Yang
Police believe Sonia Loja killed her children 12-year-old Junior Panjon, 10-year-old Joselyn Panjon and 5-year-old Jonael Panjon.
Pedro Panjon/Facebook

A young attendee who went to Saint Peter School with Joselyn from kindergarten to third grade said her late classmate was fiercely intelligent and kind.

“Joselyn was a very smart, creative and helpful person,” Katelyn Jimenez, 11, said. “Joselyn was always there when you needed her. She would comfort anyone going through a tough time.”

Katelyn said Joselyn excelled in math and helped her when she was struggling with math equations.

“To me, it seemed like she lived a good life,” Katelyn said. “She was very positive. She was great at art and music, but she was also very smart at math.”

“I’m feeling sad,” she added. “She was a good classmate and friend.”

Tomas Vega, 31, was among the many mourners who felt compelled to join the vigil in support of the family, despite not knowing Loja or her children personally.

Vega, a father of two, couldn’t comprehend Loja’s violent last act.

“What would make you kill yourself and take the lives of your three kids?” Vega asked in disbelief. “Imagine seeing your first kid dead, then the next one, then the third one. Something really bad must have happened.”

If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts or are experiencing a mental health crisis and live in New York City, you can call 1-888-NYC-WELL for free and confidential crisis counseling. If you live outside the five boroughs, you can dial the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention hotline at 1-800-273-8255 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.

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Sacramento church shooting: 5 people are dead in an apparent murder-suicide in Arden-Arcade, police say

A father walked into a church in the Arden-Arcade neighborhood and shot three of his kids — all under the age of 15 — before turning the gun on himself, Sgt. Rod Grassman with the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said at a press conference.

The fifth person found dead was identified as the wife of the shooter, Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District Capt. Parker Wilbourn told CNN.

There were other people in The Church in Sacramento at the time of the shooting but none were involved, Wilbourn said. Most of the others were employees or congregates, he said, and no one else at the scene required medical transport.

It is not known at this time if a service or event was taking place at the church at the time.

The incident is currently being investigated by the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office, which had asked people to avoid the area following reports of the shooting Monday evening.

Gov. Gavin Newsom described the shooting as “another senseless act of gun violence in America.”

“Our hearts go out to the victims, their families and their communities,” he tweeted.

CNN has reached out to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office for additional information.



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