الأحد، 5 أغسطس 2012

Police Back Away From Murder-Suicide Theory In Death Of St. Louis Mom And Kids

Screen Shot 20120801 At 85208 Am Cops now say that it is too early to conclude whether Monday's shooting deaths of Missouri mother Catherine Murch and her two kids was a murder-suicide.

GLENDALE, Mo. -- A major case squad probing the shooting deaths of a suburban St. Louis mother and her two children unleashed more than 20 investigators Tuesday, but authorities who originally viewed the case as a murder-suicide said it was too early to draw any conclusions.

Glendale police Lt. Tim Fagan said Mitch Murch called police Monday after hearing gunshots inside the family's house. He told authorities he found the bodies of his wife and two children, all with gunshot wounds.

Catherine Murch, 42, was pronounced dead at the scene, and her two children were pronounced dead at hospitals. St. Louis County Medical Examiner Mary Case identified them as 10-year-old Mitchell Murch and 8-year-old Mary Claire Murch.

Police originally said the deaths were being investigated as a case of murder-suicide. Fagan said Murch has been interviewed and is cooperating with investigators. It wasn't immediately clear whether Murch had an attorney, but Fagan said police "don't consider him a suspect."

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Dozens of people walk into Mary Queen of Peace Church for a prayer vigil for a mother and her two children found shot to death in Glendale, Mo., on July 30, 2012. Nearly two dozen investigators with the St. Louis Area Major Case Squad were looking into the shootings deaths of a suburban St. Louis woman and her two children, police said Tuesday. Police haven't officially released the victims' names, but have said the children who were killed were ages 11 and 9. (AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, J.B. Forbes) EDWARDSVILLE INTELLIGENCER OUT; THE ALTON TELEGRAPH OUT

Glendale detectives lift the yellow tape to allow a hearse to leave a home following a murder-suicide in Glendale, Mo., on July 30, 2012. Nearly two dozen investigators with the St. Louis Area Major Case Squad were looking into the shootings deaths of a suburban St. Louis woman and her two children, police said Tuesday. Police haven't officially released the victims' names, but have said the children who were killed were ages 11 and 9. (AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, J.B. Forbes) EDWARDSVILLE INTELLIGENCER OUT; THE ALTON TELEGRAPH OUT

Emotional friends and neighbors stand outside the yellow tape as police detectives work the scene of a murder-suicide in a home in Glendale, Mo., on July 30, 2012. Nearly two dozen investigators with the St. Louis Area Major Case Squad were looking into the shootings deaths of a suburban St. Louis woman and her two children, police said Tuesday. Police haven't officially released the victims' names, but have said the children who were killed were ages 11 and 9. (AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, J.B. Forbes)

Members of the major case squad and a Glendale police officer carry firearms into a secured area at the Glendale, Mo., police department on Tuesday, July 31, 2012. The squad probing the shooting deaths of suburban St. Louis mother Catherine Murch and her two children unleashed more than 20 investigators Tuesday, but authorities who originally viewed the case as a murder-suicide said it was too early to draw any conclusions. (AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Robert Cohen) EDWARDSVILLE INTELLIGENCER OUT; THE ALTON TELEGRAPH OUT

Murch did not immediately return a phone message from The Associated Press seeking comment.

Police originally said Murch was reading inside the home when he heard gunfire. He then found the bodies of his wife and son on the home's first floor and his daughter on the second level. First responders arrived at the home and found Murch trying to resuscitate his son.

The case squad issued a news release Tuesday saying that it had assigned more than 20 investigators to the case.

Fagan said the size of the probe was necessary to "get a very clear understanding of what happened."

The deaths shocked the affluent neighborhood, where the Murches' stately, two-story brick home sits on a large, neatly manicured lot. Court records show the Murches bought the home for $764,900 in 2007.

By Tuesday afternoon, ribbons had been placed on a tree in front. A lone vase of flowers was placed in the yard, near yellow tape that encircled the property.

Records show Catherine Murch graduated from the University of Missouri in 1992 with a degree in political science and received a nursing degree from Saint Louis University in 1994. Online records indicate she was a registered nurse.

Mitch Murch, 43, graduated from the University of Missouri, also in 1992. He owns a maintenance management company and is director of a business called The Maids International in Omaha, Neb., a cleaning company franchise, according to online records.

The family was active in Mary Queen of Peace Catholic Church in nearby Webster Groves. The children attended Mary Queen of Peace School, where Catherine Murch was a frequent volunteer. She was chairman for a committee preparing for an ice cream social in mid-August, according to the parish website.

A hurriedly-arranged memorial service was held at the church Monday night, hours after the shootings. The Archdiocese of St. Louis said in a statement that Mary Queen of Peace pastors were working with relatives and grieving parish members "to cope with the aftermath of this tragedy." Messages left Tuesday at the parish were not returned.

Earlier on HuffPost:


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