Pair Charged With Murder In Wash. Massacre
Woman, Boyfriend Charged With Killing 6 Members Of Her Family Could Face Death Penalty
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Mary Anderson, center, daughter of Wayne and Judy Anderson, is comforted by King County Detective Robin Cleary right, Thursday Dec. 27, 2007. At left, in red, is Ben Anderson, Mary's son. They were at the crime scene to drop off flowers and pick up her parent's dog. (AP/The Seattle Times, Greg Gilbert)
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Ben Anderson, the nephew of one of the suspects in the multiple murders in Carnation, Michele Anderson, looks on during the arraignment hearing for her and her boyfriend, Joseph McEnroe Thursday Dec. 27, 2007. at the King County Jail. (AP/The Seattle Times,John Lock)
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An investigator heads into a home surrounded by police tape at the scene where six people were found dead Wednesday, Dec. 26, 2007, in Carnation, Wash. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)
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Carnation is in a mostly rural area about 21 miles east of Seattle. (CBS)
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A King County Sheriff's deputy directs a driver near the scene of where at more than three people were found dead Wednesday, Dec. 26, 2007, in Carnation, Wash. Sgt. Jim Laing said the bodies were discovered about 8 a.m. by someone who knew the family. (AP)
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Michele K. Anderson and Joseph Thomas McEnroe, both 29, confessed to detectives they had shot six members of Anderson's family, according to court documents. Anderson said both of them shot her parents, brother and sister-in-law, while McEnroe killed the children, according to a separate affidavit.
King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg, who will decide whether to seek the death penalty, said the motive for the slayings may never be known.
"Given the magnitude of this crime, I pledge to give this case serious consideration for the state's ultimate penalty," Satterberg said.
Anderson and McEnroe were each charged with six counts of aggravated first-degree murder. The aggravated circumstances underlying the charges include that there were multiple victims, and that two killings - the shootings of the children - were done to conceal a crime or the perpetrators' identity.
Conviction on aggravated first-degree murder in Washington is punishable only by death or life in prison without possibility of parole.
Satterberg has 30 days from the filing of the charges to decide whether to seek the death penalty against Anderson and McEnroe, reports CBS News affiliate KIRO.
Anderson and McEnroe were ordered held without bail after an initial court hearing Thursday.
In police affidavits filed in court Thursday, King County Sheriff's Detective John Pavlovich described the horrific killings he said McEnroe outlined to authorities, but the detective made no mention of motive.
First, Pavlovich wrote, McEnroe and Anderson shot her parents, Wayne Anderson, 60, and Judy Anderson, 61, with large-caliber pistols and dragged the bodies to a shed. A short time later, the Andersons' son, Scott, his wife, Erica - both 32 - and their children, Olivia, 6, and Nathan, 3, arrived for a Christmas Eve visit.
"Knowing that Scott and his family were potential witnesses, Joe and Michele shot them," Pavlovich wrote. His affidavit said McEnroe shot all four.
McEnroe and Anderson confessed to authorities, court documents said. Anderson said both of them shot her parents, brother and sister-in-law, and McEnroe killed the children, according to a separate affidavit. It also does not give a motive.
McEnroe and Anderson, who had been together for six years, lived in a trailer about 200 yards from her parents' house. After the killings, they tried to flee to Canada, court documents said, but they returned the following day and were detained.
At Thursday's hearing, both defendants waived their right to appear before a judge.
McEnroe appeared briefly in the courtroom, then left with his attorney. The attorney, Devon Gibbs, did not return a call for comment Thursday.
Anderson's attorney, public defender George Eppler, said Thursday he spoke with her briefly before the hearing. "We limited our conversation solely to the issue of today's court appearance," Eppler said.
She felt she wasn't loved enough and everyone didn't appreciate her and she was pushed out of everyone's life.
Ben Andersongrandson of victim
Ben Anderson, the elder couple's grandson, has said money could have been a factor in the deaths. "She felt she wasn't loved enough and everyone didn't appreciate her and she was pushed out of everyone's life," he said Wednesday night, referring to Michele Anderson.
McEnroe's mother, Sean Johnson of Minneapolis, said she hasn't had much contact with McEnroe since he cut ties with his family after a dispute over money.
She told The Seattle Times that her eldest son was a "good Christian" and she was shocked he had been arrested in the slayings.
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