Mass Murder Family In L.A. Part Of Trend
Southern California Shaken By Recent Wave Of Family Tragedies Involving Murder-Suicide
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Cards and gifts hang on the gate of a home Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2009, where a man killed his wife and five children Tuesday before turning the gun on himself, in the Wilmington area of Los Angeles. (AP PHOTO)
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This photo obtained Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2009 from Ervin Antonio Lupoe's Facebook Web page shows their five children, Brittney, center, twin girls Jaszmin and Jassely, rear, and twin boys Benjamin and Christian. The exact identification of the sets of twins is not known. Lupoe fatally shot his wife and children and himself Tuesday , Jan. 27, 2009. (AP)
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Unidentified neighbors react to the news of a man --as yet not identified--who, apparently upset about his job situation killed his wife and five children before committing suicide in a nearby two-story tract home in Wilmington, Calif. on Jan.27, 2009. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
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A Los Angeles police investigator leaves a home where earlier, a man apparently upset about his job situation killed his wife and five children before committing suicide at this two-story tract home in Wilmington, Calif. on Jan.27, 2009. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
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"Why leave our children in someone else's hands?" Ervin Lupoe wrote in his letter to KABC-TV. The station posted the letter on its Web site later with some parts redacted.
The station called police after receiving the fax and a phone call from Lupoe, and a police dispatch center also received a call from a man who said, "I just returned home and my whole family's been shot."
Officers rushed to the home in Wilmington, a small community between the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, about 8:30 a.m. and found the bodies.
All were shot in the head, some multiple times, coroner's Assistant Chief Ed Winter said. The killings may have occurred between Monday evening and early Tuesday, based on neighbors' accounts of firecracker sounds, he said.
Although the fax asserted that Ana Lupoe planned the killings of the whole family, police Lt. John Romero said Ervin Lupoe was the suspect. A revolver was found next to his body.
The Los Angeles Times reports that area police continued their investigation Wednesday, a day after mourners held a candlelight vigil outside the home where the recently fired X-ray technician killed his wife, his children and then himself.
About 30, mostly Latino, mourners gathered and repeated the rosary in Spanish as they gathered in front of the home, with the family vehicles still parked in the driveway, the newspaper reported. A white poster with black writing read: "Rest in Peace Family Lupoe," and Santeria candles and teddy bears crowded a corner of the driveway.
Myrna Navarro, 35, who lives across the street from the Lupoe home, said that the family moved in when their eldest daughter, Brittney, was a baby and the two sets of twins had not yet been born. Navarro said she heard about the shootings while at work.
"I was just in shock, my body, I just got the goose-bumps," she told The Times.
Ana Lupoe's body was found in an upstairs bedroom with the bodies of the couple's twin 2-year-old boys. The bodies of an 8-year-old girl and twin 5-year-old girls were found alongside Ervin Lupoe in another bedroom. Both parents were 40.
It was the fifth mass death of a Southern California family by murder or suicide in a year. Police urged those facing tough economic times to get help rather than resort to violence.
"Today our worst fear was realized," said Deputy Chief Kenneth Garner. "It's just not a solution. There's just so many ways you find alternatives to doing something so horrific and drastic as this."
Ervin Lupoe removed three of the children from school about a week and a half ago, saying the family was moving to Kansas, the principal told KCAL-TV. Crescent Heights Elementary School Principal Cherise Pounders-Caver said nothing seemed to be troubling Ervin Lupoe, and she did not ask why the family was moving.
Kaiser Permanente Medical Center West Los Angeles released a statement confirming Lupoe and his wife were fired as medical technicians more than a week ago. The hospital said the firings followed an internal investigation but would not specify why they lost their jobs.
In his letter, Ervin Lupoe claimed he and his wife both had been fired and that she suggested they kill themselves and their children. Police described the fax but did not release details.
The letter indicated that Lupoe and his wife had been investigated for misrepresenting their employment to an outside agency to obtain childcare. He claimed that an administrator told the couple on Dec. 23: "You should not even had bothered to come to work today you should have blown your brains out."
Lupoe's letter said the couple complained to the human resources department and eventually were offered an apology but two days later they were fired.
"They did nothing to the manager who stated such and did not attempt to assist us in the matter, knowing we have no job and five children under 8 years with no place to go. So here we are," the note said.
At the bottom of the letter, Lupoe wrote, "Oh lord, my God, is there no hope for a widow's son?" The phrase is frequently found in Internet discussions about the novel "The Da Vinci Code," Freemasons and Mormonism.
Kaiser Permanente said staff was "saddened by the despair in Mr. Lupoe's letter ... but we are confident that no one told him to take his own life or the lives of his family."
Police Capt. Billy Hayes said the hospital may have had reason to fire the couple. "It wasn't that he was laid off as a result of the economic situation," he said.
Lupoe's fax identified his children as Brittney, 8; 5-year-old twins Jaszmin and Jassely; and twins Benjamin and Christian, ages 2 years and 4 months. Winter confirmed the identities of the girls, but the boys' names were pending.
The two-story home, much larger than its one-story neighbors, sits in front of a railroad track in Wilmington, a small community about 18 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. A children's playset stood in the backyard.
On his Facebook page, Lupoe posted photographs of a daughter at karate class, and of a fancy tub and wash basins in an apparently remodeled bathroom.
Retired truck driver Jaime Solache, who lives a few doors down, said many of these newer, larger homes in the neighborhood had gone into foreclosure. The Lupoe house, which has a sign by the driveway reading "The Lupoe's Pad," is about 6 years old, Solache said.
News of the killings sent shivers through the community, and several neighbors came to the yellow police tape to watch a steady procession of officials enter and leave the home.
"This area right here is quiet, calm," said Armando Chacon, who lives one block north. "People like to sit out at weekends and barbecue. Other than this, no problems at all."
In 1994, Lupoe was charged with carrying a concealed firearm but it was either dismissed or not prosecuted, court documents show.
Lupoe got a state license to work as a security guard in 1989 and a permit to carry a gun as a security guard in 1993 but both expired in 2007, said Russ Heimerich, a spokesman for the state Bureau of Security and Investigative Services.
Lupoe and members of his family were plaintiffs in an auto accident case that had recently been resolved, said John Wallace, an attorney for the defendant in the case. Bob Pierce, a Long Beach attorney who represented the Lupoes in the accident, said the case did not involve any serious injuries and the family was expected to receive "well below $10,000," he said.
Lupoe called Monday to find out when the money might be coming, Pierce said. Pierce told him that it might be another week or two and he said it wasn't a problem.
The region has been shaken by several recent mass murders.
Southern California family tragedies over the past year included a Christmas Eve massacre of nine people in Covina by a gunman who later killed himself. Six died in a Porter Ranch murder-suicide in October; five members of a San Clemente family died in a mysterious suicide in June; and five died in a murder-suicide in Yorba Linda in February.
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- This is a bad part of living a dream - bigger house, better income, perfect family.
A lot of us, who travel so far away from home, away from our parents, relatives and friends to start building our dream home, dream career and dream family.
When all fail, you will pretty much see this kind of tragedy.
If parents, relatives and friends are all in close distance, they can all spot your worries and offer collective helps, no one will suffer this kind of tragic loss of a whole generation.
In this time of life, family value is becoming more and more important in the era of economic bubble / dreams coming and going.
Perhaps we all should start to keep in touch with our brother, sister and parents more often to ensure that they are ok in this downturn of the whole World. - Reply to this comment
- This family''s story is sad. My heart goes out to the family and friends they left behind. You wonder what goes through a persons mind when they think murdering their child''s life as an option for anything. What about sacrificial love...where you lay down your life for another. There is no excuse for the selfishness of these two parents who took their childrens lives. Our only hope is the children are in heaven with God. And they are laughing and playing and being loved forever. I wish and pray that people would do whatever it takes to not give up and leave their children a strong legacy of Love and Hope and Faith. Never never never give up! Pray, work hard, hug and reassure your kids and keep going!!! You''ll never regret choosing life! Peace to all during these times.
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- SoCal is one of the best places to live on this planet despite the fact that tragedies such as these occur as well as all parts of the country. SoCal is solidly Democratic.
Posted by caliguy55
Tragedy like this can happen anywhere. There are more people in SoCal than most other places by geographical area, so more things like this happen where there are more people.
SoCal is paradise, you can ski in the morning and lay on the beach in the afternoon. There are great museums and cultural attractions as well as some of the best playgrounds like Disneyland in the world.
But the roads are crowded, the demand on less and less resources like water and electricity is going thru the roof and so are the costs. The air, while cleaner than 10 years ago is still dirty. When you are at the beach in the afternoon so is everyone else. People are rude, crime is not low. But one thing remains.
SoCal is not majority Democrat, it is largely Republican unless you move to the liberal areas around UCLA and some other Hoity-Toity areas where the "plastic people" (celebs) live. - Reply to this comment
- If you have never faced the possiblity of suddenly not being able to provide for your family, never felt the crushing pressure of losing it all, you cannot blame this man or woman. I hope none of us ever have to face that kind of pressure.
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- Guns are designed to kill people.
Posted by remrafbn
Not your tired drivel again. Saying guns were designed to kill people is like saying spoons were designed to make women fat. It is a gross exageration of one outcome of using a tool.
Guns were designed to allow people to;
- Put food on the table.
- Protect themselves, their property or their country.
- As sporting tools like balls or bats.
- As tools to rid farmers of rodents etc...
Once again remrafbn, get over your bias, get an education on the matter and get real.
If you feel so strongly about the evil of guns, give us a legit manner in which they can be taken out of society and how citizens can protect themselves, and their families, from criminals.
Even if this poor man and lady did not have access to a gun, do you think that would have stopped them from comitting this tragedy? - Reply to this comment
- Without a gun he would have used an axe or perhaps a home made exposive. So then we would have to ban axes, and anything that could be used to make a bomb. So roughly have of home depot.
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- I think there''s far too much hopelessness in the world today. I would recommend reading "Mother Teresa: Her Essential Wisdom" (a collection of public quotes from her life). I was in a despairing mood a few days before this Christmas Past, when I began reading it, (it was a gift bought from the "on sell" tables at Barnes and Noble)I did not stop until I had read the whole thing. It totally transformed me, restoring hope were it had been lost. Every time I get a little money, I buy a copy and give it to someone who I think might need it. Truly, "it is in giving that we receive."
Aaron Wilson - Reply to this comment
- Other than certain parts of the N.E. California remains, by far, the single most wicked, very evil and dispicable states in the United States. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by karlagolay at 10:40 PM : Jan 28, 2009
Ummm, yeah. Spoken like someone who put himself through a *** change in order to defeat a gay *** addiction....because Jesus said so. - Reply to this comment
- gun or not or any other weapon,you dont go around killing your family.there is nothing"trendy"about it.
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- bullshiat,theres no TREND there.i have a gun and dont go around killing people.
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Ex-NBA ref Tim Donaghy 



