MOO, I want Justice now. He killed three human beings, one a child, and his only motivation was financial gain. After five and 1/2 yrs., I've forgotten some of the details, but they were morbid details. All three shot in the head. I remember he laid in wait for Dr. Han to get home, and possibly kept the wife and child alive until Dr. Han got there. He wanted to make demands of Dr. Han so it's possible. It was said he was in a business transaction with Dr. Han, but it sure sounded like he was forcing himself into the transaction. I believe he used the victim's own fire arm / gun. He wrapped the bodies in plastic. (see news quote below)
A lot of details in this older news article:
Inside the Han Family Murders - The Santa Barbara Independent
"On Wednesday evening, March 23, authorities discovered all three wrapped in clear plastic and duct taped in the garage of their 4640 Greenhill Way home near Goleta. Each had been shot multiple times, and their official cause of death was listed as “gunshot wounds to the head.”'
[...]
"Until his arrest, American-born Pierre Haobsh lived with his French-born father, Frederick Smith, or Frederick Haobsh, in rented rooms of an Oceanside house..."
[...]
"Nadine Courtney, a beauty blogger and former Newlyweds reality TV star, told the Associated Press via email Saturday that she is Haobsh’s sister."
"A March 25 KGTV San Diego newscast featured Oceanside neighbors, who remembered Haobsh as
“off.”
He had shown up at Dr. Han's business:
"On both Monday and Tuesday, Haobsh had reportedly walked into Han’s Santa Barbara Herb Clinic across from La Cumbre Plaza, bypassed the front desk, and said in a brusque, dismissive manner, “Henry knows who I am.” Han was last seen alive at 10 p.m. Tuesday night, and Yu and Emily at 7 p.m. that night, according to Brown."
You can read all about Dr. Han and his family in the article. His story is quite interesting and inspiring. He overcame a very rough beginning and became beloved by his patients. He was a very successful doctor and healed many people.
"As Carlson, Relis, and Bardach tell it, Han was about 12 when doctors, intellectuals, and professionals were rounded up as part of China’s now infamous Cultural Revolution. Han, his older sister, and his parents were exiled to a re-education camp in the rural outposts of western China. The stories vary, but according to Bardach, Han’s childhood was “unspeakable.”...."
MOO, Dr. Han overcame that unspeakable childhood, only for him, his wife, and five yr. old daughter to be murdered by Pierre Haobsh out of greed hoping for monetary gain that might have been all in his imagination.