This makes more sense ....the sound factor has hung me up from the beginning. 3 of the 9 were almost incapable of defending themselves. One could presumably disable several of those more likely to fight back without awakening everyone else. Then he could go back & finish the job.... I'm thinking hammer, tire iron or baseball bat.... beating that many would certainly make less noise than at least 9 gunshots for neighbors to have heard, but I doubt it was totally without sounds traveling through older mobile home construction & open windows. However, with numerous people living there, there must have been a lot of activity & those living nearby
turned a deaf ear..... I questioned JR's involvement all along. Why lie about your whereabouts in the wake of mass murder? & why did he drop by the younger brotrher's house at 5 AM? This case is tragic all the way around. Prayers for the infant & remaining family.
Interesting read:
'CSI' alters reality of mass murders like Brunswick killings
These types of slayings require specific theories and approaches to investigate, experts say
.
"The Times-Union spoke with three criminologists about the crime of mass murder
"The New Hope slayings are clearly domestic because they took place in the family's trailer.
Most people are accustomed to the typical pattern of familicide, where a member of the family - mostly the male leader, but sometimes a child or mother - takes out the whole family and sometimes kills him or herself.
Often such actions are taken as payback for perceived injustice, Fox said, where there is one key target but others are killed as a further way to get even with that person.
"In situations with children who commit family annihilation," Fox said, "one parent might be the target."
In other cases, a family is killed by an outsider, whether motivated by a robbery, a grudge, a drug deal gone bad or some other reason.
Whatever the motive, mass murders require specific theories and approaches to investigate.
"Mass murders are different," Fox said. "It's not murder multiplied by eight victims."
"when it comes to cases of family annihilation, more often than not the perpetrator is within the family. What police will tell you all the time is that, No. 1, the first set of suspects are in the family. You rule them out and then you begin to look at family friends and connections..."
http://jacksonville.com/news/metro/2009-09-07/story/csi_alters_reality_of_mass_murders_like_brunswick_killings