By THOMAS WATKINS,AP
LOS ANGELES (Jan.
28) - In one upstairs bedroom, the bodies of twin 2-year-old boys were
found beside their dead mother. In another bedroom,5-year-old twin
girls and their 8-year-old sister lay next to their lifeless father.
Officers discovered
the horrific scene after rushing to a home in Wilmington, prompted by
the father's distraught letter faxed to a TV station describing a
"tragic story" and a call to authorities.
Police believe Ervin
Lupoe, 40, killed his five children and his wife before turning the gun
on himself. Both adults were recently fired from their hospital jobs.
"Why leave our
children in someone else's hands?" Lupoe wrote in his letter faxed to
KABC-TV. The station posted the letter on its Web site with some parts
redacted.
The station called
police after receiving the fax, and a police dispatch center also
received a phone call from a man who stated, "I just returned home and
my whole family's been shot." Police are unsure who the male caller
was, but they suspect it was the father.
Officers rushed to
the home in Wilmington, a small community between the ports of Los
Angeles and Long Beach, about 8:30 a.m. Tuesday and found the bodies.
All the victims 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 —
addressed to "whom it may concern" and explaining "why we are dead" —
asserted that the wife, 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.
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.
The letter
indicated that Lupoe and his wife — both 40 — 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 Lupoe's letter "but we are
confident that no one told him to take his own life or the lives of his
family."
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.
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.
Bob Pierce, a Long
Beach attorney who represented the Lupoes in an auto 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 'no problem.'"
To Amanda Garcia,
everything seemed normal in the Lupoe house next door. Her neighbors
always had a friendly wave and their five young children would play
outside.
"They were happy,
they had birthday parties," the 22-year-old Garcia said as she choked
back tears near her home. "The kids were always outside on bikes,
riding on their wagon."