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8 People Shot to Death in Rural Ohio 8 People Shot to Death in Rural Ohio
(about 2 hours later)
Eight people were shot to death in a rural Ohio hamlet, law enforcement officials said on Friday, and neighbors and a state official said the victims appeared to be members of a single, extended family. Eight members of one family were found murdered in rural Ohio on Friday, including a mother shot while sleeping in the same room as her newborn baby, and the killer or killers were thought to still be at large, law enforcement officials said.
The Ohio attorney general, Mike DeWine, said in a statement that five adults and two juveniles had been shot “in what appears to be execution-style killings” in three neighboring houses. Mr. DeWine’s office later reported that an eighth body, that of an adult, had been discovered in a fourth location. The bodies of seven members of the Rhoden family were found before 8 a.m. in three houses near each other in southwestern Pike County, and three children, 4 days, 6 months and 3 years, were found in the houses, unharmed, the Pike County sheriff, Charles Reader, said. A few hours later, another family member was found dead in another house a few miles away.
Mr. DeWine told a local television station that all of the victims were apparently related. Officials said at a late-afternoon news conference that they could not rule out the possibility that other members of the family might be in danger, and that officers were checking on them throughout the region. “The family involved, we are advising the family members to be very careful, and take particular precaution,” the Ohio attorney general, Mike DeWine, said.
The first bodies were found on Friday morning, in Pike County, a hilly, sparsely populated stretch of southern Ohio, about 70 miles east of Cincinnati and a similar distance south of Columbus. “The individual or individuals who committed this crime obviously are dangerous,” Mr. DeWine said. “We believe they are still at large.”
Phil Fulton, the pastor of the nearby Union Hill Church, told local television stations that sheriff’s deputies alerted him before 8 a.m. that several people had been killed nearby. He knew the victims, and they included a woman, her children and her grandchildren. County officials said some members of the extended family had gathered and were receiving counseling and protection.
No one had been arrested by midafternoon Friday, and Mr. DeWine and Charles Reader, the Pike County sheriff, referred to the possibility that the killer was among the dead, though they were not yet sure. The dead included seven adults and a 16-year-old boy; officials had said earlier that two victims were juveniles.
Law enforcement officials said it was not considered an “active shooter” situation, and lockdowns of local schools were lifted within a few hours. “Each one of the victims appears to have been executed,” Mr. DeWine said. “Each one appears to be shot in the head.”
The state Bureau of Criminal Investigation, part of the attorney general’s office, sent a dozen agents to the scene. Asked if investigators had any indication of a motive, he said, “none.” Officials said it was also unclear when the killings took place.
“We have victims who were in bed” when shot, he said. “The one mom was killed in her bed with the 4-day-old right there.”
At first, officials said they could not rule out the possibility that the gunman was among the dead. But later, Mr. DeWine said, “The preliminary determination has been made that none of the eight individuals committed suicide.”
Officials declined to give the first names of any of the people killed. Phil Fulton, the pastor of the nearby Union Hill Church, told local television stations that he knew the victims, and they included a woman, her children and her grandchildren.
The state Bureau of Criminal Investigation, part of the Attorney General’s office, took over the investigation, and Mr. DeWine said the bureau had sent more than 30 investigators to Pike county.
The killings struck a hilly, sparsely populated area of southern Ohio, about 70 miles east of Cincinnati and a similar distance south of Columbia.
Sheriff Reader said the initial call to his office came at 7:53 a.m., reporting two people dead in a house. When deputies arrived at the scene, someone flagged them down and told them to check two other houses nearby. He declined to say who notified his office, or how that person discovered the killings.