Relatives Arrested in Gruesome Murders of 3 Children in Baltimore
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, May 28, 2004
BALTIMORE Two young relatives were arrested in the deaths
of three children found slain, one of them decapitated, in an apartment, police said Friday.
At a news conference, police identified the suspects as Adan
Espinosa Canela, 17, and Policarpio Espinosa, 22. They are cousins
and are related to the victims although it was not immediately
clear in what way.
The children were identified as 9-year-old Ricardo Espinoza; his
9-year-old sister, Lucero Quezada; and their 10-year-old cousin,
Alexis Quezada, a boy. One child was beheaded, the other two
partially beheaded.
"I've been around for 35 years, and I've seen, unfortunately, my
share of murders, but I've never seen something as bad as this,"
Deputy Police Commissioner Kenneth Blackwell said earlier.
Homicide detectives had stopped an unidentified "person of
interest" in connection with the crime late Thursday.
The children were found when one of their mothers returned home
from work Thursday. The woman, who speaks Spanish but little
English, told a neighbor, who called 911.
"There's blood all over my apartment," a woman said in the 911
call, apparently providing translation for the mother. "They've
killed my family!"
The first officer on the scene "couldn't handle it" and had to
give the call to another officer, Blackwell said. "Walking in on a
scene, seeing children of that tender age in that condition,
certainly breaks your heart."
Police found a butcher knife they believe was used in the
killings near the apartment where the victims were discovered.
Parents and teachers at the children's school, Cross Country
Elementary, hugged each other Friday morning and cried. Officials
said grief counselors would be on hand to help the 700 students.
The mother gave police information about where to find the man
who was questioned, Blackwell said. Officers stopped him a few
blocks from the crime scene.
Blackwell said the man's relationship to the children, if any,
was not known but he was an acquaintance of the mother.
The art deco apartment complex is on the edge of a neighborhood
of well-tended homes. It is largely Orthodox Jewish, with a mix of
white, black and Hispanic residents.
Al Johnson, who lives in the complex, said she heard the mother
screaming.
"They were very nice, cordial kids," Johnson said. "It's such
a shock to everyone. "It's a very quiet, peaceful community."
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