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Long Branch shooting: Rare for minors to kill family members, expert says

January 2, 2018 by  
Filed under Lingerie Events

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CLOSELONG BRANCH SHOOTING LEAVES FAMILY DEAD
Softball teammate says ‘He was more than a friend’ | 0:57

Joe Rios was still in shock that his friend and family members were killed by that man’s 16-year-old son in Long Branch, NJ.
THOMAS P. COSTELLO

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CLOSELONG BRANCH SHOOTING LEAVES FAMILY DEAD
Long Branch shooting: APP Reporter live on the scene | 2:24

Here’s what we know so far about the quadruple homicide in Long Branch. Video cut off at the end due to technical difficulties.

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CLOSELONG BRANCH SHOOTING LEAVES FAMILY DEAD
Friend recalls how Long Branch murder victim did everything for his family | 2:26

Ronnie Pacheco describes how his long-time friend Steven Kologi would do anything for his family, including working extra jobs and attending sports activities. Kologi, his wife and a friend were killed by his son on New Year’s Eve in Long Branch, NJ
THOMAS P. COSTELLO

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CLOSELONG BRANCH SHOOTING LEAVES FAMILY DEAD
Neighbor’s father describes meeting murdered Long Branch family | 2:01

Carmen Guadious, West Long Branch, recalls meeting members of the family that where murdered along Wall Street in Long Branch, NJ. His son lives next door to the home where 3 family members and a friend were allegedly killed by a 16-year-old boy.
THOMAS P. COSTELLO

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CLOSELONG BRANCH SHOOTING LEAVES FAMILY DEAD
Neighbor describes hearing mix of gunshots and fireworks | 1:37

James Roskowinski describes how he heard a mix of fireworks and gunshots near where four people were killed in Long Branch, NJ, by a 16-year-old with a semiautomatic weapon.
THOMAS P. COSTELLO

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CLOSELONG BRANCH SHOOTING LEAVES FAMILY DEAD
Three family members, friend, killed by 16-year-old in Long Branch, NJ | 1:03

The Monmouth County Prosecutor reports that three family members and a friend were killed by a 16-year-old with a semiautomatic weapon on Wall Street in Long Branch, NJ, on New Year’s Eve.
THOMAS P. COSTELLO

  • Softball teammate says 'He was more than a friend'
  • Long Branch shooting: APP Reporter live on the scene
  • Friend recalls how Long Branch murder victim did everything for his family
  • Neighbor's father describes meeting murdered Long Branch family
  • Neighbor describes hearing mix of gunshots and fireworks
  • Three family members, friend, killed by 16-year-old in Long Branch, NJ

Residents woke up on New Year’s Day to news that a 16-year-old boy had been arrested and accused by authorities of murdering his mother, father, sister and a family friend in Long Branch.

Long Branch shooting: 16-year-old in custody after killing family, friend

What’s unusual about that, according to University of South Florida Professor Kathleen Heide, who has written two books on family killings, is that the alleged offender is a juvenile.

“Based on the research that’s been done in the field, you’re looking, at most, one case a year” when a juvenile kills multiple family members, said Heide, who spent decades studying cases in which people kill their family members.

About five times a year an adult kills multiple family members, she said. More common is when a person kills a parent, which happens roughly five times a week in this country, according to Heide and a 2013 Psychology Today report. That might seem frequent, but such cases account for only 1 percent of U.S. murders.

Parricide – murdering a parent – is on the rise, accounting for 15 percent of family homicides in 1980 but 37 percent in 2008, according to the study.

“Children killing their parents is the fastest growing type of family homicide,” Mario Garrett, a professor of gerontology at San Diego State University, wrote for Psychology Today.

Heide said in just more than 20 percent of parricides it is a juvenile who kills a parent, noting it is far more typical for an adult to kill a parent. 

Offenders are typically white males in their mid-20s, she said. And when a juvenile is the offender, she said, it’s typical that a firearm was used.

“An adult who gets angry and has homicidal thoughts can put the brakes on and go ‘this is wrong,’” she said. “A juvenile, because of brain development, it’s much harder for the juvenile to stop, think, deliberate and weigh consequences.

“That underscores the importance, if parents have firearms in the home, to secure those weapons. Even though the risk is very, very low, juveniles, again because of brain development and impulsivity, are much more likely than adults to react and not put the brakes on.”

More: Long Branch shooting: mass slaying no bizarre anomaly

Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni said the 16-year-old charged in Sunday’s killings used a Century Arms rifle that was registered to a family member. 

In her work, Heide has evaluated 50 people, mostly juveniles and young adults, who commit such crimes and studied thousands of cases to help answer a question that comes up after each unfathomable killing, no matter where and when it happens: Why?

Heide said in most cases an offender fits into one of four categories:

  • severely abused: an individual who kills a parent because of physical, sexual, verbal or other abuse
  • severely mentally ill: a person with a documented history of mental illness
  • dangerously anti-social: a person who kills for selfish reasons, such as an inheritance or freedom, such as to date someone they wish 
  • enraged: a person who has anger toward their parents and erupts into lethal rage, sometimes after an argument or extended conflict, and can be fueled by alcohol or drugs 

Heide stressed that mental health evaluations and research are necessary before coming to conclusions about why a person committed an act.

And she noted that there’s even less known by scholars about the motives of juveniles who kill, because it is so rare.  


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