Lodi News-Sentinel

Man arrested in Ohio suspect of killing wife's parents, brother in Florida

- By Mark Puente, McKenna Oxenden and Zachary T. Sampson

TARPON SPRINGS, Fla. — Before Christmas, neighbors saw a thin man digging a ditch outside a home with a toddler at his side.

Later, a person would notice that the air conditione­r at the house was running nonstop and a foul odor drifted from the walls.

Police arrived New Year's Day after a call from someone concerned about the welfare of the people inside. The holiday had come and gone, and no one had seen them.

Investigat­ors found a gruesome scene — three people dead.

Richard Ivancic, 71, Laura Ivancic, 59, and their son, Nicholas Ivancic, 25, had been killed Dec. 19 or 20, according to authoritie­s. Detectives soon figured out that their daughter Jamie Ivancic, 21, was missing.

The thin man, they said, was her husband, 25-year-old Shelby Svensen.

They tracked him to Ohio, where authoritie­s arrested him Thursday next to Laura Ivancic's SUV. He did not fight, they said. Investigat­ors took his children, ages 2 and 3, to the local department for children and families.

Svensen, according to records and two people who know him, has married a number of times and goes by several names. He's had run-ins with the law, including allegation­s of domestic violence, and has sought psychologi­cal treatment. Tarpon Springs police identified him as Shelby John Nealy, but Ohio records show that he changed his name years ago.

Jamie Ivancic was still missing late Friday, according to police. But deputies in neighborin­g Pasco County descended on a home in Port Richey with a forensic anthropolo­gy team, in an investigat­ion they said was tied to Tarpon Springs. Someone had found a body.

The Ivancic family moved to Florida four or five years ago for retirement, said Laura's brother, James Zindroski.

Richard had worked for the power company in Ohio and Laura, a former pharmacy technician, had been a stay-at-home mother to foster children.

They eventually adopted two of those children, Nicholas and Jamie.

Zindroski said Richard had children from a previous marriage in Florida. Laura had issues with her skin and allergies that they hoped the southern air would soothe.

They were happy, living with Nicholas, who worked in air conditioni­ng, Zindroski said.

“They were just enjoying life,” he said.

Jamie Ivancic and Svensen bounced around, as far as Zindroski knew, but they had spent time back in Ohio, living with an aunt and ailing grandmothe­r. Zindroski, a former police chief in Ohio, knew little of Svensen other than that he had spent time in and out of psychiatri­c centers and had a criminal record.

“He was always kind of a mysterious kind of kid,” Zindroski said. “You never really could pin him down with anything.”

Records in Ohio show that he had been charged with burglary and robbery. At the time of his arrest Thursday in Lakewood, Ohio, police said, he was subject to a domestic violence warrant from nearby Broadview Heights, dating to October 2016.

The police report from that incident shows emergency responders were called to a home where Svensen, then 23, was having suicidal thoughts. They found him and Jamie Ivancic sitting in the basement. She was crying, according to the report, and Svensen said: “I need help. I need to go to the hospital.”

Ivancic told investigat­ors that she did not want Svensen to get in trouble, but described how he had choked her, thrown her against a wall and bitten her in the shoulder.

Ivancic told investigat­ors she was 16 weeks pregnant with their second child. She worried she was bleeding internally and could lose the baby.

Svensen later told a physician that Ivancic had hit and choked him, too, and she was also charged with domestic violence, according to the police report. She already had another domestic violence case pending at the time.

The couple married in Palm Beach County in November 2015, records show. Svensen is listed as Shelby John Neally, with two Ls.

Police have not said why they believe Svensen killed his inlaws.

Investigat­ors said they found transactio­ns under his name at a GameStop in Palm Harbor and at a local McDonald's and Home Depot. Tina Bartek, a store employee at the GameStop, said Svensen came in Dec. 16 — three or four days before the killings — and received $100 in cash for about 20 videos. He had two children with him.

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