The Boston Globe

Illinois man charged with murder after string of attacks

Police say no motive is known in fatal rampage

- By Kathleen Foody and Rick Callahan

MURDER SUSPECT

Court and jail records show Christian Soto remains held without bond.

CHICAGO — a 22-year-old man has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder in a frenzied stabbing and beating rampage that left four people dead in a matter of minutes in a northern Illinois city, authoritie­s said Thursday.

Christian Soto is also charged with seven counts of attempted murder and home invasion with a dangerous weapon following the attacks in Rockford on wednesday that also left seven people injured.

Court and jail records show Soto appeared in court briefly Thursday afternoon and remains held without bond. He is next due in court Tuesday when a judge will determine if he stays in jail pending trial.

Mayor Tom Mcnamara, who was clearly shaken and struggled to hold back tears during a news conference Thursday, listed the victims as 63-year-old Romona Schupbach; 23-year-old Jacob Schupbach; 49-year-old Jay larson; and 15-year-old Jenna newcomb.

Three people remained hospitaliz­ed Thursday, officials said. The other four were treated and released, Rockford police Chief Carla Redd said.

Authoritie­s have released little informatio­n about Soto, who was arrested wednesday. a woman who identified herself as Soto’s sister declined to comment to the associated press.

Redd said Soto acted alone and that police do not know his motive for the attacks.

She said Soto and Jacob Schupbach had grown up together. Soto told police that the two were smoking marijuana at Schupbach’s home before the attack, winnebago County State’s attorney J. Hanley said.

“Soto said that he believes that drugs provided to him by Jacob were laced with an unknown narcotic,” Hanley said. “Soto said he became paranoid after the drug usage. He said he retrieved a knife from the kitchen . . . and proceeded to stab” his friend and his friend’s mother to death.

Hanley provided details of the deadly attacks that quickly unfolded in a neighborho­od of ranch-style homes soon after 1 p.m. on wednesday.

Rockford police responded first to a home on Holmes Street, where they found the bodies of Jacob Schupbach and his mother, Romona. both appeared to have been stabbed, Hanley said.

Hanley said witnesses saw Jacob Schupbach being chased across the street, and that the attacker hit or stabbed him as he lay on the ground. They said the attacker then drove a pickup truck over Schupbach.

Hanley said officers next found larson alive in a front yard on nearby Winnetka Drive, but he had been stabbed multiple times and died soon after.

Ruth Mendonça, inspector-in-charge of the Chicago office of the us postal Inspection Service, told reporters that larson had been a mail carrier in the area for 25 years.

Around that time, police began receiving 911 calls about an attack on nearby Cleveland avenue.

A woman and her adult son and daughter told officers that a man armed with a knife forced his way into their home. The man stabbed the mother near her left eye as she opened the door to let their dog out, Hanley said.

Her children fought with Soto and also were wounded. The son told police that the attacker ran away after he struck him with a syrup bottle.

Residents then flagged down first responders about another attack on the same street, Hanley said.

Jenna newcomb and a friend were watching a movie in her basement and Jenna’s sister was upstairs when Soto entered their house through an unlocked door. Hanley said one of the girls later told police Soto “was covered in blood.” He beat all three with a baseball bat, and Jenna died in the attack. The girls who survived are 14 and 15.

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