The Guardian (USA)

Hawaii family, including three children, die in apparent murder-suicide

- Guardian staff and agencies The Associated Press contribute­d reporting

Hawaii police said on Sunday they were investigat­ing what appears to be the murder-suicide of a family, including three children, by its patriarch at a Honolulu home.

Despite police’s descriptio­n of the incident as a murder-suicide, such crimes since the 1980s have been known as family annihilati­ons. Communitie­s – especially in the US – often perceive those crimes to be isolated tragedies.

However, an Indianapol­is Star investigat­ion found there had been an average of one family annihilati­on somewhere in the country every five days since 2020.

Police investigat­ing Sunday’s case first arrived at the home in the Honolulu neighborho­od of Manoa at 8.30am but left after no one answered the door, Lt Deena Thoemmes said at a news conference. She explained police were responding to an anonymous person’s call and had no cause to enter the home.

Officers returned at 9.15am after receiving another call and entered after speaking with a caller. They found four people who had been fatally stabbed.

The dead were a wife and three children aged 10, 12 and 17. The husband also was found dead.

A preliminar­y investigat­ion showed the husband fatally stabbed his wife and children, Thoemmes said. She added the husband’s cause of death was under investigat­ion.

The ages of the adults was not immediatel­y known, and the names of the dead had not been publicly released as of early Monday.

There was no history of domestic calls to the residence, and police did not have a motive for the killings, Thoemmes said.

Witnesses reported there had been an argument in the home early on Sunday morning, police said.

The five deaths mark the state’s worst mass killings since the Xerox murders on 2 November 1999, when Byran Koji Uyesugi fatally shot seven co-workers, including his supervisor, the local police chief Joe Logan said.

Logan predicted Sunday’s scene would affect officers, “as it would any officer, for the rest of their lives”.

In 94% of such cases, family annihilato­rs are male, and they often die by suicide, according to the Star’s investigat­ion.

Sunday’s case was unusual in the fact that guns are used in 86% of family annihilati­ons. But with no centralize­d database for family annihilati­ons available, the crimes’ characteri­stics and prevalence are not generally well known at the academic level.

In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifelin­e.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other internatio­nal helplines can be found at befriender­s.org

jects, in order to highlight where detail has been altered, knowing what should be sharp and what shouldn’t.

“As per the annotation­s, this reveals sharp transition­s of detail, usually from hard edged selections [in the image editing programme Adobe Photoshop], which can be either straight or worked around curved areas of detail.

“It’s the juddering of straight-line detail that is the biggest telltale sign of multiple frames being composited together. This can be seen extensivel­y around the hair, arms, and especially at the zip midway down the princess’s jacket. Seeing repetition of detail in the finer areas also reveals the likely use of the cloning tool in Photoshop.

“The other two main offenders are the hands and knee of Princess Charlotte, with the now famous hand mismatchin­g her jumper sleeve, and her knee slipping out of focus too readily compared to the expected depth-offield sharpness.”

20 anomalies

The Guardian imaging team has identified 20 potential issues with the photograph:

 ?? ?? Honolulu police investigat­e the killings of multiple people at a home in Honolulu's Manoa neighborho­od on 10 March 2024. Photograph: Craig T Kojima/Honolulu Star-Advertiser via AP
Honolulu police investigat­e the killings of multiple people at a home in Honolulu's Manoa neighborho­od on 10 March 2024. Photograph: Craig T Kojima/Honolulu Star-Advertiser via AP

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