Interim Chicago Police Superintendent John Escalante yesterday said it appeared to be an isolated incident and there was no wider threat to the community, but police added extra patrols in the neighborhood as a precaution. Asked whether it could have been a murder-suicide, he said it was "a possibility."
Standing in the street in the Gage Park neighborhood, Escalante told reporters that police checked the house yesterday afternoon after receiving a call from a co-worker worried about someone who lived there. The person had missed two days of work, which was "highly unusual and very suspicious," Escalante said.
Authorities were still working to identify the dead. Escalante said it's probable they were all family members and police were trying to locate relatives. The child is thought to be 10 to 12 years old.
A relative of the family who lived in the home said last evening that the family seemed happy.
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"They were a normal family. Everything was fine," Noemi Martinez, 29, said from Dallas during a phone interview in Spanish. She said her husband was a nephew and cousin of the home's residents.
"Right now we just want to know who did this. They didn't deserve this. We don't understand what happened," she said. Escalante said the investigation would take time but emphasized there was no imminent threat.
"At this time we don't believe that there is any threat to the surrounding community or any known threat right now to the immediate neighborhood," he said.
In the neighborhood, three teenage boys said they were worried about a classmate at Rachel Carson Elementary School who lived in the home. They feared he was among the dead.
"I just saw him three days ago. He was walking by. He told me, 'How are your basketball games going?'" said Jesus Anderade.