A 911 call led Tulsa, Oklahoma, police to find five people
stabbed to death inside a home, a girl critically injured and two suspects
--16- and 18-year-old brothers, both related to the victims -- running out the
door.
The teens didn't
remain on the loose for long, though. They were tracked down with the help of a
police dog.
It was not
immediately clear what charges the teens may face or what spurred the gruesome
crime, much less why they might have done it.
Whatever the
motivation, the episode has shaken citizens in Broken Arrow, a Tulsa suburb of
about 100,000 people that typically has one or two homicides a year, not five
in one day.
"A crime
like this is unprecedented for our area, just given our safe community,"
police Sgt. Thomas Cooper
told CNN affiliate KJRH. "Unfortunately, it is a family that
was destroyed over a crime, and we have to remember those victims as well as
those officers and initial responders."
Police: Officers risked lives pulling out victims
Authorities got their first hint of
trouble around 11:30 p.m. Wednesday (12:30 a.m. ET Thursday) in the form a 911
call placed from a home in what Broken Arrow Police Cpl. Leon Calhoun called a
low-crime and "very middle-class" neigborhood.
Yet that didn't
mean they knew what to expect. The 911 call came from an open line, Cooper
explained to CNN, meaning it went through but there was no conversation with
the dispatcher.
Two officers
arrived, knocked on the door, but got no answer. But they did hear moaning and
forced their way in, according to Calhoun.
It was a
nightmare. The officers saw a wounded 13-year-old girl and pulled her out for
safety. Then they took out two more victims.
And the officers
risked their lives in the process, said Calhoun, because they had no idea if a
killer or killers lurked nearby.
The final toll
became clear only after authorities canvassed the entire single-family home.
Two adults and three juveniles were dead, while two more people -- the
13-year-old girl and a 2-year-old girl, who was unharmed -- were alive.
Toddler in protective custody; 13-year-old in hospital
As to those responsible, Cooper told
KJRH, "It appears that the two suspects fled out the door sometime during
our arrival."
Police were soon
on their trail, including a K-9 team that followed the teens into a wooded area
behind the home where they were caught.
Those suspects,
who are brothers, lived inside the same Broken Arrow home as their victims.
It's not clear if and when they'll appear in court and what charges they'll
face, though Calhoun said five murder counts are a real possibility.
As to their
motivation, planning, and each one's role in it all -- including whether one
might have carried out the killings, while the other had a more passive role --
those are all things investigators are trying to figure out, said Calhoun.
Surviving family
members might shed some light, but they've proven difficult to find. The two
adult victims are believed to be the parents of the juveniles and suspects,
according to Calhoun. And one challenge is that the family has moved around a
lot, according to the Broken Arrow police corporal.
The one person
without any injuries is a toddler and in state protective custody.
As to the
13-year-old girl, she was in critical condition Thursday morning at a nearby
hospital. Calhoun say investigators want her to improve before they talk to
her, though they think she'll be vital to the case.
We are
"expecting the 13-year-old to help a lot," he said.
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