Fadden, 39, was a convicted sex offender and rapist who was about to stand trial on Monday when he carried out the killings before turning the gun on himself.

Families of the two teenage victims were allowed on the property where they witnessed a horrific scene.

A dog collar, handcuffs, drug paraphernalia, and weapons were strewn across the laundry room. The house was littered with syringes filled with unknown substances.

Holly Guess, 35, who was married to McFadden, and her three children, Rylee Elizabeth Allen, 17; Michael James Mayo, 15; and Tiffany Dore Guess, 13, were all found slain on the property of McFadden’s rural Oklahoma home.

Ivy Webster, 14, and Brittany Brewer, 16, who had visited the home for a sleepover, who were also found dead at the house.

  • Pat12@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    When did this happen? And why would they show the scene of that crime to the families? That sounds very traumatizing as if what happened wasn’t bad enough

    Which part of this is unresolved? The perpetrator seems obvious?

    • MyskaOP
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      2 years ago

      It happened back on May 1st. The article says that the parents were allowed to the crime scene as I believe it wasn’t considered a crime scene by the police anymore.

      Based on what I got, their behavior was like “The killer is gone, there won’t be a trial so why bother further?”

      The murders were committed by Jesse McFadden, the convicted sex offender. So yes, the perpetrator is obvious.

      The problem here lies in the police’s actions cause since the killer is dead, they gathered no evidence, they did nothing to understand the motive behind those crimes, and they didn’t care enough to give the families a type of closure as those people want to find out what happened to their children and grandchildren.

      If we’re looking at the unresolved part of the case, that could be the one. The police didn’t do their job.

      I watched this video by Stephanie Harlowe. She talks about the case extensively.