Family slain in Richmond, Va.

Status
Not open for further replies.

Parkerized

Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2005
Messages
8
A family of four (Father, Mother 4yr.old daughter,and 9 year old daughter) were murdered in there home on New Years day.

http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RTD/MGArticle/RTD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1128769047442


A well-known Richmond couple and their two young daughters were found bound with their throats cut yesterday afternoon in the basement of their South Richmond home.

Richmond firefighters made the discovery about 1:45 p.m. after responding to a 911 call reporting a fire at the home of Bryan and Kathryn Harvey at 812 W. 31st St. in the Woodland Heights neighborhood.

Investigators said the family members had invited friends for a New Year's Day chili party that was to start about 2.

"Murder and arson -- for chrissake! -- in this neighborhood?" exclaimed 54-year Woodland Heights resident Stephen W. Tarrant, who lives across the street from the Harveys.

Officials said the case is being handled as a homicide and arson investigation.




Bryan Harvey was a noted musician with the band NrG Krysys and also worked in technology for the Henrico County school system. His wife was co-owner of the offbeat Carytown gift shop World of Mirth and active in the Carytown business community.

The Harveys had two children: Stella, 9, a third-grader at Fox Elementary School, and Ruby, 4, a preschooler at Second Presbyterian Church's child-care center.

As of late last night, police had not officially confirmed the identities of the victims.

The slayings shattered the serenity of a sunny and mild New Year's Day in Richmond and staggered residents of the leafy, middle-class community of young families and retirees -- a turn-of-the-century neighborhood within 10 minutes of downtown Richmond across the James River.

Officials were alerted to the scene by a local musician and fam- ily friend of the Harveys. Johnny Hott, who teamed with Bryan Harvey to form the local band House of Freaks in the 1980s and'90s, arrived with his daughter at the Harvey home about 1:40 p.m. to help set up for the party.

Hott said he walked into the house through unlocked front doors and immediately was engulfed in smoke.

"I yelled out, and no one answered, so I figured they all must be on a walk or something," said Hott, who saw no signs that the family was getting ready for the party. After checking the kitchen and seeing nothing on the stove, he ran from the home and yelled across the street for a neighbor to call 911.

Dozens of firefighters and police investigators converged on the two-story, red-brick corner home, where neighbors said the Harveys had lived for four or five years. Police Chief Rodney Monroe was at the scene, as was new Commonwealth's Attorney Michael N. Herring and two top deputies.

"It's obviously going to be a priority," Herring said.

One source close to the case said it did not appear there was extensive fire damage in the basement area, where the bodies were found.

Friends and authorities said Bryan Harvey had worked New Year's Eve, playing with his band at the Doubletree Hotel near Richmond International Airport and returning home about 2 a.m.

Friends and neighbors of the Harvey family said Stella spent New Year's Eve at a friend's house and returned home yesterday about 10 a.m., when she was greeted at the door by her mother.

"I never knew this family in any other way than as loving, wonderful people," said family friend Diane Vaccarino, one of dozens of friends who unwittingly arrived at the house anticipating a party, only to find a murder scene. Police forensics investigators and fire marshals worked into the evening yesterday trying to determine when the killings took place and when the fire was set. Homicide detectives were canvassing the area, interviewing friends, neighbors, band members and business associates of the couple in their search for clues.

Woodland Heights is more accustomed to petty vandalism and shed break-ins than murder. Neighbors and police said the last homicide occurred in 1987 with the death of Dr. Susan Hellams. Hellams, who lived several blocks away on 31st Street, was a victim of Timothy Spencer, whose killing rampage earned him the notorious nickname the South Side Strangler. Spencer was executed in 1994. Daniela Jacobs, principal of Fox Elementary School, where Stella was a third-grader, said she will pull together a crisis team to assist students and staff when school resumes tomorrow.

"We'll take all precautions needed to help [them]," said Jacobs, who lives two blocks from the Harveys.

"She was a wonderful little girl," Jacobs said of Stella. "She was a happy little girl."


Contact staff writer Jim Nolan at [email protected] or (804) 649-6061.
Contact staff writer Bill McKelway at [email protected] or (804) 649-6601.
Staff writers Tom Campbell and Stacy Hawkins Adams contributed to this report.

Horrible way to start the New Year.
Parkerized
 
Terrible... I heard on the news today that one of them ( didn't say which ) may have died from something other than cut throat.... news didn't give out much detail. Hope they catch the perp.
 
Some suspects now in custody...after they apparently murdered a SECOND family...

http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001807806

The Harvey family:

HARVEYfamily0107.jpg


How could ANYONE, even the most hardened criminal, murder a couple of little girls??????

I hope the people in custody are the perpetrators, and I sincerely hope justice is served. Speedily.

UPDATE:

At least one of the alleged perpetrators was recently released from prison:

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/P/PA_RICHMOND_SLAYINGS_VAOL-?SITE=VARIT&SECTION=US

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Two men arrested in the killings of seven people in their Richmond, Va., homes agreed Monday to be sent back to Virginia to face murder conspiracy charges.

Ray Joseph Dandridge and Ricky Gray, both 28, were captured Saturday in Philadelphia on charges stemming from the killings, which included two children.

At a hearing in Philadelphia, Dandridge and Gray waived their right to fight extradition. Two Richmond police officers were in the courtroom, ready to take the pair back immediately.

Investigators have said they are looking into whether Dandridge and Gray were involved in similar crimes elsewhere. Monday, police in southwestern Pennsylvania said they were investigating whether the men had any connection to the death of Gray's wife, whose body was found 10 days after Dandridge was released from a Virginia prison.

Authorities said police found evidence linking Dandridge and Gray to all seven slayings. The victims were all bound with tape.

The bodies of Percyell Tucker, 55; his wife, Mary Tucker, 47; and her daughter, Ashley Baskerville, 21, were found in their ransacked Richmond home Friday.

The killings came days after the slayings of members of a family well-known in music and business circles. Bryan Harvey, 49; his wife, Kathryn, 39; and their daughters, Stella, 9, and Ruby, 4, were found with their throats cut on New Year's Day. Their house in Richmond was set on fire.

John Haddad, police chief in Washington, Pa., said Gray has always been a "person of interest" in the death of his wife. The body of Treva Gray, 35, was found Nov. 5 near woods in Washington, about 20 miles south of Pittsburgh.
 
Now, now, guys. In the spirit of The High Road, we must not judge these perps. Only God can judge. We can, however, ARRANGE THE MEETING!!!!!!
 
Back to Strategies and Tactics....

http://www.timesdispatch.com/servle...TD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1128769195145

What I found most disturbing was the position one is in when someone comes to the door and asks for directions.

"Family members say the robbers, who forced their way in after knocking at the door and asking for directions..."

It makes me sick to think that there is really a requirement of 'bunker down and defend' at all times. Opening the door with a hearty "Hello, what can I do for you?" seems to have been perhaps the first of their undoing.

Door chains, and those pole-in-the-floor things, and steel doors, and peep holes, and a couple of deep dead bolts.....and a .45 on the hip in the house...pitiful.

ps the quote is regarding a 3rd family!!
 
cavman said:
Back to Strategies and Tactics....

http://www.timesdispatch.com/servle...TD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1128769195145

What I found most disturbing was the position one is in when someone comes to the door and asks for directions.

"Family members say the robbers, who forced their way in after knocking at the door and asking for directions..."

It makes me sick to think that there is really a requirement of 'bunker down and defend' at all times. Opening the door with a hearty "Hello, what can I do for you?" seems to have been perhaps the first of their undoing.

Door chains, and those pole-in-the-floor things, and steel doors, and peep holes, and a couple of deep dead bolts.....and a .45 on the hip in the house...pitiful.

ps the quote is regarding a 3rd family!!

That defintely takes it onto topic.

Never open the door for someone you don't know. Pure and simple.
 
"Never open the door for someone you don't know. Pure and simple."

Agreed. The days of Mayberry where you leave the screen door open for the cool breeze are long gone.:( In the words of Canderous Ordo from KOTOR1, "I weep for my past".
 
In many parts of Idaho, we can still leave the screen door open. This is why I left California many years ago. Plus, there are so many country roads to ride...:)
Biker
 
I suppose these two will soon start writing children's books in prison now...ala Tookie :fire:
 
We have a locked gate around our place, if someone is at the door there is
already a problem. Ours was put in prior to city ordnance being passes against
it long ago. It aggravates me that homes today can not have that added bit
of security.

It is a very sad thing what happened. The death penalty is in order here.
 
What an awful, terrible story. Grief, I cannot imagine being the school counselor who has to try to explain this stuff to children. What would you say? :(

For the on-topic portion of my post:

They lived in a good neighborhood and were presumably good citizens with no particular reason to believe it could happen to them.

And it just underscores why my concealed handgun is on my hip every hour I'm awake, even at -- especially at -- home.

Think I'm paranoid? Bet those people would have thought so too.

pax
 
cavman said:
Back to Strategies and Tactics....

http://www.timesdispatch.com/servle...TD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1128769195145

What I found most disturbing was the position one is in when someone comes to the door and asks for directions.

"Family members say the robbers, who forced their way in after knocking at the door and asking for directions..."

It makes me sick to think that there is really a requirement of 'bunker down and defend' at all times. Opening the door with a hearty "Hello, what can I do for you?" seems to have been perhaps the first of their undoing.

Door chains, and those pole-in-the-floor things, and steel doors, and peep holes, and a couple of deep dead bolts.....and a .45 on the hip in the house...pitiful.

ps the quote is regarding a 3rd family!!


Be nice. Be courteous. Be open. Keep the weapon locked and loaded inside the wasteband, especially when opening the door to strangers.
 
We enter and exit through the backdoor. If they come to the backdoor that's a very big strike against them since no one should be in someone's backyard.

The front door has a glass storm door in front of it that is locked at all times. On the rare occasin that someone knocks on the door I open the door a few inches with my right foot behind the door so the door can't be pushed open easily. I also have my pistol in my right hand hidden behind the door.

If they are, say, broke down with car trouble and need to use the phone, they get to use the cordless while standing on the porch.
 
Good security habits need to start young. I currently have my daughter in law and two grandchildren living here with me while my son is deployed to Iraq. It has taken a while to break my 5 year old grandaughter from running and answering the door when the doorbell rings. She's used to living in housing on post in a much safer environment.

Had to sit down with her and explain that because grandpa is a policeman that not everyone who comes to our door may be a nice person.

I have my BUG in my pocket at all times. I am never unarmed except when in the shower.

Jeff
 
Biker said:
In many parts of Idaho, we can still leave the screen door open. This is why I left California many years ago. Plus, there are so many country roads to ride...:)
Biker


That's complacency. It wasn't that long ago that a registered sex offender murdered a woman, her BF, older child, and took her two younger children with him, later murdering one of those. That was in Idaho.
 
JamisJockey said:
That's complacency. It wasn't that long ago that a registered sex offender murdered a woman, her BF, older child, and took her two younger children with him, later murdering one of those. That was in Idaho.
Very true, but complacent I'm not. I'm always armed and have guns throughout the house. Casa Del Biker is kinda like the roach motel, "You can check in, but you can't check out!"
My point is, although these events do happen in Idaho, they are much more rare than in most other parts of the coutry.
Biker
 
Remember all you non-Richmonders...these two could have visited your town instead of ours.

Everyone is still working hard on this case. A man I know recently talked to the former band-mate - the guy who who showed up early for the party with his daughter. The grand jury has subpoenaed him, his wife AND his young daughter.

John
 
It has taken a while to break my 5 year old grandaughter from running and answering the door when the doorbell rings.
I even had to have this talk with my 19 yo daughter who lives with us, to the point of some disagreement. She had been living with some folks on a ranch that just leave their doors unlocked. But this area, though still remote, gets a lot more traffic because it has been subdivided into 40++ acre lots.

I cringe even when watching a movie with my family, when a young child opens the door :uhoh:

Out here where we live there is not much expectation of a stranger just dropping by, so anytime an unknown vehicle or persons shows up in our driveway I am immediately on "orange alert."

To me it is just easier to be always armed, so that if I decide to go out to the woodpile or over to the horse corrals, I don't have to make a point of grabbing a gun and putting it on. And it really is easier on guests to discreetly have a holstered handgun than to be answering the door with a rifle or shotgun;)
 
Richmond isn't all that far from where I live.:uhoh: I tried to have a disscusion where I could get both of my parents to get guns & permits to carry them but it was no use. I don't mind being the one to protect them, I just know that I can't be around them all the time. :uhoh:
 
JohnBT said:
Remember all you non-Richmonders...these two could have visited your town instead of ours.

Everyone is still working hard on this case. A man I know recently talked to the former band-mate - the guy who who showed up early for the party with his daughter. The grand jury has subpoenaed him, his wife AND his young daughter.

John

That doesn't really help the discussion much.
 
And I think you need to go back and read my post again.

They could have driven from Philly to Idaho and seen Biker's screen door open. Or driven to anyone else's house in a so-called safe town or neighborhood. Random stuff happens and they happened to come to Richmond for a visit.

It still sounds relevant to me.

You have a real nice day.

John
 
Off topic?

Sorry If anyone thought I posted this off topic. I posted here with the assumption some folks would pick-up the ball and run with the "what would you do if?" scenario.Guess I should have asked that directly.
I CCW but not usually in my home, and this got me to thinking. The two they arrested are ex-cons and extremely big (make Mike Tyson look like a kid). I wouldn't have answered the door for 'em, but if they did get in I'd hope I could get to one of my weapons before they got a hold of me. But hoping won't get ya to far.

Parkerized

p.s. My sister was friends with the Harvey family, so this hits close to home.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top