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Police seek husband of slain Mass. family
BOSTON, (UPI) -- Massachusetts authorities say they are still looking for a husband whose family was found slain in Winchester, Mass., in a scene described as "unspeakable."
Police are attempting to locate Thomas Mortimer IV, 43, whose wife, two children and mother-in-law were found dead in the family home Wednesday, The Boston Globe reported.
Middlesex District Attorney Gerard T. Leone Jr. described the scene discovered by police as "horrific, disturbing, and unspeakable. The acts do not appear to be random."
The victims have been identified as 64-year-old Ellen Ragner Stone, her daughter Laura Stone Mortimer, 41, and the couple's children, Charlotte, 2, and Thomas, 4, the Globe said.
A bulletin for "stop for questioning" was issued Wednesday. Police say they are looking for a 2004 Toyota Highlander Mortimer may be driving, The Boston Herald reported.
Mortimer, who had been out of work for several months, started as a senior sales executive for a Burlington, Mass., company last month, the newspaper said.
"He was working fine until Tuesday," Anil Shah, the company's president, said.
Tuesday morning, Shah said, Mortimer left a message at work saying he wouldn't be in because he wasn't feeling well but expected to be back at work by Wednesday.
He never showed up.
BOSTON, (UPI) -- Massachusetts authorities say they are still looking for a husband whose family was found slain in Winchester, Mass., in a scene described as "unspeakable."
Police are attempting to locate Thomas Mortimer IV, 43, whose wife, two children and mother-in-law were found dead in the family home Wednesday, The Boston Globe reported.
Middlesex District Attorney Gerard T. Leone Jr. described the scene discovered by police as "horrific, disturbing, and unspeakable. The acts do not appear to be random."
The victims have been identified as 64-year-old Ellen Ragner Stone, her daughter Laura Stone Mortimer, 41, and the couple's children, Charlotte, 2, and Thomas, 4, the Globe said.
A bulletin for "stop for questioning" was issued Wednesday. Police say they are looking for a 2004 Toyota Highlander Mortimer may be driving, The Boston Herald reported.
Mortimer, who had been out of work for several months, started as a senior sales executive for a Burlington, Mass., company last month, the newspaper said.
"He was working fine until Tuesday," Anil Shah, the company's president, said.
Tuesday morning, Shah said, Mortimer left a message at work saying he wouldn't be in because he wasn't feeling well but expected to be back at work by Wednesday.
He never showed up.