The small Swiss town of
Rupperswil is in shock after learning that a long-time local youth soccer coach
is suspected of being behind the brutal killings of four people last December.
Associated
Press report continues:
A
33-year-old Swiss citizen, named by local media as Thomas N., is suspected of
killing a mother, her two teenage sons and another woman in the town 30
kilometers (19 miles) west of Zurich. Prosecutors said the suspect made a
"comprehensive confession" after his arrest Thursday.
Roland
Wenger, a spokesman for the club FC Sarmenstorf soccer club where the suspect
had been a coach, said members were horrified by the news.
"Nobody
in the club would have thought Thomas N. would be capable of this, he was
always decent," he told daily Tages-Anzeiger in an interview published
Saturday.
Rupperswil
mayor Rudolf Hediger told daily Aargauer Zeitung there was relief at the arrest
but also "a certain amount of shame and dismay that it was really a member
of our village community."
Prosecutor
Barbara Loppacher said the suspect was an unmarried local resident with no
previous convictions or connections to the victims. She said, based on his
statement and the investigation, police believe he acted alone.
Prosecutors
believe N. acted out of financial and sexual motives in the killing of
48-year-old Carla Schauer, her 13- and 19-year-old sons and the latter's
21-year-old girlfriend.
Authorities
revealed grim details of the crime Friday. According to investigators, the
suspect tricked his way into the Schauers' home on Dec. 21. He made the mother
bind and gag the other victims before forcing her to withdraw about US$11,000,
said police captain Markus Gisin told reporters.
After
she returned, the suspect tied her up, raped the younger son, killed all four
by cutting their throats and set fire to the house, Gisin said.
The
absence of any link between the victims and the suspect had made the
investigation particularly difficult, said Gisin. After his arrest, police were
able to tie his fingerprints and DNA to the crime.
Gisin
said the man's arrest may have prevented further killings.
"Based on yesterday's search of the home, further investigations and questioning, we have to assume that the perpetrator had concrete plans for similar crimes," he said.
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