Colorado mother bought gun just before she, two small sons found dead
Police say the wounds appear to be self inflicted, but avoid calling deaths a murder-suicide
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A Colorado mother bought a handgun hours before she and her two young
sons were found fatally shot inside the family's minivan, authorities
said on Thursday, adding that her wounds appeared to be self-inflicted.
While
stopping short of calling the deaths of 38-year-old Jennifer Marie
Laber, and her sons Adam, 3, and Ethan, 5, a murder-suicide, police said
the recently-purchased 9mm Glock handgun was found inside the vehicle,
and all three died from single gunshot wounds.
"We can't make that
determination until the coroner completes toxicology testing, but you
can read between the lines of what was released today," City of Lone
Tree Police Department Sergeant Tim Beals said by phone.
A
statement issued on Thursday by the Douglas County Coroner's Office said
preliminary evidence suggested Jennifer Laber's wound was
self-inflicted.
Laber was reported missing by Ryan Laber, her
husband and the boys' father, on Tuesday night after she failed to
return to the family's home in Highlands Ranch, a suburb south of
Denver, after picking up their sons at school.
Authorities issued a
missing person alert along with photographs of the trio and a
description of the 2011 Chrysler minivan she was driving. Police also
released a still photograph captured from a school surveillance camera
that showed the mother leaving with the two boys.
Around 7:45 a.m.
local time on Wednesday, a passerby called police to report seeing a
minivan parked at a loading dock outside a shuttered sports equipment
store in the neighboring city of Lone Tree that matched the description
of the missing vehicle.
A responding officer found all three dead inside the van.
After
the bodies were located, authorities said Ryan Laber was not a suspect
in the deaths of his family and that there was no threat to the
community.
Police said Laber passed a requisite background check
when she legally purchased a new handgun from an undisclosed firearms
dealer about an hour before picking up her sons at school.
"This
is a tragic event and we wish it would have had a different outcome,"
Lone Tree Police Chief Ron Pinson said in a statement.
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