A gunman killed his wife, her daughter and three children in a gruesome murder-suicide in rural Tennessee last night after warning a judge she feared he might shoot her.
Gary Barnett, 48, was named today as the family destroyer who slaughtered his estranged wife Regina Barnett, her daughter Britney Perez and three children before setting fire to the Marion County home.
Barnett then turned the gun on himself. A fourth unidentified adult was found by police with three gunshot wounds and flown to hospital.
It has now been revealed that Regina filed a restraining order against her husband a month ago warning that she feared he might kill her while drunk, court documents show. A judge had approved a no contact order against Barnett who was still active at the time of the murders.
Regina wrote in court documents, “My (ex-)husband-to-be threatened to shoot me and he verbally abuses me every day. He also threatened to shoot my dog. He also has somewhere between 50 and 60 guns in his room. I’m afraid he’ll get drunk and shoot me.”
Gary Barnett, 48, was named today as a family destroyer who slaughtered his estranged wife Regina Barnett, her daughter Britney Perez and Perez’s three children before setting fire to the house in the Sequatchie area of Marion County
It has now been revealed that Regina filed a restraining order against her husband a month ago, court documents show. A judge had approved a no contact order against Barnett who was still active at the time of the murders. Regina wrote in court documents, “My (ex-)husband-to-be threatened to shoot me and he verbally abuses me every day. He also threatened to shoot my dog. He also has somewhere between 50 and 60 guns in his room. I’m afraid he’ll get drunk and shoot me’
The gruesome scene in Sequatchie, Tennessee, following the deaths of six people in what authorities have described as a domestic incident
It was previously revealed that Regina’s daughter Perez had visited her home at the time of the murders.
That’s what a neighbor, Sylvia Cooper, told me WTVC that she heard glass breaking and then about five gunshots.
Shortly afterwards, flames could be seen coming from the house. Firefighting teams from several municipalities arrived on site to extinguish the fire.
At least two of the victims died as a result of smoke inhalation, officials said.
“It’s a domestic situation, apparently going on for a long time. We’ve confirmed six people are dead. They were removed from the scene and taken to Nashville for an autopsy. The scene has been turned over to the TBI,” Sheriff Burnett told the media.
“This is one of the worst things I’ve seen. You hear about these things, but this is one of the worst I’ve been involved with in my entire career as a law enforcement officer,” the sheriff added.
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is leading the investigation. The sheriff said there is no further threat to the community and everyone involved in the incident has been held accountable.
The victims were taken to Nashville for autopsies.
Police say the perpetrator set fire to the house after shooting some family members, two of the victims died of smoke inhalation
Marion County Sheriff Bo Burnett described the scene as “one of the worst things I’ve seen”
Family massacres have become a disturbingly common tragedy across the country. They’ve happened on average nearly every 3.5 weeks for the past two decades. In 2022 there were 17, according to a databasecompiled by multiple media organizations.
Ten were murder-suicide, and 14 were shootings. The database defines a mass murder as killing four or more people, not counting the attacker.
Sequatchie, Tennessee, is one of more than 30 communities shaken by a family massacre in the past two years, a list that includes communities of wealth and poverty, sparing no race or class.
A mass murder in a family — killing four or more people, not counting the perpetrator — has occurred each of the past two years in places as big as Houston or as small as Casa Grande, Arizona.
Motives can remain speculative in family murders where attackers commit suicide, but police often cite financial or relationship problems as causes.
Family murders immediately grab the attention of people in a community, but rarely receive the national attention that mass murders at schools, places of worship or restaurants receive, said James Alan Fox, a criminologist at Northeastern University who has studied family and mass murders. murder for decades.
Fox, who helped compile and maintain the database for the AP and USA Today, said it’s because it doesn’t instill the same kind of fear in the public. He noted that police often issue messages shortly after the murders are discovered saying there is no danger to the public.
“It’s a nice, safe community, but family massacres are separate from the crime rate in the area,” he said. “We’re talking about internal factors, and I think that’s why it’s hard for people to see themselves in these situations and why the response is to grieve rather than fear.”
In fact, family mass murders are the most common form of mass murder, accounting for about 45% of the 415 mass shootings since 2006, according to the database. They are twice as common as mass shootings that kill members of the public.
Most, but not all, involve handguns, only about a third involve households with a previous incident of domestic violence, and most attackers have no violent history or criminal record, Fox said.
There is no government agency that tracks murder-suicides on a national level, so a few years ago policy analysts at the Violence Policy Center—a nonprofit educational organization that researches and educates about violence in the US—started tracking details of news reports to find a annual report. The latest 2020 version looked at murder-suicides, including many mass murders in the first six months of 2019.
Michael Haight, 42, shot dead his wife, her mother and the couple’s five children after being investigated for child abuse in one of the most notorious murder suicides in recent years
The study found that 81 percent of murder-suicides occurred at home and 65 percent involved intimate partners.
The study also found that of the murder-suicides in which more than three people were killed in addition to the attacker, six out of 10 during those six months were incidents where a person killed their children, partner and themselves.
Fox said most homicides fall into two categories. The first is murder by proxy, where the killer is motivated by anger or spite and kills the children who are seen as an extension of their partner.
The second is suicide by proxy motivated by despondency or depression, usually the loss of a job, and the attacker kills the children as an extension of themselves.
“He wants to spare them the misery of living in this horrible world,” Fox said. “Over the years there has been an eclipse in the community. Decades ago, there was a time when if you were struggling to feed your family or if you lost your job, neighbors would come over with casseroles and offer emotional support. Many people don’t know their neighbors anymore these days.’