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美国养父杀死四名领养的韩国儿童后自杀(图/视频)

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            )综合外电今日消息,近日,在美国爱荷华州爱荷华城,四名被领养的韩国儿童被美国养父杀害。这四名遇害儿童分别是由不同的未婚妈妈所生,在出生1周至3个月后就被遗弃,通过Holt儿童福利会被领养到海外。

  爱荷华州当地媒体报道说,24日上午6时30分,在爱荷华城伯灵顿道的一个两层单独住宅内,发现谢丽尔-苏培尔和领养的10岁韩国儿童伊顿、7岁塞斯、5岁玛伊拉、3岁埃莉诺等五人被打死。

  在案发现场以东14公里远的高速公路上,一辆撞上中央分隔护栏的丰田小型货车中发现了被火烧死的这家男主人42岁史蒂文-苏培尔。

  警方25日表示:“估计是苏培尔在杀死妻子和领养儿童后自杀。给警方打来报警电话的也是苏培尔本人。”

  



  本月24日,在美国爱荷华州爱荷华城被杀害的四名韩国领养儿的生前全家福。左起为,养父史蒂文-苏培尔、埃莉诺、伊桑、养母谢丽尔-苏培尔、玛伊拉、塞斯。(美联社)


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  苏培尔以挪用公款和洗钱的嫌疑被起诉,当时正面临审判。因此警方认为,苏培尔在杀死全家之后自杀身亡。据悉,“ Hills Bank and Trust”银行副行长苏培尔因涉嫌盗用银行的56万美元和洗钱被起诉,预定于4月21日在爱荷华联邦法院接受审判。

  几年前,苏培尔通过Holt儿童福利会的中介领养了四名韩国孤儿。福利会组长洪美京表示:“四个孩子是不同的未婚妈妈所生。”

  Holt儿童福利会透露说,四个孩子中有三个孩子出生不到一周就被自己的未婚妈妈交给了福利会。玛伊拉在出生三个月后被未婚妈妈抱到了福利会。洪美京表示:“玛伊拉的亲生母亲似乎对是自己抚养还是交给别人领养这件事苦恼了三个月。”

  虽然被同一个家庭领养,但他们被领养的时间互不相同。老大伊顿、老二塞斯、老三玛伊拉、老四埃莉诺分别于1998年、1999年、2002年和 2005年被领养。领养这四名孩子的苏培尔还曾被当地媒体称颂为“人道主义者”。Holt儿童福利会表示:“在领养这些孩子时,儿童福利会经过调查发现苏培尔的家庭环境非常良好。没有犯罪记录,父母和兄弟们的职业都非常好。”

  周边人称,伊顿会演奏大提琴,打高尔夫,喜欢足球。塞斯对打理植物感兴趣。玛伊拉原计划在案发第二天(25日)举行6岁生日派对。埃莉诺总是穿着漂亮的衣服,喜欢玩芭比娃娃。

  苏培尔一家在案发前一天晚上还前往附近的教会参加了复活节礼拜。教会相关人士表示:“苏培尔夫妇对养育子女非常用心,真不明白怎么会发生这样的事情。”

Bank Crimes Drove Iowa Man To Slay Family

  (CBS/AP) Five members of an Iowa City family found dead in their home were beaten to death, autopsy results released Wednesday revealed.

  Sheryl Sueppel, 42, and her four children died from blunt force trauma to their upper torsos and heads, Iowa City police said.

  Two baseball bats found in the home appear to have been used in the slayings.

  "Theyre being held as evidence," Sgt. Troy Kelsay said.

  Before he died in a fiery crash, Steven Sueppel left a hand-written four-page note in which he detailed how he killed his family, then tried to kill himself. The note was left in the kitchen and apparently was written for surviving family members.

  The note, clearly completed after he had killed the entire family, includes details that match evidence found at the scene and the medical examiners findings, Kelsay said.

  "It becomes kind of a moot point whether it was actually a ball bat or some other item," Kelsay said. "Were confident we know what happened and were not going to talk any more specifics."

  The note also reveals some detail about Sueppels frame of mind and what may have driven the former Hills Bank & Trust vice president and controller to kill his wife and four children.

  Sueppel mentioned in the note the embarrassment and other fallout from criminal charges he faced.

  He was indicted by a federal grand jury in February on charges that he stole nearly $560,000 between 2000 and 2007 from the bank. Although he had pleaded not guilty in the case, court documents indicate Sueppel had told investigators that he had taken hundreds of thousands of dollars and placed it in an account he held at another bank. He was free on bond awaiting trial in the case next month.

  Friends and acquaintances of the family said Sheryl Sueppel, a former teacher, returned to work after her husband lost his job.

  In his note, Steve Sueppel discussed his life and the criminal charges, noting that his expected absence from home would leave his wife alone to raise and support four children.

  "Certainly part of the note was apologetic in nature," Kelsay said.

  Kelsay said Sueppels note described "heres how I perceive my life and family. Heres what I see going on and for these reasons you can see why this is clearly the best choice for me and my family."

  The note chronicles Sueppels attempt to kill himself and the children by getting into the family van with them and leaving the engine running in the garage.

  When that failed, it appears he took them back into the house and killed them.

  Sheryl Sueppel was found in her bed in the master bedroom and two children were found in their beds.

  One child was found in a siblings bed and apparently had been placed there after he had been killed, Kelsay said. The fourth child was found in a basement toy room.

  The children were Ethan, 10; Seth, 8; Mira, 5; and Eleanor, 3.

  In addition to the note he left, Sueppel also eerily documented nearly his every move in a series of telephone messages left at his home and on answering services at the bank where he once worked and the Iowa City law office of his brother and father.

  "Even when he was no longer present in the home, he continued to document events by calling back to the home and basically self reporting," Kelsay said.

  At 4:01 a.m. Monday, Sueppels final phone message left at home said he had tried to drown himself in the Iowa River, but he "just kept floating."

  It is unclear what Sueppel did between that time and when he used his cell phone to call the Johnson County Sheriffs Department at 6:31 a.m. to ask police to go to his home immediately.

  Kelsay said the tone of the calls to the answering machines is similar to that of the 911 call - almost devoid of any emotion.

  In one of the messages, he indicated he believed his family was in heaven, Kelsay said.

  Five minutes after the 911 call, Sueppel crashed his van into a concrete pillar on Interstate 80 a few miles east of his house.

  Police believe the high-speed crash, which caused the van to explode into flames, was an intentional final act of suicide.

  Tests have been taken to determine whether Sueppel had drugs in his system. Those results wont be known for several days, Kelsay said.

  Investigators said there was no outward sign of illegal or prescription drug use.

  After the investigation began into the theft from the bank, Sueppel initially told FBI investigators that he took the money to support a cocaine habit.

  But law officers said there is no evidence that Sueppel used the money for either illegal drugs or gambling, reports the De Moines Register.

  He later recanted that story and told investigators he made up the story because he could think of no other way to explain the missing money.

  A University of Iowa sociologist and police investigators told the Register that Sueppel may have felt pressure to maintain his familys standard of living after his wife stopped working and the couple adopted four children.

  Kelsay said the money Sueppel allegedly embezzled -- $560,000 taken over seven years -- likely went to maintaining the Sueppels comfortable, but not extravagant, lifestyle.

  The Sueppels had taken out a mortgage in March 2004 from Hills bank for $244,000 for the home on the east edge of Iowa City in a modern subdivision.

  Kelsay said the home is no longer a crime scene and is part of the familys estate.

  The U.S. Attorneys Office will request that the case against Sueppel be dismissed after receiving a copy of his death certificate, a spokesman said.

  A funeral Mass is scheduled for 10 a.m. Saturday at St. Marys Catholic Church.

  The family will be buried at St. Josephs Cemetery.

  Those friends organized the vigil at a makeshift memorial for the family. Sheryls father Jack shared his thoughts for the dozens who came, and expressed his love for his son-in-law of nearly 18 years.

  "He was like our own son," he told CBS News affiliate KGAN-TV in Cedar Rapids. "We loved him like one of our own."

  Sister Agnes Giblin, a Roman Catholic nun at St. Marys church in Iowa City who had known the family for years, said the community is struggling to comprehend the deaths.

  "We know that if we didnt believe in eternal life and a merciful forgiving unconditional loving God, we dont know how wed get through it," she said.

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