Man massacres family in Thanksgiving horror
A man massacred his family after a Thanksgiving dinner, gunning down his pregnant sister, six-year-old cousin and two other relatives before speeding off and sparking a state-wide manhunt.
Police were searching for Paul Merhige, 35, of Miami, Florida, who also shot dead his sisterās twin and his 79-year-old aunt.
Sgt Scott Pascarella said there had been an āongoing resentmentā in the family, but did not elaborate.
āWhat led to this incident weāre not quite sure,ā he said. āIt did not appear there was any altercation prior to this shooting.ā
Sgt Pascarella said Merhige left briefly before returning to the gathering with a handgun.
Seventeen relatives had gathered in Jupiter, a small beach town about 90 miles north of Miami, best known as a home to celebrities including Michael Jordan and Burt Reynolds.
Police spokeswoman Sally Collins-Ortiz said the city had never experienced a murder with so many victims.
The department enlisted the US Marshals in the search for Merhige, who police said had no known criminal past.
Pascarella said police first received a 911 call from a neighbour, then another from someone inside the home.
The home, in a well-kept new sub-division with brick-paved driveways, is owned by local TV videojournalist Jim Sitton and his wife. Mr Sittonās daughter Makayla was the young victim.
Yesterday it was surrounded by yellow crime scene tape and police crime unit vans.
Police said she had gone to bed before the rampage.
āGod packed a lot of sweetness into that little body,ā Mr Sitton said. āSheās just our life. I donāt know how we are ever going to recover.ā
The other victims were Merhigeās twin sisters, Carla Merhige, who was a Miami estate agent, and Lisa Knight, and an aunt, Raymonde Joseph. A fifth victim, Merhigeās brother-in-law Patrick Knight, was in a critical but stable condition at a local hospital.
Another man, Clifford Gebara, 52, was grazed by a bullet.
Neighbours in the Palm Beach County community were shocked as police searched the home.
āOur kids walk the streets by themselves,ā said Nicole Kemp, 67. āI thought it was the safest place to live. I guess it doesnāt matter, if thereās a maniac here.ā





