THIS IS A DUPE. THE SAME STORY IS IN EDITORIALS & OTHER ARTICLES
CALIFORNIA
Online catfishing led to California girls abduction, killings of her family, police say
BY LAURA NEWBERRY, SUMMER LIN, GRACE TOOHEY
PUBLISHED NOV. 27, 2022 UPDATED NOV. 28, 2022 9:38 AM PT
The deaths of three people found Friday in a burning home in Riverside are thought to be connected to the attempted abduction of a teenage girl.
As police were en route to the 11200 block of Price Court for a welfare check on a man and a young woman who were having some type of disturbance outside a residence, dispatchers received calls from motorists of smoke pouring from a home in the same block, said Officer Ryan Railsback, a spokesman for the Riverside Police Department.
Firefighters responded and were extinguishing the fire when they discovered the bodies of a man and two women inside the house, Railsback said. The victims were identified as Mark Winek, 69; his wife, Sharie Winek, 65; and their daughter Brooke Winek, 38.
Investigators have determined that the woman involved in the outdoor disturbance was a teenager who lived in the house, Railsback said. The man she was with Austin Lee Edwards, 28, of North Chesterfield, Va. was identified as the main suspect in the three deaths, he said. Edwards was tracked Friday evening to San Bernardino County, where he was fatally shot by sheriffs deputies near Needles after firing a gun at officers, law enforcement officials said.
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Laura Newberry
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Laura Newberry is a reporter with the mental health initiative at the Los Angeles Times and writes Group Therapy, a weekly newsletter. She previously worked on The Times education team and was a staff reporter at both the Reading Eagle in Eastern Pennsylvania and MassLive in Western Massachusetts. She graduated from UC Berkeleys Graduate School of Journalism in 2018 and is currently pursuing her master of social work.
Summer Lin
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Summer Lin is a reporter on the Fast Break Desk, the Los Angeles Times breaking news team. Before coming to The Times, she covered breaking news for the Mercury News and national politics and California courts for McClatchys publications, including the Sacramento Bee. An East Coast native, Lin moved to California after graduating from Boston College and Columbia Universitys Graduate School of Journalism. In her free time, she enjoys hikes, skiing and a good Brooklyn bagel.
Grace Toohey
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Grace Toohey is a reporter at the Los Angeles Times covering breaking news for the Fast Break Desk. Before joining the newsroom in 2022, she covered criminal justice issues at the Orlando Sentinel and the Advocate in Baton Rouge. Toohey is a Maryland native and proud Terp.