Man wanted in 6 killings in Pa. commits suicide


Associated Press

PENNSBURG, Pa.

An Iraq War veteran suspected of killing his ex-wife and five of her relatives in a shooting and slashing frenzy was found dead of self-inflicted stab wounds Tuesday in the woods of suburban Philadelphia, ending a day-and-a-half manhunt that closed schools and left people on edge.

Bradley William Stone’s body was discovered a half-mile from his Pennsburg home, about 30 miles northwest of Philadelphia. The 35-year-old former Marine sergeant had cuts in the center of his body, and some kind of knife was found at the scene, Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman said.

Locked in a custody dispute so bitter that his ex-wife feared for her life, Stone went on a gruesome, 90-minute killing rampage before daybreak Monday at three homes in three nearby towns, authorities said. He bashed in the back doors of the first two homes and then smashed his ex-wife’s sliding glass door with a propane tank.

The killings set off the second major manhunt to transfix Pennsylvania in the past few months. Eric Frein spent 48 days on the run in the Poconos after the ambush slaying of a state trooper in September.

“There’s no reason, no valid excuse, no justification for snuffing out these six innocent lives and injuring another child,” Ferman said. “This is just a horrific tragedy that our community has had to endure. We’re really numb from what we’ve had to go through over the past two days.”

Stone’s former wife, 33-year-old Nicole Stone, was found shot twice in the face in her apartment after a neighbor heard glass breaking and saw Stone fleeing about 5 a.m. with their two young daughters. The girls later were found safe with Stone’s neighbors.

Also killed were Nicole Stone’s mother, grandmother, sister, brother-in-law and 14-year-old niece. A 17-year-old nephew suffered knife wounds to the head and hands, and Ferman said he was in “very serious” condition.

The adults were all shot. The teens were slashed and suffered blows to the head; the nephew had a gaping skull fracture, authorities said.

“It’s a relief that they found him,” said Stone’s neighbor Dale Shupe. “Now we know he’s not out trying to do more harm to anybody else.”

As the manhunt dragged on and SWAT teams swarmed through neighborhoods, at least five schools within a few miles of Stone’s home closed, and others were locked down. Veterans’ hospitals and other places tightened security.

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