Ottawa police name mother, 2 children in murder-suicide - Action News
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Ottawa

Ottawa police name mother, 2 children in murder-suicide

Police have confirmed the identities of a woman and her two children found dead Monday in west Ottawa after a double murder-suicide that has left the community and first responders reeling.

Neighbourhood, school cope with shocking deaths of Stittsville family members

Double-murder, suicide update

12 years ago
Duration 2:52
Ottawa police continue to investigate a Stittsville double-murder and suicide on Monday night.

Investigators have released theidentities of a woman and her two children in a double murder-suicide that has left emergency responders and a west Ottawa neighbourhood reeling.

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Police were called toa Stittsville house at 25 Granite Ridge Dr. on Monday at about 5:30 p.m. ET after a man returned home anddiscovered the bodies of his wife andtwo children in the basement.

Theconfirmed victims are 40-year-old Alison Easton and her two children, six-year-old Katie (Katheryn) Corchisand 10-year-old Alex (Jon Alexander) Corchis.

Police sources said two notes were left inside the homeone for the father and another for Ottawa police.

InvestigatorsbelieveEaston killed her children and then herself. No charges are expected to be laid.

The murder weapon was a knife, police sources confirmed.

The deaths have rocked the west Ottawa community. Both children attended Stittsville Public School just across the street from their home, andthe family waswell known by neighbours.

Absent from school Monday

In a news conference Tuesday,Ottawa police Insp. John Maxwell told reportersthatboth children were absent from school on Monday.

Maxwell also said policehad "minor contact" with the Corchis family in the past for small neighbourhood complaints. He wouldn't go into detail,but insisted they weren't domestic in nature and that they shed no light on what happened Monday.

The first responders who arrived at the scene Mondaywere givencritical incident counselling once police arrived and took over. Maxwell said it's been hard for many of the people involved.

"I want to say that it was actually [firefighters] and [paramedics] who arrived first, before the police, and thank god there are men and women out there who go into the darkness like we do," he said."The first officers on the scene, most of them have families. This is very, verydifficult."

Investigators arecontinuing to piece together exactly what happened and why, Maxwell said.

"We'll be speaking to any friends and family, acquaintances of the family, in case they can shed any light on the cause of this," Maxwell said.

As for the father, Jon Corchis, Maxwelltold reportershe finds it difficult to talk about how he's doing.

"God bless him and hope that he can make it through this," Maxwell said."He was completely, totally devastated last night. I feel badly even talking about him, because it's like I'm making mileage on his tragedy, and I don't want to do that."

Grief counsellors help school 'in mourning'

Grief counsellors were called toStittsville Public School Tuesday to help students and staff, according to the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board.

Police officers were also on hand to help staff and students.

"I would like to extend our sincere condolences to the family and friends of the Corchis family who were affected by this tragedy," read a statement from director of education Jennifer Adams.

A local couple left their condolences on a note with flowers to Jon Corchis, who found his wife and two children dead in their home. (Ryan Gibson/CBC)

"The Stittsville Public School community is in mourning and a tragic events response team has been put in place at the school to provide assistance, counselling and other support to students and staff to assist them in their healing process."

One neighbour, Tonya Marczak, said her daughter was Katie's best friend. She said it was difficult knowing how to relay the news to her children.

"I honestly don't know what to tell them at this point," she said.

"To hear that there's three dead, it's just devastating. I don't understand how this happens, I don't, especially when I've got little kids of my own."

Mother was Neighbourhood Watch co-ordinator

Easton was often seen walking her children to and from school, according to neighbour Jeff Wilk, where the girl was in kindergarten and the son was in Grade 5.

The mother was also a Neighbourhood Watch co-ordinator and stay-at-home mother, Wilk added.

An autopsy was scheduled for the mother on Tuesday and for the children on Wednesday.The bodies were removed from the home Monday night.

The major crimes unit is handling the ongoinginvestigation.