Anonymous ID: 34d83b June 7, 2020, 7:43 a.m. No.9519321   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9385 >>9522

Member of 470 MI Brigade and family found dead

Jared Esquibel Harless, 38, was assigned to the 470th Military Intelligence Brigade at Joint Base San Antonio

 

Army intelligence soldier, 38, who was found dead from carbon monoxide poisoning in his garage along with wife, their four children and two cats in apparent murder-suicide.

 

Jared Esquibel Harless, 38, his 36-year-old wife, four children and two cats were found dead at the home in San Antonio on Thursday night

Police have so far only released the ages of the wife and children - two boys aged four and 11-months and two girls three and one

Esquibel Harless is a US Army soldier assigned to the 470th Military Intelligence Brigade at Joint Base San Antonio

Police in San Antonio said the smell of fumes 'blew everybody out the door'

Police chief William McManus said there was evidence 'it was not an accident,' and he did not suggest that anyone outside the family was involved

 

Jared Esquibel Harless, 38, his 36-year-old wife, four children and two cats were found dead in an SUV in their garage on Thursday, after police found a 'cryptic note' and strong chemical odor at their home.

 

Police have so far only released the ages of the wife and children - two boys aged four and 11-months and two girls three and one.

 

Esquibel Harless was a US Army soldier assigned to the 470th Military Intelligence Brigade at Joint Base San Antonio and had moved to the neighborhood in January.

 

Neighbors told Fox San Antonio the family were new to the area but they never saw anything 'out of the ordinary'.

 

San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said the smell of carbon dioxide was so strong when officers arrived that it 'kind of blew everybody back out the door.'

 

He said police had gone to the house for a welfare check requested by the husband's employer, who had been unable to reach him.

 

'They were OK yesterday because he checked in with his work,' McManus said. 'So it happened sometime overnight.'

 

McManus said on the front door of the home was a 'cryptic note' with military jargon.

 

A member of the military translated it to: 'Bodies or people inside, do not enter. The animals are in the freezer.'

 

The chief said the note also hinted at booby traps.

 

'Based on the note that we received, we were very cautious about going in, and we were trying to find out what was in there before we made entry,' the chief said.

 

When they entered, the cops were overcome by a heavy, noxious odor which turned out to be carbon monoxide.

 

Police said they found no explosives after they entered, McManus said.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8394203/amp/Army-intelligence-soldier-dead-suspected-murder-suicide-pictured.html

By Karen Ruiz For Dailymail.com and Associated Press 07:59 06 Jun 2020, updated 09:31 06 Jun 2020

 

may be worth a dig::::

CO is colorless and odorless….

the smell of carbon dioxide was so strong when officers arrived that it 'kind of blew everybody back out the door.'

 

PRAY: The news is fake But the War is Real.

Anonymous ID: 34d83b June 7, 2020, 8:04 a.m. No.9519522   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9595 >>9609

>>9519321

digging now,

-prelim guess is he returned home w/family and was locked in car and unable to exit vehicle (ECM override tech?)

-note on door indicates someone was on site before or maybe after

-note cryptic and mentions animals in freezer

-PD reports smell of CO but it has no smell?

 

Staff Sgt. Jared Esquibel Harless was a 35Q cryptologic cyberspace intelligence collector/analyst and had joined the Army in January 2010, the Army said Saturday. A deployment to Iraq, in 2011 for Operation New Dawn, was the only one in his career.

 

f

 

A soldier assigned to Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston found dead with his wife and four children in their home on the city’s far North Side was an intelligence analyst who served in Iraq late in the U.S.-led occupation.

 

Staff Sgt. Jared Esquibel Harless was a 35Q cryptologic cyberspace intelligence collector/analyst and had joined the Army in January 2010, the Army said Saturday. A deployment to Iraq, in 2011 for Operation New Dawn, was the only one in his career.

 

Their deaths are believed to have been a murder-suicide. Harless, 38, his wife, Sheryll, 36, and their four children were discovered Thursday in the rear of a mid-sized SUV, parked in their garage. Police detected carbon monoxide permeating the house and called in a bomb squad robot after finding a cryptic note warning of bodies inside. The children included two boys, ages 4 and 11 months; and two girls, ages 3 and 1.

 

On ExpressNews.com: Father in suspected murder-suicide of San Antonio family was Fort Sam GI

 

Harless served with Fort Sam’s 470th Military Intelligence Brigade, with the Army listing his home of record as Renton, Wash.

(a)

https://www.expressnews.com/news/local/article/GI-in-suspected-murder-suicide-served-in-Iraq-15322480.php

 

Officers found what the San Antonio Express-News described as “a ‘cryptic note’ with military jargon that required a member of the armed forces to decipher” posted on the front door.

Two dead cats were found in a basket in the front seat.

(b)

https://www.stripes.com/news/us/army-identifies-fort-sam-houston-soldier-found-dead-in-apparent-murder-suicide-1.632662

 

(c)

https://nypost.com/2020/06/05/san-antonio-family-of-six-found-dead-in-their-suv-in-apparent-suicide/

 

Police used a robot to sweep the residence before clearing it of explosives and entering into the garage to find the grisly scene, reports NYPost.

(d)

https://thecount.com/2020/06/05/jared-harless-murder-suicide-jbsa/

 

conflicting neighbor comments:

a- “They’d been here since January, and the husband waved to me just once, outside,” said Jorge Canavati Jr., a 62-year-old consultant who has lived in the neighborhood for 15 years. “That was it. I mean, they were always locked up in the house.”

b- Neighbors told FOX San Antonio that the deceased family, who moved to the neighborhood in January, did not appear “out of the ordinary” and could often be seen spending time outdoors.

c- neighbors told police they “never saw them” out and about, according to McManus.

 

b-