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STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- How does a mother murder her kids?
The suicide and killings that left Leisa Jones and her four
children dead on the morning of July 22 were likely acts of severe
depression and desperation, but psychiatric research suggests that
in the mother's own mind, likely warped by mental illness, the
murders were acts of love.
The logic is twisted but consistent in such cases, says Dr.
Donna Cohen, a professor at the University of South Florida and a
leading expert on murder-suicides:
"The person with a mental illness has an intense attachment to
the victims and in most cases feels threatened that their
relationship is about to change. The motivation is that nobody
else can take care of them: 'I'm responsible, and I would rather
we'd be dead than not be able to control things,'" she said,
surmising, based on the thousands of cases she has studied: "I'd
say this mother was feeling unable to provide for them. ... I
think she saw herself as a good mother who would rather see her
kids' death than to see their world fall apart and not be able to
take care of them. That's love, for her."
*****
We know that Leisa Jones was overwhelmed. The mother of four,
who was attending beauty school in St. George, had last worked in
January at Macy's in the Staten Island Mall, where she was hired
on as a holiday-season security guard. She had been indebted to
her landlord in Port Richmond and had been evicted for non-payment
in 2008 from her home in Washington, D.C., where she was, for a
brief period, and unbeknownst to her blood relatives, homeless.
*****
Investigators piecing together the tragedy that took place
before daybreak on Port Richmond's Nicholas Avenue struggled at
first to determine who was responsible.
From a blazing second-floor apartment emergency responders
pulled the bodies of Ms. Jones, 30, and three children whose
throats had been slit: C.J. Raymond, 14, Brittney Jones, 10, and
Melonie Jones, 7. The youngest, 2-year-old Jermaine Sinclair Jr.,
was rescued from the fire but died later from smoke inhalation.
Police, who ruled out the possibility that an intruder
committed the crimes, originally theorized that C.J. had killed
his siblings and set the fire before slitting his own throat. But
after finding what they thought was the mother's charred note with
the words "am sorry" still legible, they turned to Ms. Jones as a
suspect.
The medical examiner ruled last week that Ms. Jones' death from
smoke inhalation was a suicide, and C.J.'s death was a homicide.
The autopsies revealed that both the mother and teen had ingested
some type of pills, but they did not cause the deaths.
Roughly 2,000 Americans a year are killed in murder-suicides.
The perpetrator is usually a man; 70 percent of murder-suicides
involve couples, and 6 percent involve infants and children,
according to data from the Violence and Injury Prevention Program
at the University of South Florida.
*****
From various descriptions of Ms. Jones emerges a picture of a
mother who was devoted and exacting, yet also harsh and
hot-tempered.
Ms. Jones was 16 and living in her native Jamaica when C.J. was
born.
She immigrated with her family to Wasington D.C., when C.J. was
just an infant leaving him behind for nearly two years while she
dedicated herself to arranging his entry to the United States.
C.J. was born with a heart problem and frequently fell ill; his
mother arranged for surgery he needed in Washington, D.C., and
only let family members know about it after the operation was
complete, said a cousin, Annette Daley, describing Ms. Jones as
"independent."
The New York Post reported from Jamaica that C.J.'s father,
Earlston Raymond, said he left Ms. Jones because of her temper.
C.J. had, they reported, asked about going to Jamaica to live with
his father outside of Kingston. Raymond also told the Post that a
close friend of Jones' had called him after the tragedy to say the
mother had earlier admitted to her that she was planning to kill
the children and burn the house down.
Authorities at Laurie Intermediate School, where C.J. was
enrolled, had been concerned about his family life; social workers
there had observed Ms. Jones being "verbally or emotionally
abusive" toward him, said a school official who requested
anonymity.
But friends, neighbors, and other relatives also describe Ms.
Jones as doting.
She demanded polite manners from her children and kept them
neatly dressed, according to several accounts.
Ms. Jones helped provide for her children by utilizing the
by-appointment food pantry at Faith United Methodist Church in
Port Richmond; it is not clear whether she had worked since
January.
Ms. Daley, speaking by phone from Washington, preferred not to
comment on whether Ms. Jones had suffered from depression.
"The family would like to withhold comments on Leisa's
personality in order that the investigators can perform a thorough
review of the physical evidence to arrive at a factual
conclusion," she wrote in an e-mail after speaking with the
Advance. "We feel this is the right thing to do as comments on
C.J.'s personality and boyish antics caused him to be wrongfully
accused. We pray that Leisa and the children are all in God's
hands."
*****
While authorities have sought to answer their central
question-- "How did this happen?" -- a traumatized neighborhood
has grappled to understand a seemingly senseless crime: "How does
this happen?"
A bouquet of balloons memorializing the dead loomed over a pile
of stuffed animals outside of the Jones' four-plex apartment house
last week, the ribbons cinched together by a torn length of crime
tape. The image echoed the clash of innocence and brutality that
has shocked the community.
*****
Innocence.
The word that arises almost inevitably when children are
victimized by crime is doubly poignant when lives are cut short.
As the murders unfolded, the Jones children were presumably
asleep.
Little information has emerged about the youngest lives that
were lost. Relatives told the Advance last week that Brittney
liked to write, color and draw, and that Melonie liked to dance.
The two girls reportedly went to PS 44 during the school year
and PS 22 for summer school, though PS 22 declined to confirm that
information.
Residents of Nicholas Avenue said the family was always
together, playing on bicycles and drinking apple juice on their
stoop.
Of C.J., we know that the teenager was troubled, although the
accounts that helped police build on their initial theory exclude
all but his faults. He had been suspended in the spring for being
aggressive toward other students, and he had a recent history of
lighting fires outside of his home and, the day before he died, at
Faber Pool.
He had been referred in June to a special education
day-treatment program.
But, Ms. Daley said, "C.J. was still a little boy at heart,"
who "liked to be under his mom, sucking his thumb and hugging her
up. He liked comfort."
C.J. had also reportedly taken on the role of man of the house,
looking after his younger siblings.
The night before the early morning slayings, a neighbor said
that C.J. had combed his hair and his brother's before bedtime.
The children presumably went to sleep happy: They'd be going to
Coney Island the next day, their mother had told them.
*****
Murder-suicides involve distorted thinking, researchers say.
But, Dr. Cohen says, they are never "senseless" acts:
"A person who commits suicide after murder feels completely
helpless and hopeless and has made the decision to die," according
to Dr. Cohen. "The murder-suicide is intentional and well planned,
often weeks, months, and sometimes years before it occurs. There
is usually a trigger, a straw that breaks the camel's back, but
most likely she was vacillating between die/live, die/live. To us
this is really horrific. In her mind, this was totally rational."
"People who commit familicides aren't malicious criminals,"
said Dr. Cohen, "they are people who see this as a way out. Leisa
probably really, really loved those kids."
By Peter N. Spencer
July 30, 2010
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- It was the mother.
Autopsy results confirmed 32-year-old Leisa
Jones set her Nicholas Avenue home ablaze after slashing the
throats of three of her children with a straight razor.
Her fourth child perished in the flames with
her.
The city medical examiner determined Ms. Jones
died of smoke inhalation and the cause of death was suicide,
spokeswoman Ellen Borakove said yesterday. Her 14-year-old son,
C.J. Raymond, was killed by a deep slash wound of his throat, the
same way his sisters Melonie, 7, and Brittney, 10, died.
No soot was found in the three children’s lungs
— they were dead before the fire started.
FDNY marshals determined the July 22 blaze had
been set intentionally.
Ms. Jones’ youngest child, 2-year-old Jermaine
Sinclair, was badly burned but still alive when a firefighter
pulled him from the apartment. But Jermaine died of smoke
inhalation after he was rushed to Richmond University Medical
Center in West Brighton.
Toxicology results on both Ms. Jones and C.J.
are still pending. Both had undigested pills in their stomachs,
but the medical examiner does not feel the results will have any
bearing on the findings.
The examination results clearly eliminates the
gruesome scenario that police laid out in the early hours of the
investigation. At the time, police said they believed C.J. had
killed his two sisters with a straight razor, then set the home on
fire before slashing his own throat.
The razor was found lodged beneath the boy’s
body, which was found crumpled in a rear bedroom.
NYPD chief spokesman Paul J. Browne seemed to
backtrack from those statements yesterday.
“The investigative premise from the outset was
murder/suicide, and [it was] undetermined whether the oldest son
or mother was responsible pending the medical examiner’s
findings,” Browne said in a written statement.
Police revealed details of C.J.’s troubled
childhood to bolster their theory: He was suspended from Laurie
Intermediate in New Springville twice for assaulting an assistant
principal and starting a fire in the bathroom; city school
officials decided he should be transferred into a special district
for severely disabled students; and he was kicked out of Faber
Pool for lighting a fire there.
But they did not point to Ms. Jones’ own
struggles as a single mother with four children, trying to keep
her family afloat. She had been attending beauty school in St.
George while working part-time as a security guard at Macy’s in
the Staten Island Mall to make ends meet.
Ms. Jones moved to Port Richmond less than two
years ago, after being evicted from her apartment in Washington,
D.C., and was homeless for an undetermined time. Her current
landlord sued her in February for almost $7,000 in back rent,
court documents stated.
The original crime theory began to unravel,
however, when a charred note stuck to a butane lighter was found
near Ms. Jones’ body, with the words “Am sorry” still legible.
Forensic handwriting experts determined the handwriting matched
that in a diary Ms. Jones kept. But the diary was too damaged to
provide any information, sources told the Advance.
Ms. Jones’ family and members of the tight-knit
community on Nicholas Avenue were appalled by the suggestion that
C.J. could do something so horrific. They were even more puzzled
when the probe was directed to the mother a few days later.
Ms. Jones’ sister, Sharon Scott, said the
family had lost faith in the NYPD’s investigation, and asked that
the FBI take it over.
Many veteran investigators who spoke with the
Advance were also puzzled by how quickly the department made
public its initial conclusions about the murders, despite the fact
that there were still many holes in the theory.
“They certainly botched this up. Now what do
they say to the public?” asked one law enforcement source familiar
with the investigation.
By Karen Zraick - The New York Times
July 29, 2010
The deaths of four children in a house fire on
Staten Island on July 22 have been ruled homicides, while their
mother died by her own hand, according to autopsy results released
by the city medical examiner’s office on Thursday.
Investigators briefly thought the family
members were victims of an accidental fire. But when the bodies of
three children were recovered from the house, they discovered that
their throats had been slashed. The fourth child, a 2-year-old,
died later at a hospital. His throat was not cut.
Toxicology reports show the mother, Leisa
Jones, 30, died of smoke inhalation, indicating she was alive when
the blaze was set — evidence that contradicted a theory that Ms.
Jones’s 14-year-old son had carried out the killings.
“The investigative premise from the outset was
that this was a murder-suicide,” said Paul J. Browne, the Police
Department’s chief spokesman. “It was a question of whether the
mother or the oldest child was responsible. We had some
preliminary findings from the medical examiner early on and were
waiting for a final determination which apparently came today,
which identified the mother as a suicide.”
The body of the 14-year-old, Romoy Raymond,
known as C. J., had been found in a back bedroom with a straight
razor tucked under his arm. Neighbors said they had previously
seen him lighting fires outside his home, and he had been
suspended from school for assault — all fueling the notion that he
had committed the murders before killing himself.
But on Sunday, the investigation veered away
from him. Among the factors under consideration was a charred note
found in the apartment, the handwriting on which matched that of
Ms. Jones. Only two words were legible: “am sorry.”
The deaths of C. J.’s siblings — Brittney, 10,
Melonie, 7, and Jermaine Sinclair, 2 — were ruled homicides last
week, and the announcement on Thursday added C. J. as a homicide
victim.
Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for the medical
examiner’s office, said the three older children all died from the
cuts to their throats. Smoke inhalation was not listed as a
factor.
Jermaine died of smoke inhalation and burns. A
fire lieutenant had rushed in to save Jermaine, but he was
pronounced dead at a local hospital a short while later.
Fire Department officials, who quickly
determined the 4 a.m. fire was intentionally set, are still
investigating how it began.
A relative at the home of Ms. Jones’s mother in
Washington declined to comment on the specifics of the autopsy
results.
“We just pray for their souls and thank the
Lord that we had an opportunity to share their lives,” said Don
Daley, a cousin of Ms. Jones’s.
“Now that they’re gone, we hope that they go in
dignity and in peace. And no more confusion."
By Shelley Ng - Mcall.com
July 29, 2010
The medical examiner has ruled Thursday that
the death of a Staten Island mother, who killied her kids and
setting fire to her house, was a suicide.
Leisa Jones, 32, died of smoke inhalation,
stated Ellen Borakove, a spokesperson for the Medical Examiner's
Office. The autopsy report confirms police's belief she is the one
responsible for commiting the murder-suicide and arson that killed
herself and her four children.
Cops originally thought Jones' son C.J. Romoy,
14, killed his siblings, torched the house and committed suicide
on July 22. He was found with a razorblade underneath his body and
had a history of behaviorial problems and setting fires.
But autopsy reports state that C.J. Romoy and
his sisters -- 10-year-old Brittney and 7-year-old Melonie -- were
already dead before the fire was set and did not die from smoke
inhalation. All three kids were found with their throats slashed.
Reports say Jones wrote the badly charred note
with the words "am sorry," which was found in the house on
Nicholas Avenue in Port Richmond.
"We believe both the note and the diary were
written by the mother," NYPD spokesperson Paul J. Browne stated in
an e-mail.
Jones' 2-year-old son Jermaine Sinclair also
died of smoke inhalation, according to autopsy reports. The boy,
who was found near the front door, was rescued from the blaze but
died at Richmond University Medical Center in West Brighton.
The autopsy report also showed that Jones and
her 14-year-old son had undigested pills in their stomachs,
further suggesting she tried to commit suicide and that she may
have needed to drug her son before killing him.
Jones was a single mother with children sired
by different fathers. She was working part-time as a security
guard in the Macy's at Staten Island Mall to make ends meet.
Autopsies clear dead teen
By Larry Celonia and Leonard Greene - NYPost.com
July 26, 2010
The mother did it.
The horrific murder-suicide that ended in an arson on Staten
Island was committed by the deranged mom, who slit three of her
kids' throats before she killed herself and her baby in the blaze,
law-enforcement sources said yesterday.
Cops had at first suspected Leisa Jones' oldest child,
14-year-old son C.J. Romoy, of the heinous act.
But autopsy results now show that neither he nor his two
sisters, ages 7 and 10, suffered any smoke inhalation, meaning
they were dead before the fire was set in their Nicholas Avenue
home, the sources said.
All three children were found with their throats slashed by an
old-fashioned barber's straight razor, sources said.
Meanwhile, Jones and her youngest son, Jermaine, 2, both died
from smoke inhalation, sources said -- leaving investigators with
conclusive proof that the unbalanced mother murdered her three
older children first, then set the blaze, trapping herself and her
baby.
Both Jones and C.J. still had undigested pills in their
stomachs, a source said. Some investigators speculated that this
was because she may have needed to drug the teen before she could
kill him, and then took pills herself. Sources could not identify
the drugs.
Cops yesterday confirmed that a singed note found amid the
debris with the words "am sorry" was written by the mother, as The
Post reported yesterday.
The deeply disturbed Jones had allegedly told a pal several
months ago that she thought about killing the kids and torching
the house.
C.J.'s dad, Earlston Raymond, said the friend told him Jones
told her: "At times, I feel like killing the kids and burning the
house down and killing myself."
"[Jones] made that statement to more than one person," said the
distraught dad, who lives in Jamaica and added that he learned of
his ex's threats only after the tragedy.
Jones and her children moved to Staten Island several years ago
from Washington, DC. Raymond described his ex as hot-tempered and
filled with negative thoughts. He said she was trying to sour the
relationship between him and his son.
"I'm sorry I signed the paper to send C.J. back to Washington,"
Raymond said, adding that he never believed his son committed the
gruesome crime.
The bodies of Jones, 30, and her children were found Thursday
after the 4 a.m. fire. Investigators had originally set their
sights on CJ because he was known around the neighborhood for his
bad habit of playing with fire.
By Fernanda Santos - The New York Times
July 26, 2010
The city medical examiner’s office uncovered traces of smoke in
the lungs of a mother found dead with her four children in a burnt
home on Staten Island last week, suggesting that she was alive
when the house was set ablaze.
The autopsies of the dead also revealed that the mother, Leisa
Jones, did not have her throat slit by a straight razor, as her
three older children did — Brittney, 10; Melonie, 7; and
14-year-old Romoy Raymond, whom everyone called C. J.
The latest developments, while shifting the likelihood of blame
to Ms. Jones, did not move investigators to formally declare her
the culprit. And the authorities, after several days of
back-and-forth theorizing, said they well might never make such a
determination of responsibility.
“You try to reach a conclusion because it’s essentially your
job as an investigator to do that, and if we’re able to draw a
conclusion on this case, we will,” Paul J. Browne, the chief
spokesman for the New York Police Department, said in an interview
Monday. “But it’s possible we never will.”
The tragedy that unfolded inside Ms. Jones’s second-floor
apartment at 302 Nicholas Avenue early on Thursday is a horrific
mystery, one complicated by tales of hidden family troubles —
financial for the mother, psychological for C. J. — and the fact
that all the witnesses are dead.
The Fire Department, which first discounted the notion that the
fire had been intentionally set, developed its own theories of
what might have happened inside the house, and in what sequence.
The Police Department, charged with determining if murder had
occurred, had its initial theories, too. There was no evidence
that anyone other than one of the family members was responsible;
there was some reason to believe that either the mother or the
older son could have been the culprit.
Arson investigators work, to some degree, by a process of
elimination: which elements did not set the fire and who could not
possibly have set it. Autopsy results determined that Ms. Jones’s
daughters died before the fire, from the cuts to their throats;
they were discounted. Their 2-year-old brother, Jermaine Sinclair,
died from smoke inhalation while on his way to the hospital, but
he was just too young to be considered a suspect.
After discarding an outsider’s involvement in the crime, they
focused on C. J. and Ms. Jones.
Suspicions among investigators initially leaned toward C. J., a
boy described by many as both caring and troubled by a history of
behavioral problems. Firefighters found his body in a bedroom. It
looked as if he had been kneeling next to a bed and collapsed on
the mattress, over the razor used to slash his and his sisters’
throats, officials said.
Investigators worked to find out more about both C. J. and his
mother from neighbors, school officials and relatives. Soon,
stories emerged about the boy’s fascination with setting fires, as
well as the assertion that the day before his home burned, he had
lit an empty potato-chip bag at a neighborhood pool.
There were also his problems at Intermediate School 72: fights,
a suspension for assaulting an assistant principal and taunts from
students who had given him the nickname “Bum” because he often
wore the same clothes.
“Witnesses will point you in a direction that’s usually a good
direction, but may not necessarily be the right one,” Paul Zipper,
a veteran arson investigator with the Massachusetts State Police,
said in an interview. “This is just one piece of a thorny puzzle.”
On Friday, fire marshals who were still combing through the
remains of the house, where three other families lived, uncovered
a singed note with the words “am sorry” fused to the stick butane
lighter believed to have been used to start the blaze. They
summoned police detectives back to the scene.
The piece of paper seemed too badly burned for anyone to tell
if it was a suicide note. Still, short of autopsy results, it was
the first time suspicions began to turn to Ms. Jones, as the
handwriting looked more like that of an adult, according to one
official who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to
discuss private details of the investigation.
On Sunday, investigators matched the note to handwriting
samples culled from a diary kept by Ms. Jones. Finding out what
killed her and when exactly she died — before or after the fire
began — became a new priority.
The autopsy found that she had undigested pills in her stomach,
raising suspicions that she may have tried to kill herself.
But again, certainty was elusive. A final conclusion on what
killed Ms. Jones and C. J. has still not been issued by the
medical examiner’s office. Ms. Jones had smoke in her lungs; C. J.
did not. Interesting information, but perhaps not decisive.
And so Mr. Browne, the police spokesman, cautioned against
developing leading theories, even now. The boy, he said, might not
have had smoke in his lungs because he started the fire and killed
himself before he could be overcome by smoke. He was, after all,
in a room away from where the fire started and away from the rest
of his family, at a time when they should all have been asleep.
“We may never know how this transpired,” Mr. Browne said.
By Rocco Parascandola - NYDailyNews.com
July 26, 2010
Medical evidence suggests that Staten Island mom Leisha Jones -
and not 14-year-old son C.J. - killed the family in a fiery
murder-suicide last week.
No soot was found in the teenagers lungs, indicating he was
already dead from a slit throat when the inferno was set, sources
said.
There was soot in the lungs of the mother and her 2-year-old
son, Jermaine, showing they died of smoke inhalation.
Police initially believed C.J. had set the fire and slashed the
throats of his two sisters before slitting his own throat with his
mother's straight razor.
But cops changed their mind after a charred note at the scene
with the words "am sorry" proved to be in the mom's handwriting.
Ever since Thursday's blaze, C.J.'s father, Earlston Raymond,
who lives in Jamaica, has said he believed the mother did it.
The NYPD has not officially declared Jones the killer.
But sources said detectives believe she used the razor to kill
daughters Melanie, 7, and Brittany, 9.
C.J. was also slashed, but pills were found in his stomach, and
a cause of his death has not yet been determined.
Jones also had pills in her stomach.
By John Doyle, Matthew Nestel andJennifer Fermino - NYPost.com
July 25, 2010
The handwriting on the "am sorry" note found in the charred
remains of a Staten Island murder-suicide appears to match that of
the dead mother -- not the teen pyromaniac believed to be
responsible for the fire and slaughter of his entire family,
sources close to the investigation said.
Investigators compared the badly burned note to writings in
Leisa Jones' journal, which was found at the scene, and believed
they found a match, according to two sources.
But a high-level police source said authorities still could not
say who wrote the note or killed the family, only that all signs
were still pointing to the oldest son, C.J. Romoy, 14.
The note -- much of which is impossible to read because of fire
damage -- was found fused to a butane lighter in the same room as
the bodies of Jones and three of her four children.
"The identity of the author of the note remains unknown,"
another police source said.
The mystery surrounding the note's author comes as C.J.'s
heartbroken father told The Post yesterday there was no way his
son was responsible -- and he pointed the finger at his ex.
"If anybody could've done it, it would've been the mother
because of her temper," Earlston Raymond said at his home in
Jamaica.
The devastated dad, who hadn't seen his son in almost seven
years, said a close friend of Jones called him after the tragedy
to say the mom earlier told her that "she was going to kill the
youths and burn the house down."
Raymond said he broke it off with Jones because of her anger
issues and flashes of violence.
"[Jones] had pulled a knife on a relative," Raymond said.
It's not clear why, but C.J. also spoke with his dad about
moving back to Jamaica.
"I talked to him the Tuesday before he died, he was a happy
kid," Raymond said.
But Jones' close friend, Shaquawna Meaders, said she was, "a
great mom."
"She's not capable of something like this," said Meaders, 25.
Cops think C.J. slit the throats of his two sisters, Melony, 7,
and Brittany, 10, at their Nicholas Avenue home Thursday morning
and then set the fatal fire that killed his brother, Jermaine, 2.
The troubled teen's throat was slit as well, and a straight
razor with a missing handle was found under his arm.
Police believe C.J. slashed his own throat after killing his
sisters, but his official cause of death, along with his mother's
is still pending.
C.J. had been suspended from school for three months for
discipline problems, which included shoving an assistant
principal. He'd also been kicked out of public pool for setting a
fire a day before his family was killed.
But Meaders said the family seemed OK the evening before the 4
a.m. fire Thursday.
"She was getting ready to put them down to sleep. They had a
trip to Coney Island planned [the next day]," she said.
"She said, 'Good night, girl. I'll see you in the morning.'
"[C.J.] was there combing his hair. When he finished, he
started combing his brother's hair. They were always together as a
family if they weren't at school."
By Kevin Deutsch, Sarah Armaghan and Jonathan Lemire -
NYDailyNews.com
July 23, 2010
A fire-obsessed 14-year-old Staten Island boy is suspected of
the unthinkable - setting his home ablaze as he murdered his
family and then slitting his own throat with a straight razor.
Investigators believe C.J. Jones cut the throats of at least
two of his younger siblings on Thursday, then ended his own life
as the tidy apartment went up in flames.
C.J. was found in the back bedroom of the modest Port Richmond
apartment, a razor filched from his mother's hairstyling kit
lodged under his body, the sources said.
His three younger siblings and mother, Leisha Jones, lay dead
steps away in the living room.
"You'd think only a monster could do this, not a little boy,"
said Chandra Franklin, 29, a family friend.
"He was a troublemaker when he was younger but we thought he
grew out of that. He was the man of the house," she said. "I don't
know why he did this, he must have been going through something no
one could see."
The dead girls were found in the charred living room near their
brother, 2-year-old Jermaine, and the body of 33-year-old mom
Leisha Jones.
Jermaine died at the hospital. Investigators think the little
boy and his mother - found facedown as if she was crawling to the
door - died of smoke inhalation.
The three-alarm blaze tore through the second-floor Nicholas
Ave. home at 4:15 a.m. and firefighters fought through a wall of
flames to find the bodies.
Investigators believe the fire was set just inside the front
door, possibly to prevent rescuers from entering the home, sources
said.
Detectives are not certain what led to the bloodbath, stunning
for its brutality and the young age of the killer.
Investigators were zeroing in on the teen's recent rash of
unstable behavior, sources said.
C.J. was kicked out of summer classes at Intermediate School 72
after igniting a fire in a bathroom, and he clashed with his
mother, a security guard at Macy's on Staten Island, after setting
fire to a bathroom towel at home, neighbors and sources said.
Hours before the inferno, C.J. was spotted igniting pieces of
paper outside the family's Nicholas Ave. home as his siblings rode
bicycles and drank apple juice.
The teen also had been ejected from nearby Faber Pool that
afternoon for setting a fire, the sources said. Staffers at local
pools, however, did not remember a boy setting a fire.
"He wasn't an evil child," said stunned neighbor Shaquawna
Meaders, 25. "He loved his brother and sisters [and] he was a
happy-go-lucky kid."
"[He was] the man of the house," Franklin said. "He took care
of his sisters like a dad."
"He never let anything bad happen to them," she said.
No one else in the building was injured. The apartment did not
have a smoke detector, which is mandated by law, officials said.
The device must be provided by the building's landlord. The
landlord at Jones' building, Albert Morcos, is on vacation in
Egypt, residents said.
Stunned by the deaths, relatives and friends mourned Leisha
Jones, whom they applauded as a model mother.
"My family, my family!" wailed Marcia Anderson, Leisha Jones'
mother.
"She was such a nice person and she was a really good mother,"
said a weeping Anderson. "She loved her kids ... and I loved her."