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Lorenzo SILVA
Lorenzo "Sol" Silva
October 11, 1999
An airport security guard who was being treated for a
mental disorder shot to death three of his upstairs neighbors before
killing himself. During the rampage, the gunman Lorenzo "Sol" Silva, 63,
also wounded the 2-year-old daughter of two of his victims.
Silva, they said, had returned yesterday morning to
the two-story house at 33 de Montfort Street from his graveyard shift at
San Francisco International Airport, where he had worked as a guard for
about 20 years.
Buen Lirios, the brother-in-law of the gunman, said
he heard at least five gunshots. He said he was reluctant to go upstairs.
It was Silva's mother, Maria Silva, who went up first and found her son
and the others dead. Lirios said he followed her upstairs. "I saw the
four bodies and the baby crying" in her high chair, he said. "There was
blood all over. They were all bloody. I didn't want to go near them."
Silva's relatives identified the slain couple as Noel
Ridual and his 28-year-old wife, Josephine. The other slain woman, who
shared the upstairs flat with the Riduals, was Ola Marquisia, 30. Noel
Ridual and Marquisia were both highly respected teachers.
Paranoia, Depression Dogged Gunman - Cancer
diagnosis: Family said he acted erratically
Jaxon Van Derbeken - The San Francisco Chronicle
October 12, 1999
The 62-year-old security guard
who shot three upstairs neighbors to
death in San Francisco before killing himself had recently
learned that he had incurable pancreatic cancer and had "flipped out,"
family members told police.
Lorenzo "Sol" Silva had been prescribed
antidepressants by doctors at the Kaiser Medical Center where he was
being treated, but he had reacted badly to the drugs in the past two
weeks and at times had acted depressed and paranoid, relatives said.
Police are investigating that and other factors in
trying to determine why Silva, a guard on the night shift at San
Francisco International Airport, went on a rampage Sunday afternoon at
his two-story home in the Ingleside District, near San Francisco City
College.
Silva took his .357-Magnum revolver upstairs and
killed Noel Ridual and his wife, Josephine, both 28, and Maria "Ola"
Marquicias, 32, before turning the gun on himself, police said. Although
family members said he was a gun collector, a search by police turned up
only the one firearm.
The Riduals' 2-year-old daughter, Jessica, was
wounded in the shoulder, apparently by a ricocheted bullet, police said.
She was being treated at San Francisco General Hospital and is expected
to recover.
Silva had lived in the downstairs unit of the house
at 33 De Montfort Ave., a home that he bought with his wife, Flora, in
1976. Silva had worked as a security guard at the airport for 20 years.
Family members said Sunday that they had been worried
about his mental condition for some time. They told reporters that he
had been unable to sleep unless he was in the same room with his 87-year-old
mother, with the light on.
Yesterday, police said doctors had prescribed
antidepressants for Silva
after the diagnosis of cancer -- a diagnosis that relatives believed was
incorrect.
"He was apparently upset about his medical condition,"
said homicide Inspector Michael Johnson. "The family said he had been
diagnosed, possibly misdiagnosed. When they told him, he flipped out --
that was their words."
Johnson said a check of Silva's past revealed no
criminal record.
Silva, his mother and his wife came to the United
States from the Philippines in 1972, said his brother, Silvestre Silva.
But Lorenzo Silva's wife returned to the Philippines
last year. Relatives said she was unhappy in the United States.
At some point, Silva had a relationship of some kind
with Marquicias, one of his victims, and had been known to stay at her
upstairs flat, relatives told police. Johnson said it was unclear what
that relationship was.
Silva's relatives were gathered at a home in Daly
City yesterday and declined to comment, other than to say that they had
hired an attorney.
Silva had worked his normal shift at the airport the
morning of the killings. At 8 a.m., one of his daughters called him and
asked if he wanted to attend Mass at St. Emydius Catholic Church near
his home, where the Riduals also worshiped, police said.
He declined, and when his daughter called again at 10
a.m., he said he was too tired and wanted to lie down rather than eat
breakfast, relatives told police. That was the last his daughter heard
from him.
At the time he started shooting, the Riduals were
having a midday meal, feeding their 2-year-old as she sat in a high
chair.
The Riduals were found dead in the dining room.
Marquicias was found in her bedroom. All were shot in the head.