“I’m sorry, it’s all my fault, totally mine.”
These were the chilling words of a handwritten suicide note found in the Hunt family home when the bodies of Kim, 41, and her three children – Fletcher, 10, Mia, 8, and Phoebe, 6 – were discovered, shot dead, at their rural property in southern New South Wales last September.
The following day, 44-year-old Geoff Hunt’s body was discovered in a nearby dam. A gun was close by.
It is believed Mr Hunt shot his entire family before turning the gun on himself, but Lockhart locals are at a loss for the motivation behind the shocking crime.
Coroner Michael Barnes said today that the inquest was “not intended to demonise or blame anyone”.
Counsel assisting the coroner Dr Peggy Dwyer said the real question in the “truly tragic” case was how the “loving and gifted family” died.
“Who shot the five deceased and why?”
The inquest heard a disability worker helped cook the family cook dinner on September 8 last year and discovered Ms Hunt’s body, covered with a jacket, on the path outside the house the following day.
Police discovered the children dead in their beds each with a single gun shot wound, dressed in the same outfits the worker saw them in the night before.
Top Comments
Even with an inquest ii would be hard to deliver a verdict on what really happened. That note has no definitive meaning at all.
Murder-suicides are a particularly gut wrenching type of tragedy, my heart breaks for this beautiful family. People are so willing to vilify the individuals who carry it out, but that does NOT help anyone. It doesn't help the family left behind, and it certainly doesn't help prevent further tragedies from occurring.
Hopefully this inquest can not only bring some answers to the family and friends, but may perhaps bring some explanation, understanding, and highlight some warning signs that may help prevent similar tragedies in the future. It's such a complex problem.
There's some terrible comments on this on facebook, and I wish there wasn't. If someone is in such a dark, desperate place that they're actually feeling this way we want them to feel like they can speak up and ask for the help and support they need.