A young man has been charged with the murder of five people including three toddlers, Australian police said Monday, after a mass killing at a suburban home.
Police found the remains of three young girls, as well as those of their mother and grandmother at an unassuming detached family home near the southwestern city of Perth on Sunday.
The gruesome discovery came after a 24-year-old man, who has not been named, walked into a police station in a remote mining area some 1,500 kilometres (900 miles) north of the city.
He was due to appear in court via video link later Monday.
Her children were named as three and a half-year-old daughter Charlotte and two-year-old twins Alice and Beatrix, and her mother as Beverley Quinn, 74.
The police did not release details about when and how they were killed, or the family’s relationship with the man.
A Facebook profile believed to be Mara Quinn’s showed her cradling a newborn in her arms, with a man beside her, and stated that she was engaged in August 2014.
A real estate listing showed a modest three-bedroom house and a standalone garage.
“She was pretty unlucky in love before she met him,” a friend told Fairfax Media. “So (when they got together) it was like ‘yay, now she gets to start a family’.”
‘Silence for a week’
A neighbour told ABC he had returned from a holiday to “silence in the street”.
“We noticed that the house next door was pretty quiet, which was unusual,” Richard Fairbrother, who lives next door to the family’s house, said.
“We could hear and see the kids playing in the backyard quite often.”
Other neighbours spoke of a shocked community that had been close, calm and peaceful.
Mass killings are rare in Australia, but this appears to be the third such family tragedy to hit Western Australia state in recent months.
In July a man allegedly killed his mother and two siblings. A grandfather shot dead his wife, daughter and her four children in murder-suicide in May.