Riverside murders: Family of victims expected to speak out Wednesday during press conference

A press conference with members of the Winek family has been scheduled for Wednesday at 9 a.m.

Rob McMillan Image
Wednesday, November 30, 2022
Riverside murders: Family of victims expected to speak out tomorrow
Relatives of a family who was found murdered after a house fire in Riverside the day after Thanksgiving will be speaking out following the release of new details surrounding the killings.

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (KABC) -- Relatives of a family who was found murdered after a house fire in Riverside the day after Thanksgiving will be speaking out following the release of new details surrounding the killings.

A press conference with members of the Winek family has been scheduled for Wednesday at 9 a.m.

Four days after the bodies of Mark, Sharie and Brooke Winek were found, detectives converged on the scene Tuesday yet again to gather more evidence.

"The family is going to have this house boarded up, just for safety reasons," said Ofc. Ryan Railsback with the Riverside Police Department outside the home on Price Court. "Our detectives wanted to come out here and just to a secondary walkthrough while it was light and not as smoky."

Accompanied by family members of the victims, detectives removed multiple bags of evidence Tuesday afternoon. Police did not give specifics on what was found.

The suspect in the triple-murder case, 28-year-old Austin Edwards, is accused of enticing a 15-year-old girl who lives at the home into having an online relationship, a scheme known as catfishing.

Edwards, a recently-hired sheriff's deputy in Virginia, is believed to have driven all the way across the country to Riverside to try to meet the teen girl.

READ MORE | Riverside murders: VA man accused of catfishing teen daughter of 1 of victims before killing family

The murders of a husband and wife and their daughter in Riverside allegedly stemmed from a catfishing incident involving the teenage daughter of one of the victims, police said.

Detectives are still trying to figure out the events leading up to the horrific display of violence at the home, but Edwards is accused of murdering the 15-year-old's mother and two grandparents and then leaving the scene with her.

A 911 call placed by a neighbor alerted police to a possible sighting of the suspect, leaving the scene with the girl; the home erupting in flames moments later. Because authorities had the suspect's license plate number from that phone call, authorities were quickly able to use technology to track him down.

He was confronted by San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies about three hours later and killed during a shootout.

READ MORE | Neighbor saw teen being taken by suspect moments before house erupted in flames

Detectives have interviewed the teen girl, but say they still know very little about how it all started, and what Edwards' intentions were when driving to California.

"We're still looking into when he arrived in Riverside, but that's going to take a while," said Railsback. "We have this whole digital crime scene that we're going to have to locate with warrants, and sort through to see if there's anything where he relayed his intentions or his plans."

But as horrific as this crime was, Riverside police say the practice of catfishing happens all the time.

"The art of catfishing is when you lie about your own persona to entice somebody who wouldn't normally be attracted to who you really are," said Riverside Det. Robert Olsen.

"A lot of these cases will start with the perpetrator actually discussing things with our children that our children are interested in, whether it be music or sports, or television, movies," he said. "In that process, once they gain trust, they move on to what's known as grooming."

Olsen said his team has made approximately 40 arrests since June 2020 for the online enticement of a minor.

"We have arrested women, government officials, celebrities, there are no specific profiles, that's what makes this crime so difficult [to investigate,]" he said.

Olsen said parents need to take the matter of protecting their kids into their own hands.

"As soon as you place a smart device in your child's hand, which nowadays is happening between 4 and 5 years old, you need to make it a habit of theirs to allow you to look through that device whenever you want, you have the passcode not them," he said.

"Because when they become teens now, and they start getting into chat rooms where some of this behavior is really occurring, they won't become rebellious when you walk up and snatch their tablet out of their hand because you want to see what they're doing."

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