The caller was unrushed and exceedingly polite, even thanking the police dispatcher as he reported that he had beaten his wife and their 7-year-old son to death with a baseball bat in their home in a handsome neighborhood in Warrington.
When police arrived at 167 Redstone Dr. late Friday night, they found a typewritten note on the front door that listed the names and phone numbers of relatives to be contacted on both sides of the family.
"Thank you" was typed at the bottom of the note.
After killing his family, Christopher Moyer, 44, a computer consultant who worked from home, drove his Toyota Camry to Hatboro, put his head on the SEPTA track at the Meadow Avenue crossing, and waited to die.
Police, who found Moyer's body there shortly after 1 a.m. Saturday, figured he knew the train schedule.
What no one - including the Warrington police, the Bucks County district attorney, and relatives - seems to know is why all this happened.
Warrington Police Chief James Miller said Moyer's phone call came in at 9:40 p.m. Friday. Warrington, Warminster, and Warrick police rushed to the scene but Moyer had already left. After trying to make contact with anyone inside, the officers entered through the garage.
They found Irina Geller Moyer, 39, in the bathroom adjacent to the master bedroom. Officers found Dillon in another bedroom and a bloody baseball bat nearby. There were no signs of struggle. Mother and son may have been asleep when the attack began, police said.
Bucks County District Attorney David Heckler said Moyer, after killing his wife and son, texted a relative to say he was sorry.
At 12:56 a.m., Hatboro police received a call from SEPTA that a passenger train had hit a man in Hatboro. Police found $1,300 in Moyer's pocket and his car parked near the tracks.
While police were investigating the crime scene Friday night, Irina Moyer's parents and her brother and sister-in-law, who all live in Northeast Philadelphia, arrived at the house.
They had been expecting the Moyers to drive Dillon to the grandparents' home for a weekend visit. When the Moyers didn't arrive and couldn't be reached by phone, Irina's family drove to Warrington, where police informed them of the deaths, Heckler said.
Christopher Moyer grew up in the village of Neffs, a section of North Whitehall Township in Lehigh County. His father, Warren, 77, said Moyer attended Kutztown University.
Moyer married Irina Geller, a native of Kiev, Ukraine, in 2002. It was a second marriage for both, records indicate. On her Facebook page, she used the name Elizabeth Moyer. The couple bought the house on Redstone Drive in 2003, according to records.
There was no history of domestic violence between Moyer and his wife, but they had had financial difficulties. According to court records, the state filed a $2,228.20 lien against the couple's house in September 2010. They had avoided foreclosure in 2006 and paid off a federal lien filed that year as well.
The neighborhood was quiet Saturday afternoon. The family's four-bedroom house with two-car garage has a swing set in the backyard and a barbecue grill on the deck. Real estate listings indicate houses on the street sell in the $500,000 range.
Warren Moyer, who still lives in Neffs, said he had no idea why his son killed himself and his family.
"We spoke on Friday morning and he was in good spirits," he said, remarking that his son told him he had just renewed a contract with a computer client.
A compilation of daily news articles from around the United States about deaths (including both people and animals) that appear to occur in the context of a past or present intimate relationship, focusing on 2009-present. (NOTE: this blog is limited to incidents that appear in the media and are captured by our search terms. We recognize this is not an exhaustive portrayal of all deaths resulting from intimate violence.) When is society going to realize intimate violence makes victims of us all?
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