Teenager murders his family members on New Year's Eve, officials say

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A 16-year-old New Jersey boy gunned down his parents, sister and a family friend just before midnight on New Year's Eve, turning the family home into a bloodbath that his brother and grandfather managed to escape, investigators said Monday.

The teenager shot and killed his father, mother, sister and a family friend who also lived in the Long Branch, New Jersey home, Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni said in a statement. Police were called to the home around 11:43 p.m., and the suspect was taken into custody without incident, Gramiccioni said.

“We are confident that this is a domestic incident that is completely isolated,” Gramiccioni said. “It’s a terribly tragic incident.”

The boy’s name was not released, but the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office identified the deceased as: Steven Kologi, 44; Linda Kologi, 42; Brittany Kologi, 18; and Mary Schultz, 70. Schultz was identified as a “family acquaintance” by the prosecutor’s office.

The suspect’s brother and grandfather also were at the home at the time of the shooting but were able to escape unharmed, Gramiccioni said during a Monday news conference.

The teenager was believed to have used a Century Arms "semi-automatic assault rifle" to gun down his family members and the family friend, authorities said. The gun was legally owned and registered to a family member, Gramiccioni said.

Gramiccioni declined to comment on the suspect’s motive or a possible mental disability when asked by reporters. He did say the attack was an “isolated” domestic incident.

"The Kologis were very caring, loving people and always looking to do fun things with their kids," Walter Montelione, Linda Kologi's cousin, told WCBS-TV. "He was a good kid. He was a little, you know, slow with learning disabilities, but he knows right from wrong."

Brittany Kologi was a freshman at Stockton University in Galloway Township, N.J., where she studied health sciences, a university spokeswoman confirmed to Fox News.

"We are shocked and saddened by the reports of the death of freshman Brittany Kologi under such tragic circumstances," Diane D'Amico, a Stockton University spokeswoman said. She added that counseling staff will be on hand for students.

Jalen Walls went to school with Brittany Kologi and lives a few blocks away from the home. He told NJ.com that the suspected shooter was cared for by his mother as he required special assistance.

"But he was fully functional and comprehended what we were saying," Walls told the news outlet.

Dave Farmer said in a Facebook tribute that he played softball with Steven Kologi and “never had an argument or disagreement since” with him.

‘I’m proud to say publicly that I knew and loved this man unconditionally and always told him when we parted, ‘I love you brotha!!!’” Farmer said.

The teenager could be charged as an adult, officials said.

Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office and the Long Branch Police Department have launched a joint investigation into the murders.

Steph83 on January 1st, 2018 at 20:18 UTC »

This could easily be my son. It’s so hard to find help for a mentally ill child/teen. My son burned our home down 2 years ago and has been in a residential treatment facility ever since. We adopted him from foster care when he was 3 years old. One of the only reasons we had access to mental health services was because he was adopted. Parents who biologically have children with mental health issues are basically screwed, unless they pay out of pocket. Even with the help my son has, he’ll never be able to live a normal life or come home. Now the insurance is tired of paying and is telling us we have to bring him home - so our options are to pay ~$5,000 per month to privately keep him in the facility or sign our parental rights away. If we sign our rights away, we have to go through an abuse investigation with DCF and potentially lose our jobs and our other children. We could be arrested for abandonment (because refusing to pick him up and bring him home is considered abandoning him). We’ve spent over $100,000 since the fire. We’d do anything in the world to help him, but nothing is helping. Just last week he assaulted his therapist and said he would break out and kill me. He’s threatened his siblings. He’s made comments about sexually assaulting the staff or females living there. He’s admitted to his therapist that there were multiple times that he stood in my doorway at night with a knife in his hand. When/if we sign our rights away, he’ll still leave the institution but he’ll be put into foster care. Placement likely won’t tell the family the extent of his issues and it could end very, very badly.

TheLadyEve on January 1st, 2018 at 17:42 UTC »

The alleged suspect’s brother and grandfather were also at the home at the time of the shooting but were able to escape unharmed

Well first of all, thank goodness, but second of all, can you imagine how that surviving brother feels right now? And grandfather?

Nexisman on January 1st, 2018 at 16:04 UTC »

The boy remains unnamed but here's his family members.