GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) — Police say preliminary results show that a Grand Forks mother shot and killed her three children and then took her own life.

Astra Volk and her children, 14-year-old Tyler Talmage, 10-year-old Aidan Talmage and 6-year-old Arianna Talmage, were found dead in a rental home Thursday morning after a school asked police for a welfare check. All had gunshot wounds.

Police said in a news release issued Monday that no additional suspects are being sought. The investigation remains open.

Court records show Volk was divorced and had struggled to pay off medical bills.

Family, friends and neighbors shared stories Sunday evening at a vigil held outside the home. Volk’s mother, Elizabeth Richards, urged people dealing with mental health issues to get help.

 

 

Previously…

GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) — Authorities in North Dakota say four people found dead in a Grand Forks home were a mother and her three children and their deaths were apparent homicides and a suicide.

Police found the bodies Thursday morning after one of the children’s schools asked them to do a welfare check. They say all four had gunshot wounds.

The police news release Thursday night said a handgun was found at the scene and no suspects were being sought.

Police identified the dead as 35-year-old Astra Volk and her children, 14-year-old Tyler Talmage, 10-year-old Aidan Talmage and 6-year-old Arianna Talmage.

 

GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) — Court records indicate a woman who, along with her three children, died of gunshot wounds at her home in North Dakota may have been struggling with financial problems.Police have not officially classified the killings as murder-suicide, but said they are not looking for any suspects and that they found a gun in the house with the bodies.Grand Forks County court documents show a collection agency won three civil judgments totaling about $3,750 against an Astra F. Volk in the last six months of 2017 for unpaid medical bills.

A woman by the same name set up a GoFundMe account April 25 seeking money to help pay off medical bills she said were brought about in part for treatment for mental illness. The woman said she was working full-time but that her wages had been garnished.

The fundraising account had been deleted Friday.

Paula Stevens, 58, who lives two doors down from the house where the four were found, said Thursday that the family had moved into the house just a couple of months earlier.

“Three little kids and their mom — oh my goodness,” she said.

Stevens said the house “sat empty forever” until it was recently renovated. She said the woman was living there as a renter, but that she rarely saw the family because the woman worked odd hours and the long winter kept the kids indoors.

“It’s a little frightening because Grand Forks is supposed to be like a safe town, a place where you can keep your doors unlocked,” said Caralyne Ronai, a senior at the University of North Dakota who was walking through the neighborhood. “Four dead is upsetting to hear.”