FBI joins investigation into slain couple as fear grips New Hampshire town
The FBI has joined the investigation into the fatal
shootings of a retired couple whose bodies were found last week on a hiking
trail near their New Hampshire home, leaving residents in their town fearful
for their own safety, authorities said.
No suspects have yet been identified and police have
released little information on the mysterious double homicide in Concord, New
Hampshire, of retired international humanitarian worker Stephen Reid, 67, and
Djeswende "Wendy" Reid, 66.
"We've been able to provide the information that we
have, which is that we have no specific information that there's any danger to
the public in general at this point in time, but be vigilant, and those
families are going to have to make those decisions for themselves as to what's
best for their family and what they're most comfortable with," Geoffrey
Ward, a senior assistant state attorney general, said on Tuesday.
Despite reassurances from the authorities that no imminent
danger is lurking in Concord, the state's capital, state Rep. Kris Schultz,
D-Concord, said anxiety has permeated the city of nearly 44,000 people, where
only seven murders have occurred in the past five years, according to the
Concord Police Department's annual crime statistics.
Schultz told WMUR in Manchester, New Hampshire, that the
lack of answers has left many of her constituents on edge.
"Do we need to be worried on an everyday basis in our
neighborhood? Are we safe?" Schultz said. "This has been a safe
community, and I believe it will continue to be, but I'm eager to hear
more."
'No. 1 priority'
Concord Police Chief Bradley Osgood said solving the
slayings is his department's "No. 1 priority."
"We are dedicating resources to be more visible in the
community to make people feel safer," Osgood said.
The Reids were reported missing on April 20 when Stephen
Reid failed to show up at a planned event, according to the state attorney
general's office. Their bodies were discovered a day later off a hiking trail
in a wooded and marshy area within the city's Broken Ground Trails system,
officials said.
Autopsies determined they both died from multiple gunshot
wounds.
The Reids were last seen alive on April 18, when they left
their home in the Alton Woods apartment complex around 2:30 p.m. and went for a
walk in the Broken Ground Trails area.
Homicide investigators and the couple's children are asking
the public to report any information that could possibly be helpful in cracking
the case.
The couple's family, including their children, Lindsay and
Brian Reid, released a statement, describing Stephen and Wendy Reid as
soulmates who traveled the world and shared a "mutual love of adventure
and fitness."
The Reids moved to Concord about three years ago when
Stephen Reid, who grew up in Concord, retired from a more than a 30-year career
as an international development specialist working on humanitarian projects
around the world through USAID, their family said.
The couple met while Wendy Reid, who was from West Africa,
was studying in Washington D.C. on an athletic scholarship, the family said.
After graduating from the University of Notre Dame, Stephen
Reid served in the Peace Corps in West Africa for four years, according to
relatives.
"Steve’s 30-plus year career as an international
development specialist in service to the world’s most vulnerable through USAID
humanitarian projects could not have been made possible without the love, care
and support of Wendy, who also helped recently resettled refugees acclimate and
thrive in the United States," family members said in their statement.
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