Family of six found dead; police believe father killed family, then self
March 15th, 2002 | Posted in: , Psychological & Social Issues | Keywords: Jehovah, Watchtower Society, Bryant family, children | 2 CommentsMarch 15, 2002

MCMINNVILLE - The community of McMinnville was visibly shaken
after investigators discovered a family of six shot to death in
their home in an apparent murder-suicide Friday.
Robert Bryant is believed to have shot his wife and four children
- whose ages range from 9 to 15 - before turning the gun on himself,
said Yamhill County District Attorney Bradley C. Berry.
Robert Bryant was found dead in the living room, 37-year-old Janet
Ellen Bryant in the master bedroom, and their four children in their
beds, Berry said.
All had been killed by shotgun blasts.
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Neighbors said the children had not been in school for about two weeks, and parents also seen, Berry a faxed statement./>
“Evidence … indicates that Mr. Robert Bryant killed his wife
and children and then took his own life,” Berry said, although a
motive is not yet known.
“It was a horrible sight,” Berry said.
The children last attended school on Feb. 22, and the shootings
are believed to have occurred the following day, he said.
Dead are the 37-year-old father, his 37-year-old wife, Janet Ellen
Bryant, as well as 15-year-old Clayton, 12-year-old Ethan, 10-year-old
Ashley and 9-year-old Alissa Bryant.
Bryant was a self-employed landscaping contractor.
Family Leaves California After Being Shunned; Bryant Parents
Worried About Custody Battle
A former California neighbor, Albert Clary, said the Bryants and
their relatives were Jehovah’s Witnesses.
According to Clary, Robert Bryant got into an argument with a
church leader over the Bible while he and his family were still
living in California.
The family was reportedly shunned by both other Jehovah’s witnesses
as well as their own relatives following the incident.
In fact, the Bryants were essentially kicked out of the church
three years ago, KATU News learned from an elder church member of
the California congregation to which the Bryants belonged.
“Mr. Bryant was expelled from the congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses
for conduct that was not in harmony with Bible principles, and chose
to move his family from the area away from friends and family,”
said congregation elder Mark Messier Sr.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. Bryant were concerned that relatives may seek
custody of their four children, Messier said.
According to the church elder, relatives of the Bryant family
had already filed documents in an effort to seek custody.
The Bryants came to Oregon last
summer to make a fresh start, a former neighbor of the family told
KATU News.
Two Jehovah’s Witnesses who were at the McMinnville church on
Friday said they had never heard of the Bryants.
A study of California bankruptcy records indicates that the family
moved to McMinnville from Shingle Springs California, where the
father had a landscaping business called Bryant’s Landscape Maintenance.
A Gruesome Discovery
Two Yamhill County sheriff’s deputies were in the vicinity of
the Bryants’ McMinnville home Thursday night when neighbors approached
them to express concern about the family.
Deputies spotted what appeared to be a body inside the home. They
obtained a search warrant and found all six bodies inside.
On Friday, deputies roped off the
area around the Bryants’ manufactured home on a hillside outside
McMinnville, a prosperous town in the heart of Oregon’s wine-growing
country.
Detectives searched the grounds for clues but found nothing.
The home sits on about two acres of a rural subdivision west of
McMinnville, in hills at the foot of Oregon’s Coast Range and about
20 miles south of Portland.
“There Were No Warning Signs”
Neighbors told investigators the Bryants were planning to build
a larger house on the site.
“It was our understanding that they planned to build a bigger
home and then sell it…so he had a lot of ideas of what he was
going to do in the future, so this really surprised us,” family
acquaintance Colin Armstrong told KATU News.
In a phone interview, Jeanna Wright
told katu.com that her daughter Jaden was friends with Ashley Bryant
at Memorial Elementary School. Mrs. Wright said her daughter had
not seen Ashley in Mrs. Mecker’s class for two weeks and was concerned.
Karen Richey, assistant superintendent for the McMinnville School
District, said teachers had noticed the children’s absence from
school and several attempts were made to contact the Bryants.
“We had people knocking on the door several times,” but no one
ever answered the door, she said.
At first school officials weren’t alarmed,
because it is not uncommon for students to be absent during the
flu season, she said.
School officials say that a 10-day absence is not unheard of,
and there were no real warning signs to alert them that anything
may have been wrong at home.
Ashley’s younger sister Alissa was a second grade student at Memorial
Elementary.
Ethan was a sixth grader at Patton Middle School, and Clayton,
the oldest, attended McMinnville High School.
The Children Were Well-Liked
Not surprisingly, this apparent murder-suicide has saddened many
who knew the Bryant children.
“Ethan Bryant was a very nice young man, he had many friends.
We are very saddened by this tragedy,” Assistant Principal of Patton
Middle School, Mark Hyder told katu.com.
“Ethan was new to our district this year…he was a very popular
sixth-grader,” said Hyder. “We’re just trying to get through this
day supporting students and their families.”
In a press conference this morning,
McMinnville Superintendent Elaine Taylor told the media, “the Memorial
staff is understandably very grief-stricken, the two teachers of
the children…are having a difficult time…”
It was clear that Taylor was struggling to maintain composure.
Alissa and Ashley Bryant were described by Memorial Elementary
staff as “bright students who showed an interest in school.”
McMinnville High School, Patton Middle School, and Memorial Elementary
all have extra counselors on site today to help students and staff
cope with their grief.
Bryants
described as ‘perfect family’
March 16, 2002

MCMINNVILLE, ORE. (AP) - Robert Bryant moved his family to Oregon
from California last year abruptly after becoming estranged from
his parents and siblings over church issues and going into bankruptcy.
Things started getting better when they arrived in McMinnville.
Now, friends and acquaintances are asking themselves why Bryant
would kill his wife Janet, their four children and himself, destroying
what one acquaintance called “a perfect family.”
align="right"/>Yamhill County District Attorney Bradley Berry has listed the deaths
as murder-suicide and says they probably took place about Feb. 23.
They were not reported until suspicious neighbors alerted sheriff’s
deputies late Thursday night.
Dead are Robert Arlie and Janet Ellen, both 37, and children Clayton
Keith, 15, Ethan Lance, 12, Ashley Rose, 10, and Alyssa Megan, 9.
Investigators believe Robert Bryant killed the other five with
one shotgun blast each, then turned the gun on himself.
Neighbors in McMinnville and a family spokesman in California
say the fallout was due to undisclosed differences between Bryant
and the Jehovah’s Witness church he had attended for years.
Jehovah’s Witnesses in Shingle
Springs had banned Robert Bryant from the congregation there, an
act that members call “disfellowship.” The action was taken, church
elder Mark Messier said, for Bryant’s “unrepentant behavior” that
violated church beliefs. Then his family apparently did so as well.
RV park owner Howard Angell said Robert confided the family had
left a “big problem” in California, actually fleeing out of fear
in the middle of the night, the McMinnville News-Register reported.
Hermina Sampson of McMinnville met Robert Bryant soon after he
came to town last summer and was going door to door drumming up
work for his landscaping business. “He told me he had to get away
from the grandparents,” she said. “The grandparents were kind of
trying to brainwash the children.”
A former California neighbor, Albert Clary, said Robert Bryant
held Bible studies every Tuesday at his Shingle Springs home. But
he homeschooled his children and limited other interaction. “They
were sort of standoffish people,” Clary said.
Berry said investigators may never learn why a man described as
mild-mannered and deeply religious would murder a wife and children
described as doting and devoted.
The family had installed a double-wide
mobile home on a two-acre lot west of town in December. The Bryants
enrolled the children in McMinnville public schools. They had planned
to live in the mobile home only long enough to build a new house.
Four weapons were found in the house including two shotguns that
Berry said were used in the crime.
Each family member died from a single blast at close range. “One
shotgun shell casing was accounted for and recovered at the scene
for each victim,” Berry said.
The children had virtually perfect attendance records through
Friday, Feb. 22. But they had not been seen in class since.
Phone calls and checks at the house got no answer.
“They were just as nice a couple as you’d ever want to meet,”
said Dennis Goecks, who sold the Bryants the two-acre lot last summer.
“It’s one of those things that just doesn’t compute.”
The family lived in Shingle Springs quietly and, according to
those who knew them were polite, but not outgoing. Brenda Maranville
rented the Bryants a house for four years, and then sold it to them.
“They were wonderful renters, they were immaculate caretakers,
their kids were always so well behaved - it’s like the perfect family,”
she said.
Goecks said the Bryants bought the view lot west of McMinnville
from him last summer and had finished paying for it by the end of
the year.
Peggy Ojeda, office manager of the Dayton park where the family
stayed for a short time said the family arrived June 11.
One of his first steps was creation of Bryant’s Landscape & Maintenance,
registered with the state at the RV park address.
“They were an extremely nice, very
quiet family,” Ojeda said. “They did everything together. “The children
positively drooled over their dad. They never seemed afraid of him.”
They aggressively advertised the business, both in the newspaper
and with leaflets, and the business took off.
Robert presented a proposal to RV park owner Angell to re-landscape
the entire park, but phoned back in November to say he had taken
on too much other work.
Vern Skoog of Homes America had many dealings with the family
in connection with the double-wide home’s purchase. He remembers
Robert as a “really pleasant guy.” Skoog said, “He had gone through
some difficulties in California, including a business bankruptcy.
He was looking to make a fresh start.”
The Bryants moved into the home just before Christmas.
On Jan. 13, 2000, the Bryants filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. They
had unsecured debts of $57,000, mostly on credit cards. They had
a home valued at $175,000, but had little equity in it.
The bankruptcy freed the Bryants from the credit card debt and
some of the other debt.
By June, the Bryants had a fresh start, and set out to rebuild
their businesses and finances. They continued to pay off more than
$11,000 that they legally didn’t have pay to Steve and Brenda Maranville.
“We struggled a little bit to get financing in place, but we were
able to do it,” Skoog said. He said he discounts financial pressures
as a reason for the murder-suicide. The Bryant’s California bankruptcy
attorney agreed. “The bankruptcy took care of their financial problems,”
said Julia Gibbs. “They probably should have been fine.”
Similarities
between the Bryant case and the Longo murders
March 15, 2002

The Bryant case bears some similarities to the case of Christian
Longo–also accused of murdering his family.
Like the Bryants, the Longo’s were Jehovah’s witnesses and were
also disfellowshipped–or, kicked out–by their church. In Christian
Longo’s case it was allegedly because of repeated run-in’s he had
with the law.
Also like the Bryants, the Longo family moved to Oregon with the
stated goal of “starting a new life.”
One key difference:
after allegedly murdering his 3 children and his wife, Christian
Longo did not take his own life.
Instead, he spent several weeks on the run before being captured
in Mexico.


