Kansas man Kevin Ray Moore dead in murder-suicide IDed as suspect in killing of 2 young researchers

A Kansas man who was found dead in an apparent murder-suicide has been identified as the killer of two young South American medical researchers whose battered bodies were discovered in a fire earlier this month.

The Jackson County Prosecutor’s office said Kevin Ray Moore, 42, murdered researchers Camila Behrensen, 24, and Pablo Guzmán Palma, 25, in their apartment and then intentionally set it ablaze.

Their bodies were found on Oct. 1 in the rubble at the apartment they shared near the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in Kansas City, where they were predoctoral researchers.

Investigators determined that both victims suffered trauma before their bodies were burned and deemed their deaths a homicide. Police have not revealed how they died or what injuries they suffered.

About two weeks after the gruesome killings, cops found the bodies of Moore and 40-year-old mother of five, Misty Brockman, in a car near an amusement park in Clay County. Police believe Moore killed Brockman before killing himself, but didn’t disclose how.

Camila Behrensen and Pablo Guzmán Palma were researchers from South America, working in Missouri at the time of their deaths.
GoFundMe

A subsequent investigation determined that Brockman was the main suspect in the murders of Behrensen, of Argentina, and Guzmán Palma, of Chile.

Police used phone and computer data, surveillance videos, ballistic testing and DNA evidence to determine Moore was behind the slaughters, according to the prosecutor’s office.

Early in the investigation, detectives had filed a search warrant to gain access to an Amazon Alexa device inside the researchers’ apartment. They hoped the device’s cloud storage may have recorded what happened on the day of their murders.

Behrensen and Guzmán Palma were part of the 2020 predoctoral class at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research.

“These researchers were members of our 2020 class and vibrant members of our Stowers Institute community,” Stowers said in a statement. “We want to honor and remember the joy, optimism, and exceptional work these two individuals embodied and all that they have accomplished.”

With Post wires



Read the full article Here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

DON’T MISS OUT!
Subscribe To Newsletter
Be the first to get latest updates and exclusive content straight to your email inbox.
Stay Updated
Give it a try, you can unsubscribe anytime.
close-link