People
living in Cedar Hill Drive, Prospect, Connecticut, were
awoken from their sleep in the early hours of Friday 22 July
1977, by the smell of smoke and the crackling of fire.
Looking out, they saw the house occupied by the Beaudoin
family was a blazing inferno. The fire brigade were called
and doused the flames with their hoses, but despite their
best efforts the house was gutted. When fire fighters
entered the still smouldering ruins they found the charred
remains of human corpses everywhere.
They came upon twenty-nine-year-old Mrs Cheryl Beaudoin dead
on the kitchen floor, her clothes burned from her body. The
bodies of three children were discovered in a bedroom to the
right of the hall and two others in a bedroom to the left.
Another child was dead in the master bedroom and two more in
the bathroom. Investigators later noticed that Mrs Beaudoin
and several of the children had their hands tied behind
their backs and the two in the bathroom had their feet bound
together; all the children appeared to have head wounds.
The victims, apart from Mrs-Beaudoin, were her own seven
children Frederick (twelve), Aaron Lee (ten), Debra Ann
(nine), Paul (eight), Roderick six), Holly Lyn (five) and
Mary Lou (four). The ninth victim was Mrs Beaudoin's niece
Jennifer Santoro (six), who had been staying with the
family.
Police immediately launched the largest murder investigation
in Connecticut's criminal history. Post-mortems established
that Mrs Beaudoin died from head injuries and a stab wound
in the chest. Paul also died from head injuries, while the
others perished from a combination of head injuries and
smoke inhalation. Within twenty-four hours detectives had
interviewed more than a hundred potential witnesses,
including the bereaved husband and his foster brother Lome
J. Acquin, who turned out to have been at the house playing
with the Beaudoin children on the night before the fire. A
witness later confirmed that a man had been seen in the area
sitting in his car on the day before the murders.
The police investigation now concentrated on
twenty-seven-year-old Acquin, who, according to the criminal
records had a previous conviction for burglary plus an
additional sentence for an attempted jail break. On Saturday
23 July, Acquin was detained for questioning. On the Sunday
morning, he agreed to make a statement in which he admitted
attacking his sister-in-law with a tyre lever, after which
he did the same to the children before spreading petrol
round the house and setting it on fire. Later that day Lome
Acquin was charged with nine counts of murder and one of
arson.
Acquin eventually went on trial at Waterbury on Monday 16
July 1979, after jury selection had taken more than a month.
The prosecution emphasised that in his confession, Acquin
said he 'might' have sexually molested ten-year-old Sharon
Beaudoin but that the post-mortem examinations had confirmed
there were signs of sexual injury in her case.
On Friday 19 October 1979, after three days' deliberation
the jury convicted Acquin on all nine counts of murder and
the charge of arson. He was subsequently sentenced to
twenty-five years to life on each of the murder convictions
and twenty for arson.
Taken in it's entirety from "The Encyclopaedia of
Mass Murder," by Brian Lane and Wilfred Gregg.
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