Police to Rumford: "Be smart ... be on guard."

RUMFORD —A State Police detective said Tuesday police were searching for a person of interest in the shooting deaths of two men on Pine Street Monday night.

RUMdblhomicide4P0805.jpg
Terry Karkos

Terry Karkos/Sun Journal

Two State Police detectives meet with Maine State Police Evidence Response Team leader Herb Leighton, center, on Tuesday morning opposite the scene of Monday night's double homicide at 244 Pine St. in Rumford. Leighton, a 15-year detective is the team's blood-spatter expert.

Home at 244 Pine St.
Terry Karkos

Terry Karkos/Sun Journal

State police detectives were getting search warrants on Tuesday morning to begin searching the small house at center where two men were killed late Monday night at 244 Pine St. in Rumford.

Terry Karkos

Terry Karkos/Sun Journal

State and Rumford police were waiting on Tuesday for search warrants on Tuesday morning before starting to search this house at 244 Pine St. in Rumford were two men were killed late Monday night.

Scene of Rumford homicides
Terry Karkos

Terry Karkos/Sun Journal

Standing near the Maine State Police Evidence Response Team mobile crime lab, Rumford police Chief Stacy Carter, center, listens to Maine State Police detectives on Tuesday morning while standing opposite the house at 244 Pine St. where two men were killed late Monday night. Just beyond them, a state police detective escorts a resident through the scene.

Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal

Police officers talk with people near the scene of a double homicide late Monday night on Pine Street in Rumford.

Double murder in Rumford
Russ Dillingham

Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal State and local police investigate a reported double murder at 244 Pine Street, far left, in Rumford.

State Police Det. Lt. Brian McDonough also warned residents to be careful as they had yet to secure a suspect in the killings.

With a killer still at large, McDonough said residents should “be smart about
yourself and on your guard.”

According to police, Victor Sheldon, 22, and Roger Day, 48, were shot
in the home. People at the scene said the victims had been shot in the
head. 

McDonough said that besides the two dead men at least two others were in the house at 244 Pine St. The man seen fleeing may not have known there was a third person inside, McDonough said.

“We are seeking the public's help in locating an
individual seen fleeing from the scene immediately following the shootings,”
McDonough said.

The man was described as white, in his 20s,
approximately 6 feet tall, with a medium build and dark shoulder-length hair. He
was also wearing dark clothing, the detective said.

“And, he had these — they've been described as
either bandages or almost like gloves you'd wear riding a bicycle, with the
fingers free,” on both hands, McDonough said.

“Please keep in mind that he may have changed his
appearance following the incident,” he said.

“There we're a number of individuals in the
neighborhood at the time of the shooting and, we're getting some good witness
testimony describing this individual, so, I think there's some good early
indications that we're going to be able to identify and locate this person,”
McDonough said.

To help, call either the Maine State Police at
657-3030 or Rumford police at 364-4551.

 Police have been at the scene since late Monday and held a news conference at 2 p.m. Tuesday to announce they were looking for a man with long black hair who was seen leaving the scene. The man was wearing gloves or had something wrapped around his hands.

Day lived at the house where he was shot, a house owned by Anthony Scott Richards. In April, Richards was extradited to Montana to face federal sex charges. Richards was arrested by a U.S. Secret Service agent in April at the home where the two men were found shot dead Monday.

Richards was facing charges stemming from a joint Internet child pornography investigation by the FBI and the Montana Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force.

The home was purchased by Richards in  July 2003 for $24,000, according to county records.

Sheldon also stayed at the home frequently with Day, according to State Police.

Both state and local law enforcement officers equipped with search dogs continued to canvass the neighbor near the crime scene Tuesday morning.  Uniformed and plain-clothes officers in marked and unmarked vehicles were seen apparently looking for evidence or witnesses in an area several blocks wide, expanding outward from the crime scene. As of mid-day police were releasing only preliminary information and did not say if they had a suspect or whether anyone had been taken into custody for questioning. Some Rumford police officers were called in off-shift to assist with the investigation.

Two of Sheldon's brothers did give statements to police early Tuesday morning and one was also speaking to television news reporters.

Some neighbors on the scene early Tuesday morning said the home, which was dark-colored and ramshackled in appearance, was known in the neighborhood as the "creepy house." A number of people in a third-story apartment building across the street from the crime scene were seen watching police work.

Sheldon had been scheduled to be arraigned in Rumford District Court on Tuesday, but charges of domestic violence assault against him were dropped on Monday, according to court records obtained by the Sun Journal.

Police first began receiving reports of the shooting at about 10 p.m. Monday.  No suspects were in custody by midnight, police Chief Stacy Carter said at the scene.

Maine State Police spokesman Steve McCausland confirmed that detectives had been dispatched to work with Rumford police on the investigation.

Two blocks of Pine Street were cordoned off, between Oxford Street and Maine Avenue, and anyone entering the restricted area was escorted by police.

A woman identified by neighbors as one victim's aunt was sobbing loudly as she hugged a man with a beard.

The mother of one of the victims fainted near the scene late Monday and was taken to a hospital by ambulance, a neighbor at the scene said.

Two ambulances were at the intersection of Pine and Oxford streets.

About 30 people were standing at either end of the cordoned-off area, as neighbors, family members and authorities converged on the scene late Monday.

The small, dark family home where the shooting happened is in a residential neighborhood, surrounded by other homes, including apartment houses and a mobile home.

sthistle@sunjournal.com

or  tkarkos@sunjournal.com


View Rumford double homicide scene in a larger map

Stay informed — Get the news delivered for free in your inbox.

I'm interested in ...

In order to make comments, you must verify your account.

In order to comment on SunJournal.com, you must use your real name and include the town in which you live in your profile. A member of our staff will call you to verify this information. To join in, fill out your user profile completely and check the box "please verify my status." We'll get back to you within one business day to verify your account.

Login or create an account here.

Our policy prohibits comments that are:

  • Defamatory, abusive, obscene, racist, or otherwise hateful
  • Excessively foul and/or vulgar
  • Inappropriately sexual
  • Baseless personal attacks or otherwise threatening
  • Contain illegal material, or material that infringes on the rights of others
  • Commercial postings attempting to sell a product/item
If you violate this policy, your comment will be removed and your account may be banned.

Advertisement

Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

cman629's picture

Hey heres some news they

Hey heres some news they didnt live in the same house as Anthony. They lived in a house on the same lot and for the record Rodger Day was a kind and nice man who cared for his friends. Why dont you keep your opinions about stuff you dont know to yourself. Peoples lives are in ruins and all you can do is throw around juvenille and ignorant accusations.

mssuzeey's picture

Imagine my surprise this

Imagine my surprise this morning when I heard 244 Pine Street. I grew up in that house and street back in the 1950's and early 1960's. That was a great neighborhood where everyone knew everyone else. The house looked much different with a porch and lots of flowers. How sad to hear about this happening in my old neighborhood.

littleda27's picture

Wow what a crazy world we

Wow what a crazy world we live in .. I remember as a kid things like this didnt happen very much in this state... now it seems like it is all the time ... people now a days seem to think they are intitled to everyting and dont care who they hurt to get it ... my thoughts and prayers go to this family ... because as we all know a crime like this dont just affect the people that were killed it will affect the familys of both the victims and the family of the accused .....

cosnaja's picture

I send my deepest sympathy

I send my deepest sympathy to the familys of these two. I personally lived on Pine Street and isn't half as bad as people seem to make it out to be. Being a person that knew these two I find it very hard to beleive this has happened. I'm not exactly sure why some people have such a hard heart and degrade these folks. If it was your child or your cousin or your friend, how would you feel? There are other place in that town that could use a cleaning yet they continue to be the same. For whatever reason this has happened it is tragic.

rumfudcar's picture
verified

yes mainexlie what is your

yes mainexlie what is your plan? judging from afar again.

Nancy1's picture

Blackdog, two people are

Blackdog, two people are dead, their families are grieving, no matter the citcumstances. Why not go to some other story to show off your questionable wit? You should be ashamed.

blackdog's picture

Yes, what a beautiful

Yes, what a beautiful neighboorhood indeed. Little known fact, several episodes of leave it to beaver were filmed there.

Nancy1's picture

Whatever happened,

Whatever happened, condolences to the families. Such a tragedy.

Mainexile, I had a childhood friend who lived on Pine Street, in the area where this occurred. Her mom was a nurse and dad was a professional too. I spent many happy days playing on that street. The homes were all neat and well cared for, everyone was friendly. And this was certainly less than 50 years ago. This tragedy could have happened ANYWHERE, even on your street.

Let's wait until the facts are in before we start pointing fingers and conjecturing that an area is a problem.

candiceanne's picture

I'm confused, first the

I'm confused, first the article says the shooting took place early Tuesday morning, then it says Rumford Police started getting calls at 10 pm that is at night. Were they getting called the night before and did not respond? What happened between what must have been 10 pm Monday and when the bodies where found Tuesday morning and the state police called in? No information apparently from the time the bodies were found til press at midnight and no ask for information by police. Looks like people here like need to be prepared to protect themselves you will have a long wait for police.

CmdrDewey's picture
verified

Yes Candice you are

Yes Candice you are confused. The article says they were in investigating early Tuesday morning. They started getting calls on Monday night. Now I will admit that perhaps the article was amended after you posted but that seems unlikely in 19 minutes.

nwills87's picture

it happened monday night.

it happened monday night. the article says police were INVESTIGATING early tuesday morning.

imgnepc's picture
verified

Clean House, mainexile?

Clean House, mainexile? What's your plan there? How, exactly...

mainexile's picture

That part of town has been a

That part of town has been a problem area for at least 50 years. Now it has taken one more step down the path of criminal activity with this double murder (execution?). Rumford PD: Maybe it's time to "clean house" on Pine Street?

mainegal's picture

Were these young people? At

Were these young people? At first is sounded like they may have shot each other... then I heard they were "found dead in the street", but then there was mention of someone seen running from the scene, a car with Mass. plates and the PD not being sure if there is a suspect "on the loose". I personally will feel much safer when I know that there isn't a suspect running about town.

facetheone's picture

It's a lot different when it

It's a lot different when it happens right around the block from where you live. :( Very sad. Good thing the Rumford PD is getting some extra help on this one. Whatever the reason, there's no reason it needs to end like this.

Advertisement