This horrific crime is beyond cruel. This family was tortured, terrorized and then murdered. What kind of thug does this to a family?

Here are photos of the suspect:

This combination of undated photos provided by the Washington, D.C., police shows Daron Dylon Wint. The police issued a news release late Wednesday, May 20, 2015, saying they are looking for Wint in connection with last Thursday's quadruple homicide of a wealthy Washington family and their housekeeper inside their multimillion-dollar home. (Metropolitan Police Department via AP)
This combination of undated photos provided by the Washington, D.C., police shows Daron Dylon Wint. The police issued a news release late Wednesday, May 20, 2015, saying they are looking for Wint in connection with last Thursday’s quadruple homicide of a wealthy Washington family and their housekeeper inside their multimillion-dollar home. (Metropolitan Police Department via AP)

DNA found on a piece of a pizza led police to the man they believe brutally murdered a Washington, D.C., family and their housekeeper last week in the exclusive Woodley Park neighborhood in northwest D.C.
Daron Dylon Wint, 34, is wanted for first-degree murder while armed, police said late Wednesday. Just before midnight Wednesday, police were seen questioning people at Wint’s last known address in Prince George’s County, Maryland.

The break in the case came when investigators found DNA on a piece of a pizza that was delivered the night of May 13, sources close to the investigation told News4.
Police believe three family members — including a 10-year-old boy — and their housekeeper were killed the next day, hours after someone delivered $40,000 in cash to the multimillion-dollar house.

The family had likely been kept bound and threatened over Wednesday night, sources close to the investigation tell News4. The cash had been withdrawn from an account at the company where one of the victims was the CEO, the sources said.
Sometime after the cash arrived on May 14, the home was set on fire, leading to the discovery of the bodies.
Wednesday’s developments were major breaks in a case that seems almost unimaginable in its brutality and in its location. It happened in the 3200 block of Woodland Drive NW in Woodley Park, a neighborhood of security systems and landscaped lawns just blocks from the vice president’s home and near the National Cathedral.

Savvas Savopoulos, 46; his wife, Amy Savopoulos, 47; their son, Philip; and housekeeper Veralicia Figueroa, 57, were found dead after the home was set on fire. Three of the victims had been beaten and stabbed to death, and some of the bodies smelled of gasoline, police said.
Philip’s body was so badly burned that investigators aren’t sure if he was injured before the fire was set, and he still hasn’t been officially identified, sources close to the investigation said.

Philip’s body was found in his room; three other bodies were found on the floor in another bedroom.
The family Porsche was found burning in a church parking lot in suburban Maryland. Police had circulated the grainy image of a person leaving the scene of the car fire, wearing black clothing.
Wint, the suspect that police are seeking, has a court record that includes charges of assault, carrying concealed weapons and theft in Prince George’s County. One of those records lists a home address that is less than a half-mile from where the car was found burning.

Savopoulos was the CEO of American Iron Works, which helped build major D.C. construction projects, including the Verizon Center and CityCenterDC. Savopoulos and his wife, Amy, were well known in the neighborhood, often hosting parties for neighbors and friends, according to The Washington Post; the family had attended St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Cathedral in the neighborhood.

Philip (pictured below) was a fourth-grader at St. Albans, the private school near St. Sophia and the National Cathedral; two daughters were away at private boarding schools.

dchomicideNeighbors who have been in the home said the family had an extensive and valuable art collection, which was on display a couple of years ago during the Christmas house tour put on by St. Albans.
The timeline of events that investigators are working from seems to match information from a longtime housekeeper for the Savopoulos family, who said she was a good friend of Veralicia “Vera” Figueroa.

Nelly, who didn’t want her full name used for security reasons, owns her own cleaning company and worked for the family for more than two decades. Nelly allowed Figueroa to work with her at the Savopoulos family’s home.
On that Wednesday, Figueroa texted Nelly to say she wanted to work at the home, and planned to finish by 3 p.m.
That evening, Nelly missed a call from Savvas Savopoulos, saying Figueroa was spending the night at the family’s home. She heard the call on voice mail the next morning.

Nelly said Figueroa’s husband went to the home Thursday morning to look for her and had an eerie encounter. No one answered the door when he knocked on it, but he told Nelly he had the feeling someone was standing just inside the closed door.
He went around the back of the house to knock again. As he did, Nelly said, Savopoulos called his cell phone. Savopoulos said Figueroa was OK and had spend the night, according to Nelly.
The fire at the home was reported about four hours later.
Nelly said Figueroa was hard-working and loved life. She’d come to the United States from El Salvador to earn money before planning to retire next year.
A GoFundMe page was created to help with her funeral costs.
Throughout the week, federal agents and D.C. police have continued to gather evidence at the Woodley Park home. Meanwhile, in New Carrollton, authorities used a bloodhound to try to track down the person who torched a 2008 blue Porsche 911 stolen from the home on the day of the fire.
The Porsche was burned in the parking lot of St. Christopher’s Episcopal Church. That’s where surveillance video of a person of interest in the case was captured on a camera at a nearby banquet hall.
The person is difficult to see in the video. The person is dressed in dark clothing, including a hoodie with the hood pulled up.

(Washington, DC) – Detectives from the Metropolitan Police Department are seeking the public’s assistance in locating 34-year-old Daron Dylon Wint in connection with a quadruple homicide which occurred on Thursday, May 14, 2015, in the 3200 block of Woodland Drive, Northwest. He is wanted pursuant to a DC Superior Court arrest warrant charging him with Murder One while Armed.

He is described as a black male, approximately 5’7” in height, weighing approximately 155 pounds.

The Metropolitan Police Department currently offers a reward of up to $25,000 to anyone who provides information which leads to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons wanted for any homicide committed in the District of Columbia. Anyone with information about this case is asked to all police at (202) 727-9099. Additionally, anonymous information may be submitted to the department’s TEXT TIP LINE by text messaging 50411.

Read more: Conservative Treehouse 

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