Man held in deaths of mom, 4 kids

Chinese immigrant arrested in NYC relatives’ slayings

A crime scene detective leaps up the steps at the scene of a multiple fatal stabbing Sunday, Oct. 27, 2013, in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, in New York. Police said a mother and her four young children were stabbed to death in a brutal rampage just before 11p.m. Saturday. The working-class neighborhood is home to many Chinese immigrants. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
A crime scene detective leaps up the steps at the scene of a multiple fatal stabbing Sunday, Oct. 27, 2013, in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, in New York. Police said a mother and her four young children were stabbed to death in a brutal rampage just before 11p.m. Saturday. The working-class neighborhood is home to many Chinese immigrants. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NEW YORK - A Chinese immigrant was arrested Sunday on five counts of murder in the deaths of his cousin’s wife and her four children in a stabbing rampage in their Brooklyn home.

The suspect, Mingdong Chen, 25, implicated himself in the stabbings late Saturday in the Sunset Park neighborhood, police said. New York Police Department Chief Phil Banks said the victims “were cut and butchered with a kitchen knife.”

Two girls, Linda Zhuo, 9, and Amy Zhuo, 7, were pronounced dead at the scene, along with the youngest child, William Zhuo, 1. Their brother, Kevin Zhuo, 5, and mother, Qiao Zhen Li, 37, were taken to hospitals, where they also were pronounced dead.

Chen is a cousin of the children’s father and had been staying at the home for the past week or so, Banks said. He came to the United States from China in 2004 and seemingly struggled to make it, Banks said.

“Ever since he came to this country, everybody seems to be doing better than him,” he said.

On Saturday night, Chen had apparently been acting in a way that concerned Li, Banks said. She tried to call her husband, who wasn’t home, but couldn’t reach him.

Banks said Li called her mother-in-law in China, who also was unsuccessful in reaching her son. The mother-in-law reached out to her daughter, who lives in the neighborhood, Banks said.

She and her husband went to the house and banged on the door, then called 911. Officers in the area responded, Banks said.

“It’s a scene you’ll never forget,” he said. The victims had wounds in their necks and torsos.

Chen was in custody and wasn’t immediately available for comment. He also faces counts of assault on a police officer, which happened while he was being processed, and resisting arrest, Banks said.

Bob Madden, who lives nearby, was out walking his dog when he saw a man being escorted from the building by police. He was barefoot, wearing jeans, and “he was staring; he was expressionless,” Madden said.

New York Fire Department spokesman Jim Long said emergency workers responded just before 11 p.m. to a 911 call from a person stabbed at the residence in Sunset Park, a working-class neighborhood of adjoining two-story brick buildings with a large Chinese community.

Neighbor May Chan told the Daily News that it was “heartbreaking” to learn of the deaths.

“I always see [the kids] running around here,” Chan said. “They run around by my garage playing. They run up and down screaming.”

Front Section, Pages 2 on 10/28/2013

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