Suicide note indicates former officer's killing of teen daughters was premeditated, police say

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Monday, February 23, 2015
Police give update on retired officer double murder suicide
Lisa Colagrossi has the latest developments from Harrison.

HARRISON, N.Y. -- Harrison Police Chief Anthony Marraccini says a retired officer's five-page suicide note indicates that the killing of his teenage daughters in their beds was a premeditated act.

Marraccini said Monday that former White Plains Officer Glen Hochman had no known health or psychiatric problems. He says there also were no indications of alcohol or drug use.

Marraccini said Hochman and his wife, Anamarie, had recently had "a family discussion" about separating and that on the day before the killings, Anamarie Hochman reported to police that she and her husband had a nonviolent argument over an $80 cellphone bill. The chief said she did not want police to follow up but rather wanted to "document" the incident.

Marraccini said police went to the home after a person reported that no one was answering the door. Police found the bodies of Hochman and his daughters at 3:50 p.m.

"It looks at this time that the father killed the two girls and then himself," Marraccini said.

He said Hochman's body was found in the garage while the bodies of 17-year-old Alissa and 13-year-old Deanna were found on "the main level" of the house. Three dogs were shot to death as well, he said.

Hochman's wife and older daughter were on a trip to Mohegan Sun, but grew concerned when there was no answer at the house. Once entering the home just before 4 p.m., Alissa's boyfriend discovered Hochman's dead body within the garage.

Adam Burak, Alissa's history teacher spoke exclusively to Eyewitness News, and said the 17-year-old was a special student.

"Alissa is one of the reasons I got into teaching - she is one of the sweetest kids you could have, just a nice girl," Burack said, "she also had a love of hockey - we bonded over the New York Rangers, and that's why I wore this shirt today."

Not inside the home at the time of the deadly rampage Hoch's wife, Anamarie, a nursery school teacher and the couple's oldest daughter Samantha.

Anamarie clearly adored her girls, posting a message, in 2012, to Alissa on her birthday "...you are the light of my life, even though most days we are fighting...I can't imagine one minute without you. happy sweet 16, I love you always"

Hochman spent 22 years at the White Plains police department before retiring recently.

"The department is shocked and horrified by the news of this unfathomable tragedy," White Plains Police Commissioner David Chong said in a statement. "We can only pray for the family. Officer Hochman served this department and the city of White Plains with honor and integrity."

Last year, Hochman won the department's life-saving award for keeping an unresponsive man alive until paramedics arrived.

Residents of the upper middle-class neighborhood discussed the shootings in quiet tones as they shoveled snow Sunday.

Howard Hollander, 52, an airline pilot who lives five doors down from the Hochmans, said Hochman "was always taking care of the property, landscaping, cleaning up the yard."

"The girls said hi whenever they passed," Hollander said. "I remember one was learning to drive and beeped at us as she went by."

He added, "There was no indication at all of any problem, that something like this would happen."

Another neighbor, Dante Garritano, 52, an engineer, said he went outside when he saw ambulances and police cars Saturday.

"I walked out and I heard a woman crying, screaming, on her phone, 'My God, they're dead. He killed himself,'" Garritano said.

Alissa Hochman was a senior at Harrison High School, which opened its campus on Sunday for grief counseling.

On the Harrison Central School District website, Superintendent Louis N. Wool said the district mourned the deaths of two girls "both lost to incomprehensible tragedy."

(Some information from the Associated Press)

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