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  • Family's Suicides Defy An Answer

    FAMILY'S SUICIDES DEFY AN ANSWER
    By Paloma Esquivel

    Los Angeles Times
    Jan 23 2009
    CA

    Two young women, their parents and a grandmother killed themselves
    in their stunning San Clemente home last year. No one knows why.

    On a clear day, the expanse of blue ocean seen from the living room
    of this San Clemente home seems almost endless. Sometimes, as day
    gives way to evening, a line of pink stretches like a crayon scrawl
    in the sky. When night falls, the sea is an abyss of black.

    Twenty years later, the home with the breathtaking view is where
    investigators say father, mother, daughters and a grandmother killed
    themselves.

    Late last year, after a six-month investigation, detectives closed the
    case. Some time in early May, the exact date unknown, Margo and Grace,
    both 21; Fransuhi Kesisoglu, 72; and Manas, 58, committed suicide
    with Vicodin, sleeping pills and antidepressants, they said. Only
    Margrit did not have drugs in her system. As Manas lay unconscious
    from the overdose, she shot him in the chest. Then she put the gun
    into her mouth and fired.

    Investigators are at a loss as to why. So are friends and family. There
    were no indications of marital troubles or psychological problems. No
    one was in financial straits and detectives found no evidence of
    bad health.

    "There's just nothing there," said Orange County Sheriff's Det. Dan
    Salcedo, who has been trying to decipher the case since late May. "I'd
    like to find something, have something, some possible reason to give
    the family some closure.

    "If there were any problems," he said, "they certainly kept it to
    themselves."

    Manas came to the United States in the 1970s from Istanbul, where he
    was part of a tight-knit community of Armenians who had migrated from
    Zara, a small town in central Turkey.

    Everyone knew of one another. They knew Manas' father, a tailor who
    could not find work in the big city, and his brothers. They knew of
    Manas' successes as a student. But they knew little else about him,
    said Antranik Zorayan, a leader of a small, well-organized community
    of Zara immigrants who now live in Southern California.

    Most years, Manas was busy studying. He earned a degree in engineering
    before moving to the United States for graduate study. Soon after
    completing his studies, he took a job teaching in the engineering
    department at Syracuse University.

    "He was a very, very calm person," recalled Bruce Pounder, a former
    student. "He was very smart and very generous with his time and
    willingness to help students like me."

    Margrit joined him in Syracuse. She had been raised in Turkey by
    Kesisoglu, who family members said was her mother. Margrit told
    friends Kesisoglu was actually an older sister who raised her from
    a very young age, a claim family members deny.

    Margrit was a doctor but couldn't practice in the United States because
    she lacked the proper credentials. In 1986, Margo and Grace were born.

    The family bought the hilltop estate in San Clemente, where they
    would be near Margrit's and Manas' brothers, and settled into their
    new lives.

    Manas was vivacious; Margrit was quieter. After many years of marriage,
    the couple still held hands and wrapped arms around each other, friends
    said. They were religious but not deeply so, going to St. Mary Armenian
    Church in Costa Mesa only on major holidays, fellow congregants said.

    Through Manas' work as an accident investigator, a lucrative profession
    that relied on his engineering background, they became close to
    a Laguna Niguel couple, attorney Glenn Rosen and wife, Peggy, but
    seemed to have few other acquaintances.

    Margrit, especially, seemed to develop a special affinity for the
    Rosens. She told them about her trouble getting an expected inheritance
    from the estate of a murdered uncle, who had been the head of an
    Armenian orthodox church; she blamed the Turkish government for the
    holdup. She expressed confusion over why a sister-in-law, a new mother
    diagnosed with brain cancer, had decided not to fight the disease. "Why
    isn't she getting whatever treatment she could get?" Peggy recalled
    Margrit asking. "Why didn't she have the will to fight this cancer?"

    Margrit's daughters were her life, the Rosens said. Starting in 1992,
    she operated a jewelry shop named Margaux Grace after the girls at
    a high-end mall in Newport Beach.

    Margo and Grace were inseparable. Through elementary, middle and high
    school they dressed identically -- in dark-colored turtlenecks with
    long sleeves and dark pants. Fellow students at Bernice Ayer Middle
    School said they were quiet, polite, sweet, smart -- and strange. The
    girls told acquaintances they would be together for the rest of
    their lives.

    Sometimes Manas would join them at school for lunch. In the afternoon,
    he often arrived 20 minutes before classes let out and waited to pick
    them up, students recalled.

    When the twins graduated from high school and enrolled at UC San
    Diego, Manas and Margrit followed, renting a house where they all
    lived together for much of the time during the years the girls were
    in school. Margrit told friends she wanted to tutor the girls as they
    prepared for medical school.

    The girls distinguished themselves as pre-med students. They continued
    doing everything together; they took the same classes, wore the same
    kind of clothing -- dark shirts and pants, large gold crosses around
    their necks -- worked as teaching assistants in the same class and
    interned together at a psychiatric center.

    Dr. Kai MacDonald compared them to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern,
    the indistinguishable characters in William Shakespeare's "Hamlet."

    "It's funny that certain people are so conjoined," MacDonald said. "I
    guess I would consider them as something of a unit."

    Professors and mentors assumed that Margo and Grace would attend
    medical school together to study psychiatry. But there are no records
    showing they applied, said Salcedo, the head detective. Even a biology
    professor who considered himself something of a mentor said he wrote
    no letters of recommendation, though he assumed others had.

    Margo and Grace finished their degrees in biology a year ago, one
    semester ahead of schedule. In mid-April, the family, accompanied by
    Kesisoglu, went on a short cruise to Mexico. After they returned,
    the girls went back to their internship at the psychiatric center
    and Manas returned to work.

    On Saturday, May 3, someone used the family's transponder to access
    their community vehicle gate. That was the last sign of them. If anyone
    from the household left the neighborhood after that, it was by foot,
    but no one recalls seeing them.

    The home provides no clues to what happened in their final hours. There
    was no food on the table, no dishes in the sink. Everything was clean
    and put away. The girls and Kesisoglu apparently washed the pills
    down with water -- half-empty glasses were found nearby. The twins
    lay side by side on a bed in the master bedroom; Kesisoglu was next
    to them, on a chaise.

    Investigators believe Margo, Grace and their grandmother were dead by
    the time Margrit, using a gun she bought years ago, shot Manas. Then
    she turned the gun on herself. His death was ruled a homicide,
    but investigators believe he took so much Vicodin he would have
    died anyway.

    It was weeks before anyone found them. The girls' failure to show
    up at the psychiatric center didn't raise alarm because they didn't
    have a regular work schedule. Margrit's and Manas' brothers, who live
    within an hour's drive, called the home, to no avail.

    They assumed the family was on vacation.

    On May 25, after trying repeatedly to reach the family, the brothers
    arrived at the house. It was Margrit's birthday. By then, the five
    bodies were badly decomposed. Detectives say the family had been dead
    three weeks.

    When news broke about five found dead, dressed all in black, rumors
    flew. The story became fodder for curiosity-seekers who tried to
    visit the house and for bloggers, who tried to piece together the
    family's history. There was talk of a cult; of a strange, insular
    ethnic community; one neighbor told investigators that Manas was
    angry because the girls were not accepted by a medical school.

    Relatives dismissed the significance of similar clothing.

    "That's the first thing everybody picked up on," said one close
    relative who asked not to be identified, saying the family has been
    bombarded by inquiries since the deaths. "It was said over and over
    again that they always wore black. . . . I have photographs. They
    didn't always wear black.

    "It's just an inexplicable, horrific tragedy that we're still dealing
    with. They were a very loving and warm and beautiful family."

    For now, the house Margrit once prized stands empty. And in his
    cubicle in downtown Santa Ana, Salcedo sits with a foot-tall stack of
    transcripts, coroner's reports and financial documents about the Ucar
    family. The family's computers have been analyzed. Nothing supplies
    an answer.

    Manas' and Margrit's will was not updated, although they often are in
    cases of suicide. There was no paperwork indicating the couple was
    heading toward divorce. There were no unusual phone calls or notes,
    "no indication that somebody was going to do something," Salcedo said.

    "Everybody seemed to be content with their lives."

    Salcedo hopes that someday, someone comes forward with information
    that will help people understand.

    "The investigation is closed as far as causes and motives," he said. "A
    reason why is something I'm always going to keep open."

    http://www.latimes.com/news/printedit ion/front/la-me-suicides23-2009jan23,0,5545509,ful l.story
    Margrit Ucar fell instantly for the panorama. Even before her husband,
    Manas, had a chance to see the house, she knew it was where they
    would raise their two young daughters, twins Margo and Grace.
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