A man stabbed his girlfriend and all three of her children Wednesday morning, killing her, her and two of her daughters at a hotel that was being used for homeless housing, authorities said.
The womman, identified by the Associated Press as 28-year-old Rebecca Cutler, and her three daughters, 1, 2 and 5 months old, were all stabbed at a Ramada Inn on Staten Island, authorities said. Cutler was pronounced dead upon arrival to the hospital and two of the three children died not long after, authorities say. The third child was taken into surgery after the stabbing and is expected to survive the attack.
Michael Sykes, 23, is wanted for questioning after he called his mother to say he was going to kill his girlfriend and himself, said the official, who wasn't authorized to publicly discuss the case and spoke on condition of anonymity. Sykes was the father of the 5-month-old, police said.
He also allegedly called someone after the stabbings Wednesday morning and confessed to the crimes. He told that person that he was thinking about comitting suicide, according to NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce.
"Call 911 immediately if you see him," Boyce said.
A housekeeper found the injured family and called police, who discovered a black-handled bloody knife nearby, the official said.
Cutler's shocked aunt said she last saw Cutler and Sykes on Monday night when they picked up the children from her Brooklyn home.
"She was doing great," Helen Mathis said.
Mathis said she had no knowledge of any domestic disputes between her niece and Sykes. But the official said a domestic incident report was filed with police Tuesday after Sykes was accused of stealing Cutler's phone, claiming she was contacting another man.
A city official familiar with the case tells NBC 4 New York that Cutler and her family had been living at the hotel since December and had been in and out of the shelter system since 2014. The first time she entered the system she had claimed to be the victim of domestic violence with someone other than Sykes; she later recanted those claims.
Hundreds of families have stayed in hotels in recent months as city officials determine whether they can be placed more permanently in other city facilities. Because the Ramada was also being used by families who weren't homeless, the city official said there were no special security measures at the hotel.
Contact information for Sykes and his family members wasn't immediately available.