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Four men shot to death in Boston house

Four men were fatally shot Tuesday night inside a Boston house, police said.
/ Source: The Associated Press

Investigators on Wednesday were searching for suspects in one of the city’s bloodiest crimes in recent memory after four men were fatally shot in a basement that neighbors said had been set up as a music studio.

The dead were in their late teens and early 20s, authorities said.

Three men were found dead at the house and the fourth died at a hospital, Police Superintendent Bobbie Johnson said.

Johnson said witnesses told police they saw a heavyset person fleeing the scene Tuesday night. No arrest had been made.

Tia Duncan, who said she moved out of the house on Monday, said her brother was one of the victims. Edwin Duncan, 21, was part of a rap group and lived in the house where the shootings occurred, she said.

He and a bandmate were waiting in the basement for other members of the group to arrive when the shootings took place, she said.

Police did not confirm that Edwin Duncan was one of the victims, but said those involved appeared to have known each other. Police Commissioner Kathleen O’Toole said one of the victims lived in the house.

“It’s much too early to speculate on a motive in this incident,” O’Toole said. “But generally speaking, homicides occurring inside residences are seldom random acts of violence.”

Tuesday’s killings were among the worst in Boston’s recent history.

In 1995, four people were gunned down at a crowded restaurant in the city’s Charlestown neighborhood. In 1991, five men were shot execution style in a social club in the city’s Chinatown neighborhood.

The deaths pushed the number of murders in Boston this year to 71, the highest in a decade.

U.S. Attorney Michael J. Sullivan said last week that his office will increase federal prosecutions of suspects involved in gun and gang violence in Boston.

The house on Bourneside Street is a triple-decker typical of the multifamily homes that dot Boston’s working-class neighborhoods. It’s near Fields Corner, a mostly gentrified neighborhood of stately Victorians.

The Rev. Jeffrey Brown, a co-founder of an anti-violence coalition who lives nearby, said police had not had any problems at the address in the past.