DOVER, Del. (AP) ? A warrant to search the home of a Texas man who killed his former daughter-in-law and another woman at a Delaware courthouse shows that investigators suspect the gunman's wife and son of helping to plot the slaying.
The killings were the culmination of a bitter, years-long custody battle involving the slain woman and the gunman's son. The gunman, Thomas Matusiewicz, had previously complained that his family wasn't getting justice in a lawsuit that she filed against them over the kidnapping of the pair's daughters.
Matusiewicz (muh-TOO'-suh-wits) complained in a 2011 letter to a Delaware Superior Court judge that he and his family had no money to defend themselves in a lawsuit filed by Christine Belford after her ex-husband, David Matusiewicz, kidnapped the couple's three daughters and took them to Central America.
At the time Thomas Matusiewicz and his wife wrote the letter in August 2011, their son was serving time in federal prison for kidnapping and fraud.
"We've lost or spent over a million dollars trying to get our grand-daughters to safety and now THERE IS NO MONEY LEFT AND THEY ARE STILL IN CUSTODY OF THEIR MOTHER (who has been in the care of someone in the mental health profession for over 20 years)!," Thomas and Lenore Matusiewicz wrote in boldface letters.
"Is it true as they say, you only get the amount of justice you can afford?" they added. "Well, I guess we aren't going to be getting any."
Delaware State Police said Thomas Matusiewicz, 68, walked into the lobby of the New Castle County Courthouse in Wilmington on Monday and shot and killed Belford, 39, and her friend Laura Mulford, 47, before taking his own life.
According to an affidavit filed by Texas authorities for a search of Thomas Matusiewicz's home in Edcouch, Texas, he was carrying handwritten death certificates for Belford and Timothy Hitchings, an attorney representing her in the divorce and custody battle, when he entered the Delaware courthouse on Monday.
Texas authorities also said in the affidavit that Thomas Matusiewicz, his wife and his son were all suspected of "intentionally and knowingly participating in a murder."
Sgt. Paul Shavack, a spokesman for the Delaware State Police, had no immediate comment about the Texas affidavit naming David and Lenore Matusiewicz as suspects.
Neither David Matusiewicz nor his mother has been arrested in connection with the shooting, but David Matusiewicz is being detained by federal authorities who say he has violated the terms of his probation. Federal authorities say he failed to disclose that he spent the night before the shooting at a home in Elkton, Md., and has not paid restitution and child support as ordered.
Hitchings said in an email that he had no firsthand information about being targeted. "It's still being investigated," he said. "I will say that Thomas Matusiewicz likely resented my representing Christine."
Outside a South Carolina courthouse on Wednesday, a man involved in a paternity dispute opened fire on a woman who he claimed had his baby, the sheriff said.
The Delaware shooting was the culmination of years of acrimony in a bitter divorce and custody battle. At the heart of the dispute were the daughters of Belford and David Matusiewicz, now ages 7, 9 and 10.
David Matusiewicz pleaded guilty in 2009 to federal fraud and kidnapping charges after fleeing to Nicaragua in a motor home with his mother and the three girls.
David Matusiewicz, who was released from prison last year, kidnapped the girls after telling Belford they were going to Disney World for two weeks. The two were divorced and sharing custody at the time. Prosecutors say he forged his wife's signature to obtain nearly $250,000 from a Delaware bank, then sent the money to his parents' bank account and had his father transfer the money to a Bank of New Zealand account.
Belford sued her former husband, his sister, Amy, and his parents in 2009, claiming they conspired to carry out the kidnapping. She sought compensation for "medical, therapeutic, counseling, travel and other expenses."
Belford dropped the lawsuit in December 2011 after Thomas and Lenore Matusiewicz filed for bankruptcy protection in Texas.
"It became obvious that it was not going to be collectable," said Belford's attorney, James Woods. "I had no doubt she would win, and probably a very significant amount of money, for that torture they put her through."
Woods said the lawsuit was an attempt by Belford "just to try to get some justice."
"They had put her through hell, and it wasn't just David, it was certainly Lenore... and I found it incredibly hard to believe that Tom didn't know anything about it and participated in it, and Amy the sister as well."
Woods said that after Belford dropped the lawsuit, Thomas Matusiewicz sent him two thick packages of documents containing "all kinds of scandalous and ridiculous allegations" that Christine was abusing the children and was an unfit mother. The allegations were never substantiated, Belford was never charged and she was given full custody of the girls.
"It was obvious that there was so much venom they had directed toward Christine that it was almost palpable," Woods said.
Lenore Matusiewicz made similar allegations in a handwritten letter she addressed to Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden in January 2011. She was on probation at the time after serving more than a year in Delaware state prison for endangering the welfare of her three granddaughters related to the kidnapping.
She said her son was "paying the price for trying to protect his children...."
A federal judge who sentenced David Matusiewicz to prison noted that he never expressed any concern that his ex-wife was abusing their children until after he had been arrested.
A state judge who denied a motion by Lenore Matusiewicz to modify her prison sentence in 2010 also expressed skepticism about the abuse claims.
"Sadly, even if all the allegations of the defendant and her son are true, their decisions only seemed to harm the children more," the judge wrote.
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Sherman contributed to the story from Edinburg, Texas.
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