Sarah and Susan Wolfe
As Pittsburgh police continue to aggressively pursue any
leads in the Friday slaying of two sisters, the victims’ Iowa-based family which includes state Rep. Mary Wolfe continues to mourn their loss.
“Thank you to my
friends and neighbors and colleagues and to Suzy’s and Sarah’s friends and
neighbors and colleagues for all of the lovely thoughts and prayers,” Wolfe wrote
on her Facebook page about her sisters’ deaths. “We are so grateful.
Heartbroken, but grateful.”
Investigators found the bodies of Susan Wolfe, 44, and Sarah
Wolfe, 38, on Friday afternoon in the home they shared in Pittsburgh after both
of their employers reporting them absent from work, said Pittsburgh police Lt.
Daniel Herrmann.
Susan Wolfe worked as a teacher’s aid at Hillel Academy in
Pittsburgh, and Sarah Wolfe was a psychiatrist for the University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center, Herrmann said. Susan’s employer requested a welfare check at
her home after she didn’t show up for work, and Herrmann said Sarah’s coworkers
also had texted her boyfriend regarding her whereabouts.
Officers conducted a perimeter check of the home around
12:45 p.m., and they encountered Sarah’s boyfriend, who had arrived around the
same time, Herrmann said. He had a key to the house, and when authorities
entered, they found the women’s bodies in the basement, according to Herrmann.
The medical examiner’s office ruled their deaths a homicide,
reporting they each had a single gunshot wound to the head. Police have not
made any arrests in the case, and Herrmann said investigators are following
every lead and keeping that information close to the vest.
“We have 12 to 14 homicide detectives chasing leads,” he
said. “We are working around the clock.”
Most of Pittsburgh’s homicides are gang or drug related,
according to Herrmann. But this shooting happened in a relatively quiet
residential neighborhood.
“We are not used to seeing this,” he said. “This is not
normal. This is a very special case, and everyone in the homicide squad and on
staff is concerned that we find this person.”
Family members, many of whom live in Iowa, have expressed
grief and shock via social media. Pierrette Wolfe, of Clinton, identified
herself as the women’s mother on Facebook and shared a letter her son – their
brother – sent to his colleagues.
In it, he remembers the “healing and light” his sisters
brought to those they worked with, and he wrote that “very little is making
sense to me or my family.”
He said both sisters “cared deeply about children and the
world” and lived lives “dedicated to education and service.”
He said Sarah spent her career “caring for children who had
been deeply hurt by violence, abuse, neglect and crime.” And he wrote that
Susan had worked in a behavioral disorder classroom in one of the most
impoverished, challenging schools in her district.
Herrmann said authorities have interviewed family members as
part of their investigation – mostly over the phone, although one member drove
up from Washington D.C.
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