Grim sight at home where three people were found dead and a man was arrested - as details emerge about family that 'kept to themselves'
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By CANDACE SUTTON, SENIOR NEWS REPORTER, AUSTRALIA and MAISY RAE Published: 02:56, 3 May 2026 | Updated: 03:28, 3 May 2026 Grim new details have emerged around the deaths of three people in a family home in Sydney's south west overnight as a man remains in police custody. Police said the couple in their 60s and their 37-year-old son were attacked at the home on Juliet Close, Rosemeadow just after 1.30am on Sunday. Emergency services were called to the home following reports of a violent assault however were confronted by a 'very grisly crime scene' upon their arrival. 'Police first encountered a 61-year-old woman and started doing first aid on her... police went inside the house and found a 64-year-old male who was still alive with serious blunt force head injuries,' Campbelltown Commander Superintendent Grant Healey told reporters on Sunday morning. 'They found a 37-year-old male deceased in a granny flat at the rear of the premise.' Superintendent Healey said another brother aged 30 was taken to Liverpool Hospital and was released after receiving medical treatment - police believe this brother was the one to contact emergency services. Officers arrested a 32-year-old man an hour after the grim discovery when a silver sedan pulled up at the scene. The driver of the car, who is believed to be the couple's middle son, was taken to Campbelltown Police Station where inquiries are continuing. Police found the bodies of a couple in their 60s and their 37-year-old son at the home on Juliet Close, Rosemeadow just after 1.30am on Sunday Police removed a silver Subaru sedan from the street, which seemingly had blood on one of the handles Police believe the horrific attack occurred inside the home and in the granny flat at the rear When asked by reporters if the man would be charged today, Superintendent Healey said: 'It's still very early. We have a few things to run through'. He said the family, who are Asian-Australians, were not well known to police. Superintendent Healey said police believe more than one weapon was used during the deadly attack, including a bladed weapon and one that would cause 'blunt force trauma', which he agreed may have been a hammer. No firearms are believed to have been involved. As police worked to tow away the silver sedan on Sunday morning, shocked neighbours told the Daily Mail the family mainly 'kept to themselves.' One neighbour, who knew the family's eldest son, said ambulance crews had attended the home several times in the last year. Another neighbour said he was awoken at 1.30am by the sounds of what he thought was 'a car chase.' 'Then all the emergency cars came and a silver Subaru returned to the street. Someone said they saw a man hold up his hands as police approached him,' he said. Sorry we are not currently accepting comments on this article.




