The terrible deaths of sisters Paityn, Evelyn, and Olivia Decker, ages nine, eight, and five, respectively, rocked the American city of Washington.
After visiting their father, 32-year-old Travis Decker, a homeless former soldier, the girls were discovered dead last Monday (2).
The incident sparked widespread outrage and is being handled as a vicious triple homicide case, which has significant implications for conversations regarding shared custody limits and child safety.
Official reports state that the girls were placed in their father’s custody for a court-ordered visit with their mother, Whitney Decker, from whom Travis had been separated since 2022.
About two hours from Seattle, the ex-soldier lived in a pickup truck parked in a temporary camp. Travis searched the kids on Friday (30) and they vanished.
The mother attempted, but was unsuccessful, to get in touch with her ex-husband after they were not returned on Saturday as scheduled. She became even more concerned when the calls went straight to voicemail.
When the police did not respond, an arrest warrant for interference with custody was issued on Sunday (1). The three girls’ bodies were discovered hours later, abandoned close to the camp, next to Travis’ truck.
The kids were wearing plastic bags over their heads and had their wrists bound. Asphyxiation was determined to be the cause of death by autopsy. Following the crime, Travis ran away, and state and federal law enforcement are working to apprehend him. He is now facing upgraded charges of kidnapping and murder.
The case brings up pressing issues regarding the psychological support provided to former combatants, the supervision mechanisms in custody agreements, and the protections that can fail to prevent tragic outcomes in situations that appear to be under control.
Still in shock, American society demands answers and justice for the violence that claimed three innocent lives too soon. Details regarding the wake and burial of the girls are unknown.
