
Decoding Filicide after Shreveport: Motives Behind a Parental Tragedy
The article explains filicide—the killing of a child by a parent—in the Shreveport massacre, where police say Shamar Elkins fatally shot the mother of his children, another woman, seven of his children, and a cousin. It outlines four main motives experts cite for parental killings: fatal maltreatment, an unwanted child, partner revenge, and acutely psychotic/altruistic acts, and it places the case in historical context with contrasts to the 1987 Ronald Gene Simmons family killings. It also notes Louisiana’s high rate of homicide-related child deaths and that Elkins was reportedly under separation and custody pressures before the shootings.




