A Texas woman was arrested on Friday (local time) and charged with capital murder after her two children were found dead in a car that was set on fire in .
NBC News on Saturday identified the woman as Marlene Vidal, 34, of Edinburgh, Texas. She was arrested after the bodies of her children, aged five and seven, were discovered in a vehicle engulfed in flames in a warehouse parking lot, according to police.
In a press conference, Police Assistant Chief Jesus Salame said a passerby was walking his dog when he called police to report the burning vehicle. Salame added that the accused had reportedly told the passerby she had already contacted police, though it is unclear whether that claim was true.
After firefighters extinguished the blaze, they discovered the bodies of Vidal’s two children. However, it remains unclear whether they died before or after the car was set on . A local medical examiner is still investigating the cause of death.
According to Salame, surveillance video and statements Vidal made to investigators suggest she was solely responsible for the deaths of the two children.
Officials have not yet determined a motive, though Salame said there are indications that issues may have played a role.
“I know this is going to deeply affect our community,” he said. “People will naturally want to know why this happened, but in cases like this, that can be the most difficult question to answer.”
Filicide cases in the US
A CNN report, citing Federal Bureau of Investigation () data, noted that there are nearly 500 arrests for filicide each year in the , the legal term for when a parent kills their child.
Earlier in April, an ex-soldier in killed eight children, seven of them his own, in what was described as the deadliest mass shooting in two years. Shamar Elkins, a 31-year-old father and former soldier, was reportedly suffering from mental health issues. According to The New York Times, a woman who raised him but was not his biological mother said he had attempted to take his own life in February.
According to Elkins’ family members, he was reportedly struggling as he and his wife were going through a divorce. He had previously stayed at a local VA hospital for treatment related to mental health issues.
A 2014 study examining 32 years of filicide arrest data found that between 1976 and 2007, most victims were children aged one to six years old.
The analysis also showed that most offenders and victims were White, followed by Black individuals as the next most common group. It further found that about 90 per cent of victims were the biological children of the perpetrators. The research also indicated that mothers and fathers commit filicide at broadly similar rates.
Motives behind filicide cases
Dr Phillip Resnick, a forensic psychiatrist at Case Western Reserve University, published a landmark 1969 study proposing five categories to explain the motivations behind filicide.
According to Resnick’s study, the most common motives include:
Fatal maltreatment: cases involving abuse or neglect
Unwanted child: situations where parents view the child as a burden
Spousal revenge: rare cases linked to divorce or custody disputes
Altruistic filicide: when a parent believes they are acting out of “love” or protection
Acute psychosis: cases in which the parent is experiencing hallucinations or severe mental illness
The Texas incident adds to a pattern of rare but recurring filicide cases in the United States, where investigators often point to mental health concerns and domestic instability, though definitive motives remain difficult to establish.
