Suicide note found in deaths of ex-officer, daughters
HARRISON, N.Y. — There were recollections of neighborly generosity, high school ties and dogs walked around the block.
In short, life at the expansive, two-story house with a gently sloping roof at 1 Adelphi Drive seemed typical of any home on the quiet and affluent suburban street.
But that was before retired White Plains police officer Glen Hochman shot and killed two of his daughters, Alissa, 17, and Deanna, 13, and the family's three dogs before killing himself, according to authorities.
On Sunday, investigators, family and friends were at a loss to comprehend how the friendly family man and dedicated public servant who worked 22 years for the White Plains police department could be capable of such horrific violence.
"At this point, we're trying to evaluate everything," Harrison Police Chief Anthony Marraccini said Sunday. "As of now, it would appear that both victims were shot, as was their father."
Authorities said they recovered a handgun from the scene, but did not release any additional details. An autopsy by the Westchester County Medical Examiner's Office was scheduled to determine the circumstances of the killings.
Marraccini confirmed that Hochman, 52, was found in the garage with a suicide note.
Hochman's wife, Anamarie DiPietro-Hochman, 50, and their eldest daughter, Samantha, 22, were out of town during the killings. Before she left, police said, DiPietro-Hochman had made a domestic incident report on Jan. 20. The incident allegedly occurred on Jan. 19.
"She described it as a verbal argument only," Marraccini told The Journal News. "There was no representation of any violence."
Harrison police were dispatched to the snow-blanketed scene after a neighbor called 911 around 3:30 p.m. Saturday.
"I heard someone screaming and crying loudly," said Dante Garritano, 53, who lives three doors down from the Hochman family. "I thought in all the snow someone had an accident. The last thing I expected to hear was that he killed himself and his two kids.
Efforts to reach DiPietro-Hochman's family on Sunday were unsuccessful.
A Harrison police patrol car remained parked in front of the house on Adelphi Avenue on Sunday. A police vehicle was also stationed outside the New Haven Street home of DiPietro-Hochman's mother, Barbara, where several people could be seen hugging and weeping.
Nothing that is known about Hochman would remotely suggest such a crime.
Authorities have described him as a decorated officer who was commended for saving a man's life only months before he retired from the force in January.
Hochman suffered an ankle injury in early May when he fell while helping a disabled motorist. He missed four months of work after having surgery on the ankle. He had passed 20 years on the job, so he was planning for retirement, said his union lawyer, Warren Roth. Hochman sought a disability retirement because of the injury but had not been depressed over it, Roth said.
Roth had known Hochman for more than 25 years, even before he became a cop, since both worked as EMTs with the Harrison ambulance corps. Roth got a call to go over to the Hochman residence Saturday once the union was contacted.
"It's just devastating to a lot of people," Roth said. "He was always a quiet, reserved guy, nothing ever seemed to unsettle him. ... And he was wonderful with his daughters, a devoted father. That's the scary part. There was absolutely no seeing this coming."
A holiday photo on Facebook shows Hochman, dressed in a red Polo pullover and jeans, sitting on couch next to the two teens and cradling one of the family's dogs under his left arm.
In another photo, he shakes the paw of the family's German shepherd, which he allegedly killed on Saturday.
On Sunday, a Harrison police cruiser remained parked in front of the home and the family deflected media inquiries. The question throughout this neighborhood of almost universally well-kept houses remains: Why?
Indeed, to those who knew Hochman, by all accounts a helpful and friendly man, the mystery only deepened on reflection.
"I can't understand, no matter what problems that you have, you take out on your children," said Garritano. "I have two children, I'd step in front of a train for them."
Robbie Carducci, 23, also of Bellain Avenue, attended high school with the Hochmans' oldest daughter and said he used to deliver pizzas to their home.
"You would never expect something like that from them," he said.
Alissa was a senior at Harrison High School and Deanna attended the Windward School in White Plains. Friends of the Hochman girls took to Twitter on Sunday to express their grief.
"It shouldn't have happened," wrote Jessica Prado in a tweet, using the hashtags#staystrongharrison and #staystronghuskies. "Our community has lost yet two more beautiful souls. RIP Alissa & Deanna."
The high school opened on Sunday for grief counseling.
Contributing: Jonathan Bandler, The (Westchester County, N.Y.) Journal News