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Tessa Buscko, 36, of Duluth, Minn., said she worked with Oles-Magdzas, and briefly with Magdzas, at Community Connections, a Duluth foster care facility for people with brain injuries. Oles-Magdzas had recently left the home, however, to take a job as an assistant cheerleading coach at Duluth East High School. "April's passion for working with young people was evident to everyone that came into contact with her," the school's activities director, Shawn Roed, said in a statement. "She will be sadly missed and our thoughts and prayers go out to her family and friends." Buscko said Oles-Magdzas was due to give birth by C-section the day her body was found. She said Oles-Magdzas planned to name the baby Anna. She didn't know what could have driven Magdzas to wipe out his family. "He must have had a flashback or something. I don't know. That's crazy. Matt doesn't seem like that type of person," Buscko said. "The only thing people can think of is coming back from the war and trying to live a normal life." Investigators recovered a 9-millimeter handgun in the house they believe Magdzas used. They also discovered what appeared to be a bomb in a backpack in the house, but explosives experts later determined it likely wasn't and destroyed it. "Wow, he must have really ..." Buscko said, trailing off. "It's just sad all the way around."
[Associated
Press;
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