'Thanks for making buying a gun so easy': Depressed Texas brothers, 19 and 21, pen suicide note revealing how they lied to buy weapon - and how The Office TV show 'went to s***' - before killing parents, sister and grandmother and then themselves

 A 19-year-old Texas college dropout who police say had teamed up with his older brother to kill their entire family before taking their own lives as part of a suicide pact posted a rambling note online, ranting about the sitcom The Office and calling the nation's gun control laws 'a joke'. 

According to the Allen Police Department, Farhan Towhid, 19, and his 21-year-old brother, Tanvir Towhid, shot dead their parents, Farhan's twin sister and their grandmother, before turning the gun on themselves over the weekend in suburban Dallas.

Farhan bragged in his six-page suicide note, which was published on Google Docs and linked to his now-defunct Instagram account, about how easy it was to obtained the guns used in the slaughter.


He also wrote that all of his decisions were based on weighing pros and cons, including the decision to kill his family. 

Farhan explained that the plan he and his brother hatched was simple: 'We get two guns. I take one and shoot my sister and grandma, while my brother kills our parents with the other. Then we take ourselves out.' 

He noted that because 'gun control in the US is a joke,' all it took for his brother to get the firearms was to go to a store and sign some forms.

'There was a question asking if he had any mental illnesses but—get this—he lied,' Farhan wrote. 

'He literally just said no. They didn’t ask for proof or if he was taking any medication (he was). ... Thanks for making the process so easy.' 

The other victims were identified as mother Iren Islam, 56; father Towhidul Islam, 54; Farhan's twin Farbin Towhid, 19, and Altafun Nessa, 77, the grandmother who was visiting the family from their native Bangladesh. 

Several members of the Bangladesh Association of North Texas gathered near the home Monday after news of the family’s death was released, the newspaper reported. Ahmad Hossain, who lives about a block away, told the newspaper that the family moved to the area about seven or eight years ago from New York.

Hossain said Nessa, the grandmother, was visiting the family from Bangladesh. He said she was scheduled to return home last week but couldn’t because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Fazia Rahman, who graduated Allen High School last year with Farhan and Farbin Towhid, said the family was welcoming and the parents “treated everyone like they were their own kids.”

“We don’t want this to be their family legacy,” she said. “They were such great people, they genuinely touched the lives of everyone who they came in contact with. ... They were good people who had bright futures ahead of them.”

 

One of the brothers, aged 19, detailed the deadly plan in a rambling six-page suicide note that was posted online, in which he talked at length about his years-long battle with depression and self-harm, expressed anger at the latter seasons of the TV sitcom The Office, and ranted about inadequate gun control in the US.  

The Towhid family were found dead on Monday morning: from left - Tanvir, 21; Farhan, 19, their father Towhidul Islam; Farbin, 19, the twin of Farhan; and their mother Iren

The Towhid family were found dead on Monday morning: from left - Tanvir, 21; Farhan, 19, their father Towhidul Islam; Farbin, 19, the twin of Farhan; and their mother Iren

Officers with the Allen Police Department responded to a home in the 1500 block of Pine Bluff Drive at around 1am on Monday after receiving a call requesting a welfare check.

The call came from a friend who was concerned that someone at the home was suicidal, according to police talking to The Dallas Morning News.

Tanvir, 21 (left) and Farhan, 19, killed their sister Farbin, 19, plus their parents and grandmother

Tanvir, 21 (left) and Farhan, 19, killed their sister Farbin, 19, plus their parents and grandmother

Towhidul Islam and his wife Iren, pictured in November 2015, emigrated from Bangladesh

Towhidul Islam and his wife Iren, pictured in November 2015, emigrated from Bangladesh

Six bodies were found inside the family's home in Allen, Texas, early Monday

Six bodies were found inside the family's home in Allen, Texas, early Monday


Officers entered the residence and found six people dead from gunshot wounds, including two brothers, Farhan's twin sister Farbin, their parents  and a grandmother. 

The family were immigrants from Bangladesh and the local police department had no prior interactions with them. 

It is believed that the massacre was carried out by the two brothers, identified by a family friend as 19-year-old Farhan Towhid and 21-year-old Tanvir Towhid, as CBS DFW first reported.

'Apparently two brothers made an agreement to commit suicide and ended up taking the entire family with them,' said Allen police Sgt. Jon Felty. 

The killing claimed the lives of Farhan's twin sister Farbin Towhid, their parents Iren and Towhidul Islam, and a grandmother, 77-year-old Altafun Nessa.

She was visiting from Bangladesh, and was set to go return home next month.

Farbin was a talented artist, who had a full scholarship to New York University, FOX 4 reported. 

The family members were likely killed sometime on Saturday, but they were not discovered until Monday morning. 

Police confirmed that Farhan, formerly a computer science student at the University of Texas at Austin, linked his lengthy suicide letter from his Instagram. 

The letter, which was published through Google Docs and reviewed by DailyMail.com, begins with the words: 'Hey everyone. I killed myself and my family. If I'm going to die, I might as well get some attention.'

He goes on to say that he was diagnosed with depression in the ninth grade, and describes in graphic detail cutting himself with school scissors and knives, until he hit a 'breaking point' and told his father about his struggle.

Towhidul Islam in October 2013 with wife Iren, and (l. to r.) oldest son Tanvir and twins Farhan and Farbin

Towhidul Islam in October 2013 with wife Iren, and (l. to r.) oldest son Tanvir and twins Farhan and Farbin

Towhidul Islam and his wife Iren are pictured in April 2016. The pair were killed by their sons

Towhidul Islam and his wife Iren are pictured in April 2016. The pair were killed by their sons

Police were called to the home on Pine Bluff Drive after a friend expressed concern about a suicidal family member and requested a welfare check

Police were called to the home on Pine Bluff Drive after a friend expressed concern about a suicidal family member and requested a welfare check

Farhan said he was put on medication, received therapy, found a good group of friends and became popular. 

'My life was perfect, but that didn’t change the fact that I was depressed,' he writes. 

'I would still have the urges to cut myself or end up crying myself to sleep. I tried doubling my medication which worked, but only temporarily. Every solution was always temporary.'

After experiencing a breakdown earlier this year and dropping out of college, Farhan said he found himself spending much of his time watching The Office with his older brother, who he said also suffered from crippling depression, despite being a 'genius.' 

Farhan then launches into a bizarre rant about how the comedy series should have ended after the seventh season, when the character of Michael Scott, as played by Steve Carrell, exited the show, instead of continuing on for two more seasons.  

Farhan writes that he and his brother continued watching The Office until February 21, when his sibling walked into his room with a proposition: 'if we can't fix everything in a year, we'll kill ourselves and our family.' 

Farhan explains his decision to kill his family before committing suicide by saying that were his loved ones to go on living without him, 'they would be miserable. They would spend the rest of their lives feeling guilt, despair, and a multitude of other adjectives that mean sad.

'Instead of having to deal with the aftermath of my suicide, I could just do them a favor and take them with me. None of us would ever have to feel sad ever again.' 

He adds: 'I love my family. I genuinely do. And that’s exactly why I decided to kill them.'   

'Thanks for making buying a gun so easy': Depressed Texas brothers, 19 and 21, pen suicide note revealing how they lied to buy weapon - and how The Office TV show 'went to s***' - before killing parents, sister and grandmother and then themselves 'Thanks for making buying a gun so easy': Depressed Texas brothers, 19 and 21, pen suicide note revealing how they lied to buy weapon - and how The Office TV show 'went to s***' - before killing parents, sister and grandmother and then themselves Reviewed by Your Destination on April 06, 2021 Rating: 5

No comments

TOP-LEFT ADS