| 
Kate Mather, UCSB Friends Were Victims of Circumstance. Los Angeles Times, June 21, 2014. www.latimes.com/local/crime/la-m ... 20140621-story.html
 
 Quote:
 
 “Chen and Wang were the sons of Chinese immigrants who came to the U.S. via Canada; Hong emigrated from Taiwan.
 
 “Exactly what happened remains unclear [in the apartment where the three were killed]. Santa Barbara Sheriff Bill Brown called it a ‘pretty horrific crime scene,’ saying the three men had been ‘stabbed repeatedly with sharp objects.’  An attorney representing the three families, Todd Becker, said * * * that a knife, a hammer and a machete were used.
 
 “There are many questions, including how the slightly built Rodger could have overpowered the three young men. A sheriff's spokeswoman said investigators were looking into whether the victims had been drugged.
 
 Note:
 (a)
 (i) circumstance (n): “state of affairs :  EVENTUALITY <open rebellion was a rare circumstance> —often used in plural <a victim of circumstances>”
 www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/circumstance
 (ii) eventuality (n): "a possible event or outcome : POSSIBILITY"
 www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/eventuality
 
 (b) The (English) surname Mather means “a mower or reaper of grass or hay, Old English m?ðere [moethere]. Compare Mead, Mower.”
 (c) James Cheng Yuan HONG 洪晟元 (Taiwan)
 (d) David WANG  王 伟汉 (Tianjin)
 (e) George CHEN  陈 乔治
 
 |