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NewsMarch 27, 2016

LOS ANGELES -- A popular practitioner of Chinese herbal medicine was found shot to death and wrapped in plastic along with his wife and 5-year-old daughter in their palatial two-story home in upscale Santa Barbara County. A 27-year-old suspect was arrested in the San Diego area...

By JOHN ROGERS ~ Associated Press

LOS ANGELES -- A popular practitioner of Chinese herbal medicine was found shot to death and wrapped in plastic along with his wife and 5-year-old daughter in their palatial two-story home in upscale Santa Barbara County.

A 27-year-old suspect was arrested in the San Diego area.

What connected the two men remains unclear. Authorities said only the two were recently involved in a business deal, and financial gain could have been involved in the slayings.

Pierre Haobsh, 27, of Oceanside was taken into custody at gunpoint at a gas station in San Diego County, Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bob Brown said Friday. Investigators with an arrest warrant had been following a red Lexus that belonged to him, Brown said. A loaded handgun and items belonging to one of the victims was found inside the car, the sheriff said.

Deputies who went to check on the welfare of 57-year-old Dr. Weidong "Henry" Han on Wednesday found the bodies of the physician, his 29-year-old wife, Huijie "Jenni" Yu, and the couple's 5-year-old daughter, Emily Han, in the family's multimillion-dollar home on the outskirts of Santa Barbara.

Their bodies were found shot, wrapped in plastic and duct-taped in the garage, a sheriff's statement said. They last had been seen the night before they were found.

Two business associates of Han went to his home after he failed to show up for a meeting -- something they told authorities was uncharacteristic of him. The associates called authorities when they found the front door ajar and the family's cars parked outside.

Haobsh is a U.S. citizen, authorities said, but few other details about him were released.

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Nadine Jolie Courtney, a beauty blogger and author, wrote in an email message Saturday Haobsh was her brother. She condemned the killings and extended her prayers to the Han family.

"We cannot wrap our minds around this tragedy and are in a state of shock," she wrote on behalf of herself and her husband.

The killings shook Santa Barbara, where Han, who owned and operated the Santa Barbara Herb Clinic, was a popular figure.

The couple's daughter was a kindergartener at Foothill Elementary School in the Goleta Unified School District, where counselors were made available to her classmates and their parents, the school said in a statement.

Saturday was the girl's sixth birthday, family and friends told the Los Angeles Times.

Han had owned and operated the Santa Barbara Herb Clinic since 1991, according to the clinic's website. Public records show he is a licensed acupuncturist.

A biography on his website says he earned degrees in Oriental and Western medicine from a Beijing university in 1982, graduating at the top of his class. He moved to the U.S. a few years later to study psychology.

Han came from a family of Chinese doctors and provided traditional treatments including acupuncture, acupressure and herbal formulas from an on-site Chinese pharmacy.

He is co-author of the book "Ancient Herbs, Modern Medicine," and he was working on a volume about how to integrate Chinese and Western medicine. At the clinic, he created individualized herbal formulas for each patient that were filled at an on-site pharmacy.

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