Pawlet Town Hall seen on Sunday, March 14, 2021. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
A man with short hair and a beard, wearing a red and white checkered shirt, sits in a room with a cabinet and cardboard boxes in the background.
Brian Crossman at an Aug. 6, 2024, Pawlet Selectboard meeting. Screenshot via PEGTV Rutland

Updated at 9:37 p.m.

Days after the bodies of three people were found in a Pawlet home, Vermont State Police identified the victims late Tuesday. They did not, however, name a suspect. 

Police said in a press release that the deceased were Brian Crossman Sr., 46, a member of the town selectboard; Erica (Pawlusiak) Crossman, 41, who was married to Brian; and Colin Taft, 13, a son of Erica and stepson of Brian. 

According to the Vermont Chief Medical Examinerโ€™s Office, all three died as a result of gunshot wounds and were ruled homicides. 

State police said Tuesday night that nobody was in custody and that an investigation into the deaths remained โ€œactive and ongoing.โ€ They appealed to members of the public to contact the agency with any information relevant to the case. 

On Tuesday morning, Crossmanโ€™s colleagues on the Pawlet Selectboard issued a statement mourning his death. โ€œBrian Crossman was a friend and neighbor, a hardworking community member who just this year stepped up to join the Pawlet Selectboard,โ€ they wrote.

โ€œThis tragedy that struck him and his family has also hit our community hard, and we are shaken and grieving. Our hearts go out to everyone affected by this devastating loss,โ€ read the statement, which was signed by the boardโ€™s chair, Mike Beecher. โ€œThe town of Pawlet will work to get through this as we always get through hard times, by supporting each other and doing our best to carry on.โ€

State police on Sunday first announced three โ€œsuspicious deathsโ€ in Pawlet, with the victims found at a home on VT Route 133. At the time, police called the incident โ€œisolatedโ€ and said there was โ€œno identified threat to the community.โ€ 

On Sunday, Maj. Dan Trudeau, commander of the state police criminal division, told WCAX that police received a report of a โ€œperson that had some blood on themโ€ on a โ€œroadway.โ€ That person was later detained, he said.

Crossman was serving a one-year term on the selectboard.

Ian Sullivan, Rutland County Stateโ€™s Attorney, said Monday afternoon that his department was โ€œworking closelyโ€ with law enforcement.

Teacher remembers Crossman as โ€˜humbleโ€™, โ€˜kindโ€™

Decades ago, JeanMarie Oakman served as Brian Crossmanโ€™s teacher and principal during her tenure at Wells Village School.

She said Crossman was a โ€œhumble, sweet, gentle boy,โ€ the kind of kid who made others feel at home at the small, rural school. 

โ€œHe looked after all of his cousins and relatives. He was so kind to his sister,โ€ Oakman said, noting that Crossman was part of a large โ€œsalt of the Earthโ€ family. 

After falling out of touch, she said, she caught up with Crossman at a wedding in recent years, and she โ€œbeamed with prideโ€ to see how well he was doing. 

โ€œImagine, he wanted to sit with his old teaching principal,โ€ she recalled. โ€œI remember leaving that wedding thinking, โ€˜what a remarkable human being.โ€™โ€

Now, she was questioning how such a tragedy could befall Crossman and his family.

โ€œWhy them? I canโ€™t fathom. Itโ€™s been very upsetting,โ€ she said.