
By Taylor Bennett. Mar 6, 2026
Two women were found dead inside a Pennsylvania home after police say an out-of-state tip prompted a welfare check - and investigators also reported a man was found dead in Illinois.
The home is on Dior Drive in Jackson Township, Butler County, near Zelienople, where officers forced entry when no one answered during the check, according to local reporting.
Pennsylvania State Police have described the case as an apparent murder-suicide spanning states, with officials emphasizing there was no ongoing threat to the public.
Police later identified the two women as Amy Byrd, 63, and Lanaya Lewis, 19, and said they were found with gunshot wounds inside the Dior Drive home.
Investigators also identified the man connected to the tip as A.C. Byrd Jr., 67, who authorities say contacted Illinois police, provided the Pennsylvania address, and was later found dead in Illinois from what was described as a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
CBS Pittsburgh reported that the deaths are being treated as an apparent murder-suicide, and that the investigation began after Illinois police received information that led them to alert Jackson Township officers to perform the welfare check.
According to the Cranberry Eagle, the initial call came into the Hillside Police Department in Illinois. A spokesperson told the outlet the caller provided the Pennsylvania address and indicated there would also be a body in a nearby Illinois field - a grim warning that accelerated the response in both states.
Police in Pennsylvania then went to the Dior Drive home for a welfare check. When they were unable to make contact, they forced entry and discovered the two women dead, with the investigation later turning over to state police.
What remains unclear in the public reporting is the precise timeline inside the home - when the women died, when the Illinois call was made relative to those deaths, and what investigators believe connects the events beyond family ties and the tip itself. Authorities have not publicly released a full narrative of what led up to the deaths.
Even in communities familiar with routine calls for service, a forced entry that becomes a death scene lands differently - because it turns a front door into a boundary line between normal life and tragedy.
Neighbors told the Cranberry Eagle that the family moved into the Jackson Ridge housing development around 2020, and that the loss has left people shaken and searching for words.
CBS Pittsburgh’s reporting also captured that sense of whiplash through friends who described the victims in everyday, human terms - a working mother, a young woman with plans - details that make the story feel less like a headline and more like a hole in a neighborhood.
That’s the part communities struggle with most: not only that deaths occurred, but that they unfolded behind closed doors in a place meant to be ordinary and safe.
Pennsylvania State Police and local agencies are continuing to investigate, and officials have said there is no danger to the broader community.
In cases like this, answers often come in stages: confirmation of identity, coordination between jurisdictions, and the slow construction of a timeline that can stand up to scrutiny. For now, the public facts remain limited to what investigators and local reporting have confirmed - two women found dead in the Pennsylvania home, and a man found dead in Illinois after making the tip that led police to that address.
If you or someone you know is struggling or in immediate danger, you can call or text 988 in the U.S. for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (24/7).
References: Two Women Found Dead in Butler County Home After Illinois Man Dies by Apparent Suicide | Women Found Dead in Jackson Township Identified
The Bold Fact team was assisted by generative AI technology in creating this content























