Image: Armed police officers at the scene of a knife attack that killed six people in St Helier, Jersey
Ian Le Sueur  /  EPA
Armed police officers at the scene of a knife attack that killed six people in St Helier, Jersey, on Sunday.
msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated 8/15/2011 5:10:34 AM ET 2011-08-15T09:10:34

Police on the British island of Jersey have admitted they were "shaken" by the killings of six people in what was the deadliest crime in the community's living memory.

Neighbors said the victims were members of the same family. The dead were a man, two women and three children, police said.

Some were stabbed inside their home, others outside the property, which is located on a relatively secluded side street.

The 30-year-old suspect, who was not identified, also sustained injuries that were not life-threatening. Police said they were questioning him at his hospital bed.

'It was a small child'
Neighbors said they thought at least some of the victims were Polish. One witness, Andre Thorpe, said he saw police running around the property trying to gain access, then paramedics carrying a bloodied child from the scene.

"I saw police come running out with a child, it was a small child, I just saw the legs. They went off in an ambulance. When the paramedic came back her shirt was covered in blood," Thorpe said, according to the Telegraph newspaper.

Detective Superintendent Stewart Gull, who is leading the investigation, said his officers had yet to establish the victims' ages and the circumstances of the attack.

He said the crime had shocked everyone.

"It goes without saying that when you are dealing with multiple deaths, of men and women and, in particular young children, you would be inhuman not to be shaken yourself," he said.

Gull led a police investigation into the murders of five women in Ipswich, a town on the east of mainland U.K., in 2006, according to BBC News.

Violent crime is unusual and murder rare on Jersey, a British island dependency 14 miles west of France's Normandy peninsula.

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The largest of Britain's Channel Islands has a police force of 236 officers to protect about 92,500 residents, many of them tax exiles.

"Jersey is an incredibly safe island, probably one of the safest places in the Western world," Gull said.

No businesses robbed in 2010
Several police and Jersey media officials said they couldn't recall the last murder on the island.

An Associated Press search found it occurred in March 2004, when a 19-year-old man originally from Northern Ireland tried to rape, then kicked to death, a 35-year-old nurse outside her home. It was the first murder in Jersey since the 1970s.

In their 2010 annual report, the Jersey police recorded 4,554 crimes, mostly theft and fraud. There were 83 physical assaults, 14 rapes and one kidnapping.

No businesses were robbed. Three people were killed and 65 injured in car accidents.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  1. Image: Armed police officers at the scene of a knife attack that killed six people in St Helier, Jersey
    Ian Le Sueur / EPA
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