Parents who taught their kids to lean on faith kill themselves in tragic double suicide over financial difficulties

A married couple who taught their children about the power of faith leaped to their deaths in a tragic double suicide in New York City on Friday.  It is reported that they committed suicide because of financial difficulties.

The bodies of chiropractor Glenn Scarpelli, 53, and his wife Patricia, 50, were found lying in the street close to the Empire State building early in the morning as people arrived for work. 

They are believed to have jumped from the window of Glenn's former office on the ninth floor of an office building at East 33rd St, near Madison Avenue. 

They were the parents of daughter Isabella, 20, and Joseph, 19, both former students of Loyola School, a Jesuit-run Catholic school on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, according to the Daily Mail.  Isabella currently attends the Austin, Texas, based Catholic college, St Edward's, the website said.

In a suicide note found in his pocket, Glenn wrote: 'We had a wonderful life....Patricia and I had everything in life.'

However, he also described the couple as being in a 'financial spiral'.  'We can not live with' the 'financial reality,' the letter said, according to the New York Post.

Patricia had a separate suicide note that said: 'Our kids are upstairs, please take care of them.' 

According to the Daily Mail, Glenn had debts of around $213,000 with the federal government and nearly $42,000 in unpaid taxes owed to the state. 

The website said the parents used to help organize the annual benefit for their kids' Jesuit school.  Its report detailed an essay written for the school magazine by Joseph who said his 'proud Italian-American family' attended their local Catholic church on a weekly basis.  

According to the Daily Mail, the essay also described how Glenn and Patricia encouraged faith in their children. 

'My parents repeatedly told me that I could wake up one day and lose every material possession and everyone I love, but no one will ever be able to take away my faith,' it is reported to have said. 

Newsletter Stay up to date with Christian Today
News
The media mandate: How wise use of communication can strengthen the Christian church
The media mandate: How wise use of communication can strengthen the Christian church

As the Church tries to make sense of AI and all the media tools at its disposal, it must ask not merely what gains attention, but what honours Christ, writes Duncan Williams.

Church of Scotland to consider apology for alleged slavery links
Church of Scotland to consider apology for alleged slavery links

The Church of Scotland’s General Assembly will next month consider a report detailing historic links to the transatlantic slave trade and proposals for an official institutional apology.

Flying the flag – act of defiance or plea for help?
Flying the flag – act of defiance or plea for help?

Left to themselves, the English are notoriously slow to make any kind of public display, so in trying to understand what’s really going on here, perhaps we should ask why people have felt moved to behave in so ‘unBritish’ a way?

Pope Leo XIV listed among Time’s 2026 100 most influential people
Pope Leo XIV listed among Time’s 2026 100 most influential people

Pope Leo XIV has been included in Time magazine’s annual list of the 100 most influential people in the world, marking another milestone in the early months of his historic papacy.