Mystery shrouds the group suicide of five members of a French family living in Switzerland’s town of Montreux.
Only a 15-year-old boy survived the tragedy, who is in a coma but in a stable condition in hospital, police said.
The Vaud police today said that their findings โmake it possible to rule out the intervention of a third party and suggest that all the victims jumped from the balcony one after the otherโ.
Police and prosecutors are working on the theory of โcollective suicideโ.

A man aged 40, his 41-year-old wife, her twin sister, the coupleโs eight-year-old daughter and their boy plunged more than 20 metres from the apartment, where they all lived, according to police.
Investigators said two officers knocked at the door of the apartment at 6:15 am, as they wanted to speak with the father about the home-schooling arrangements for his son.
A voice asked who was at the door, but then said nothing further and the police officers left the place. However, a few minutes later, all five family members jumped from the balcony within five minutes, one by one.
Police detected no trace of a struggle, saying that they jumped of their own accord. โBefore or during the events, no witnesses, including the two police officers present on the spot from 6:15am and the passers-by at the foot of the building, heard the slightest noise or cry from the apartment or the balcony,โ police said.
โTechnical investigations show no warning signs of such an act,โ they added, noting however that โsince the start of the pandemic, the family was very interested in conspiracy and survivalist theoriesโ.
According to media reports, the family lived in virtual self-sufficiency having amassed a well-organised stockpile of various food, taking up much of their living space but enabling them to see out a major crisis.

Only the motherโs twin sister worked outside the home, while neither the mother nor the eight-year-old girl, who did not attend school, were registered with the local authorities.
โAll these elements suggest… fear of the authorities interfering in their lives,โ the police statement said.
Granddaughters of Algerian writer
Franceโs Journal du Dimanche newspaper said the father, Eric David, grew up in a wealthy part of Marseille and attended the Ecole Polytechnique, one of the most prestigious schools in the country.
The twin sisters, Nasrine and Narjisse Feraoun, grew up in a family of five children who were all educated at the elite Lycee Henri-IV in Paris, the weekly said. The mother was a dentist and her sister an ophthalmologist.
The newspaper also said the twins were granddaughters of Algerian novelist Mouloud Feraoun.
A close friend of the French philosopher Albert Camus, Feraoun was assassinated in Algiers in 1962 by a far-right French pro-colonial group.

