Brian Anthony Nelson II, Brantley Nelson, Vegeta "Vegeta the Prince" Nelson, Ragnar Nelson, Kurgan Nelson, Britannica Nelson
SHARE LINK
CANDID ID: OK_22_977
AGE
9   years
STATE
Oklahoma
DATE OF DEATH
10/27/2022
DEATH RECORDS
Not Available
STATE REPORTS
Not Available
SUMMARY OF DEATH
On October 27, 2022, in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, six homeschooled children—Brian Anthony Nelson II (13), Brantley Nelson (9), Vegeta Nelson (7), Ragnar Nelson (5), Kurgan Nelson (2), and Britannica Nelson (1)—were shot and killed by one or both of their parents, Brian Nelson (34) and Brittney Nelson (32), in a murder-suicide. The parents gathered the children in a back bedroom, shot them (with four of the six suffering multiple gunshot wounds and the eldest suffering at least six), and then set the room on fire. The parents were found in the front of the house, each with a gunshot wound to the head. The family had been experiencing severe financial distress—having declared bankruptcy in 2020 with approximately $138,000 in debt—and was relying on government assistance. Neighbors were unaware that six children lived in the home. The medical examiner confirmed all six children died of homicide by gunshot wounds, with burns noted but not the cause of death.
Contexts/Conditions

Is there any mention of child drug ingestion or overdose?

Is there any mention of a drowning incident (either intentional or accidental)?

Is there any mention of a firearm incident?

The NPR article states: "Preliminary autopsy reports show eight members of an Oklahoma family found dead inside their burning home were each shot." Additionally, the hsinvisiblechildren.org document notes "Numerous firearms were recovered from the home," and the bankruptcy filing listed "nine guns" per the NPR article.

Is there any mention of inappropriate supervision (e.g., child wandered off and drowned)?

Is there any mention of inflicted injury? (e.g. slapped, punched, kicked, choked)

The NPR article states: "Four of the slain children had multiple gunshot wounds, with the eldest child, Brian Nelson II, suffering at least six." The Fox10 article corroborates: "the manner of death for each of the six is listed as homicide due to gunshot wounds." All six children were shot, constituting inflicted injury.

Is there any mention of malnutrition, starvation, or dehydration?

Is there any mention of medical neglect?

Is there any mention of a motor vehicle crash or incident?

Is there any mention of a murder-suicide incident?

Multiple sources explicitly describe the incident as a murder-suicide. The hsinvisiblechildren.org document states the children "died as part of a murder-suicide plot conceived by one or both of their parents." The NYT article states: "died in an apparent murder-suicide in which the adults are suspects." The NPR article states: "Police at the time called it a murder-suicide."

Is there any mention of outdoor elements (including hot car deaths)?

Is there any mention of prenatal substance exposure (including fetal alcohol syndrome or neonatal abstinence syndrome)?

Is there any mention of sexual abuse?

Is there any specific mention of shaken baby or abusive head trauma?

Is there any mention of prolonged abuse or torture (including restraints, captivity)?

Is there any mention of an unsafe sleeping environment?

Individuals Involved

Was an adoptive parent or guardian involved in the death?

Was a biological father involved in the death?

Brian Nelson Sr. is the biological father of all six children. The hsinvisiblechildren.org document identifies the children as those "of their parents, Brian and Brittney Nelson" and describes the incident as "a murder-suicide plot conceived by one or both of their parents." The NYT article identifies the adults as suspects: "died in an apparent murder-suicide in which the adults are suspects." The autopsy reports confirm Brian Nelson suffered a gunshot wound to the head and was found in the front of the house, while the children were in the burning back bedroom.

Was a biological mother involved in the death?

Brittney Nelson is the biological mother of all six children. The hsinvisiblechildren.org document describes the incident as "a murder-suicide plot conceived by one or both of their parents, Brian and Brittney Nelson." The NYT article identifies "the adults" as suspects. However, the autopsy report lists Brittney's manner of death as "unknown," leaving open the possibility she was a victim rather than a co-perpetrator. The language "one or both" in document 1 introduces ambiguity about the extent of her involvement, but she is nonetheless treated as a suspect by police.

Was a day care worker, babysitter, or nanny involved in the death?

Was a female paramour or friend involved in the death (e.g., girlfriend, stepmother)?

Was a foster parent involved in the death?

Was a male paramour or friend involved in the death (e.g., boyfriend, stepfather)?

Was another adult relative involved in the death? (e.g., grandfather, aunt)

Was a sibling involved in the death?

Child Characteristics

Was the child adopted?

Was the child homeschooled (including "cyberschooling") or taken out of school?

The hsinvisiblechildren.org document explicitly states: "The children were homeschooled." It further details that "While the Nelsons sent Brian II to school for kindergarten, they pulled him out of school to homeschool him in the middle of first grade because 'his father didn't get along with what they were teaching.' After that, all subsequent children were homeschooled by Brittney."

Was the child in foster care at the time of the incident?

Was the child living with relatives at the time of the incident (but not parents)?

Is there any mention of a neurological developmental child disability? (e.g., autism, intellectual disability, nonverbal)

Is there any mention of a physical child disability? (e.g., feeding tube)

Is there any mention of prematurity or low birthweight?

Is there a history of child protection reports prior to death (for this child or siblings)?

Does the child have a history of foster care (but not in care at time of incident)?

Is there a history of a sibling death (separate incident from this death)?

Parent/Caregiver Factors

Was an adult charged or arrested for the child's death?

Is domestic violence by the parent/caregiver referenced?

Is there any mention that the death occurred in a temporary shelter or while homeless?

Is an intellectual disability of the parent/caregiver referenced?

Is the mental health of the parent/caregiver referenced?

Is a history of arrests or criminal charges for the parent/caregiver referenced?

Is substance use by the parent/caregiver referenced?

Notable Details

Several notable details not addressed by preceding questions emerge from the text. First, the children were effectively invisible to the community: the hsinvisiblechildren.org document states "Neighbors reported that they had no idea six children were living in the home." Second, there are strong indicators of premeditation: the Nelsons "called their landlord and asked to have the gas line turned off" two days before the murders and "arranged to have the children's grandparents babysit during a planned medical appointment" but never brought the children. Third, the family was in extreme financial distress, filing bankruptcy in 2020 "listing nearly $138,000 in liabilities and about $8,800 in assets, including nine guns" (NPR). By October 2022 they "were relying on government assistance for food, rent, and utilities." Fourth, the Nelsons progressively isolated themselves, as "the Nelsons began to distance themselves more over time" from the paternal grandparents. Fifth, Brian Sr. was pulled out of the workforce after a serious head injury and Brittney "did not work outside the home and also had debilitating medical issues," creating a household where both caregivers were disabled. These factors collectively point to systemic isolation and escalating crisis that went undetected by any institution or social safety net.

These fields were populated by an AI model and may contain inaccuracies. Review the links and PDFs provided for verification before citing. Contact [email protected] to report any inaccuracies where corrections are needed.