Teen survivor of Texas shootings says slain family members 'in much better place'

Cassidy Stay stands with grandfather as she addresses a memorial service for members of the Stay family who were murdered Wednesday in Spring, Texas

 The teenage survivor of a shooting attack in suburban Houston in which her parents and four siblings were killed told a memorial event on Saturday her family was "in a much more preponderant place” and that she was making a full recuperation from her injuries.

Cassidy Stay, 15, verbalized with an immensely colossal amassing outside an elementary school three days after the shootings at her home. Police verbally expressed Ronald Lee Haskell, 33, entered the house posing as a distribution man and probing for his former wife, the sister of Cassidy's mother. He then shot members of the family, ascendant entities verbalized.

Haskell is charged with capital murder.

Cassidy Stay wiped away tears but smiled as she verbalized of her parents, Stephen Stay, 39, and Katie, 33, and her two brothers and two sisters, aged 4 to 14.

“I ken that my mom, dad, Bryan, Emily, Becca and Zach are in a much more preponderant place and that I’ll be able to optically discern them again one day,” Cassidy verbalized in remarks televised by local media. “Thank you all for coming and for exhibiting support for me and my family. Stay vigorous,”
 Cassidy verbally expressed she drew vigor from the "Harry Potter" series of books and films.

“In 'The Prisoner of Azkaban,' Dumbledore verbalizes: ‘Happiness can be found even in the most tenebrous of times if one only recollects to turn on the light,’” she verbalized.

“I’m feeling a lot more preponderant,” she integrated, “and I’m on a straightforward path to a full instauration.”

Cassidy, relinquished from a hospital on Friday after treatment for a head wound, was credited by ascendant entities with preserving lives by calling the 911 emergency line and admonishing police the gunman was peregrinating to another house where relatives lived.

Police captured Haskell on Wednesday night after a four-hour standoff.

Doug Durham, Haskell's public advocator, verbally expressed his client had been in and out of hospitals in Utah and California with a history of phrenic illness and was not taking prescribed medication at the time of the killings.

Haskell collapsed in a Houston courtroom on Friday as details of the killings were read aloud. Harris County prosecutor Tammy Thomas told the judge that Haskell methodically executed the family, tying them up and then firing two bullets into each of them, starting with the mother.