Ex-Virginia Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax, Wife Dead In Apparent Murder-Suicide

Justin Fairfax, a former Virginia lieutenant governor, fatally shot his wife, Cerina, inside their Annandale home before dying by suicide amid a “messy” divorce, police said. The deadly violence unfolded early Thursday morning at the Fairfaxes’ residence on the 8100 block of Guinevere Drive, Fairfax County Police Chief Kevin Davis told reporters at a news conference after the incident. He said both the couple’s teen children, a boy and girl, were home at the time, and that their son made the initial 911 call.

“This is certainly a fall from grace for a relatively high-profile family that seemingly had a lot of things going for them,” Davis said. “Tragic for the children to lose both parents. Extra tragic for them to actually be in the home when it occurred.”

When authorities arrived on the scene just after midnight, they discovered both Cerina and Fairfax dead inside the residence. Davis said that Cerina, a dentist, was shot several times in the basement, adding that her body was surrounded by bullet casings.

“At some point after Justin shoots and kills his wife, he runs upstairs in the home, into the primary bedroom,” where he used the same weapon on himself, Davis told reporters.

The murder-suicide came amid an “ongoing domestic dispute” surrounding a “messy or complicated divorce.” Davis added that Fairfax was recently served paperwork related to the proceedings, which “apparently led to this incident last night.”

The couple had been living together but were separated, he said, residing in separate bedrooms. Cerina filed for divorce last July.

Authorities previously responded to the residence back in January, when Fairfax called and claimed he’d been assaulted by his wife, Davis said. It was later determined no assault had occurred after investigators reviewed footage from surveillance cameras installed inside the home by Cerina. No charges were ever filed.

Fairfax was the lieutenant governor under Democrat Ralph Northam, who served as the 73rd governor of Virginia from 2018 to 2022. His appointment made him only the second African American elected statewide in Virginia.

“Pam and I are devastated by this heartbreaking news. I had the privilege of getting to know the Fairfaxes while our families served together,” Northam said in a statement to the Washington Post on Thursday.

In 2019, Fairfax was accused of sexual assault by two women, with the alleged incidents dating back to 2000 and 2004. The allegations triggered calls for Fairfax’s resignation, but he resisted and finished off his term before launching an unsuccessful campaign for governor in 2021. He finished fourth for the Democratic Party.

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Jessica Schladebeck; New York Daily News; (TNS) || ©2026 New York Daily News. Visit at nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.