Journalists document the crime scene where four people were shot to death in a British-registered car, in a forest in the Alps, near Chevaline, France, Friday, Sept. 7, 2012. The case took on international ramifications, with links that tied the slain family to Britain, Iraq and Sweden. (AP Photo/Laurent Cipriani)
Journalists document the crime scene where four people were shot to death in a British-registered car, in a forest in the Alps, near Chevaline, France, Friday, Sept. 7, 2012. The case took on international ramifications, with links that tied the slain family to Britain, Iraq and Sweden. (AP Photo/Laurent Cipriani)
view of the trailer where the slain British family were holidaying in a camp site of Saint Jorioz, near Annecy, French Alps, Friday, Sept. 7, 2012. French prosecutors focused Friday on a feud between brothers as they searched for a motive in the slayings of a British-Iraqi family vacationing in the French Alps. Two young sisters survived the deaths of their parents and an older woman in the family car late Wednesday, as well as a French cyclist whose body was found nearby. (AP Photo/Lionel Cironneau)
Annecy prosecutor Eric Maillaud answers a question during a news conference in Annecy, France, Friday, Sept. 7, 2012. Maillaud said that the 4-year-old girl who survived the slaying of her family in Annecy couldn't help their investigation since she hid under her mother's legs during the killings. (AP Photo/Lionel Cironneau)
Police on Thursday Sept. 6, 2012 stand outside the home of Saad al-Hilli in Claygate, Surrey, who has been named by French media as one of the members of a British family who was shot dead by a gunman in the French Alps. (AP Photo/Steve Parsons/PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE
Cyclists look at the trailer where the slain British family who were holidaying in a camp site of Saint Jorioz, near Annecy, France Friday, Sept. 7, 2012. A 4-year-old British girl hid for eight hours beneath the bodies of slain family members in the back of their car in a nearby forest, before she was discovered by French investigators who had been guarding the vehicle. One man and two women were shot to death, as was a French cyclist whose body was found nearby. (AP Photo/Lionel Cironneau)
ANNECY, France (AP) ? The brother of an Iraqi-born British man shot dead in the French Alps with his wife and two other people came forward to British police on Friday and denied any conflict in the family, while investigators looked into a possible money dispute among the siblings, a French prosecutor said.
Two days after the killings, authorities identified the dead as mechanical design engineer Saad al Hilli and his wife, Ikbal, based partly on the testimony of their 4-year-old daughter Zeena, who survived unhurt by hiding under her mother's skirt as some 25 automatic-handgun rounds were fired.
French cyclist Sylvain Mollier, 45, whom authorities suspect was in the wrong place at the wrong time, was also killed in Wednesday's rampage. Investigators were working to identify a fourth victim, an elderly, Iraqi-born Swedish woman also inside the family's vehicle.
French authorities, cautious about tipping off the culprit or culprits, offered only a trickle of clues about the investigation.
Eric Maillaud, the prosecutor in nearby Annecy, said British police reported that Saad may have feuded with his brother Zaid over money.
On Friday, after learning about media reports that cited authorities' suspicion about a possible family dispute, Zaid went to British police and told them, "I have no conflict with my brother," according to Maillaud.
"This brother came forward spontaneously to investigators, first to ask simply about the state of his brother because he heard through British media that his brother was dead," Maillaud said.
But Mae Faisal El-Wailly, a childhood friend of the brothers, made available a letter written to her by Saad last year that alluded to a possible inheritance dispute. She said the brothers' father had died recently, and she described the family as wealthy and well-traveled.
"Zaid and I do not communicate any more as he is another control freak and tried a lot of underhanded things even when my father was alive," Saad wrote. The letter was dated Sept. 16, 2011.
"He tried to take control of fathers assets and demanded control," the letter says. "(A)nyway it is a long story and now I have just had to wipe him out of my life. Sad but I need to concentrate now on my wife and two lovely girls ..."
Public records show Zaid resigned from Saad's small aeronautics design firm, Shtech Ltd., last year.
Maillaud said he had not heard about any possible inheritance issue and that Zaid remains "a free man."
The prosecutor also said it was a "miracle" that the dead couple's other daughter, 7-year-old Zaina, who was shot in the shoulder and beaten, survived. She remained unconscious Friday in a medically induced coma in a Grenoble hospital, under close police guard.
Maillaud said investigators looked forward to speaking with the girl to help identify or describe any suspects.
So far, authorities have questioned her 4-year-old sister Zeena, but Maillaud said her account was filled with "kids' words."
She "was asked time and again to tell us who she was with," he said. "She said, 'With my daddy' and gave his first name, and 'With my mummy' and gave her first name, 'and my sister'."
Maillaud said the girl provided no other details that might advance the investigation.
For the first time in nearly two days, police allowed access to the site of the shooting, along a potholed, one-lane road near a mountain stream. Broken glass and skid marks marred the parking area where the family was found.
Maillaud said each victim was shot at least three times and hit at least once in the head.
Investigators were looking for a green or dark-colored 4x4 vehicle and a motorbike, based on a possible witness sighting.
Four French police investigators were heading to England following the launch of a French judicial investigation on charges of assassination and attempted assassination.
Police in Surrey, England, said in a statement Friday that the al Hilli family had a residence in the town of Claygate, but they declined to provide details on the investigation.
Autopsies continued Friday.
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Thomas Adamson in Paris and Raphael Satter in London contributed to this report.
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