The man authorities say killed his wife, two children and himself in an upscale suburban Tampa mansion was no stranger to financial problems.

Though the major financial trouble happened a decade ago, investigators a currently doing a financial audit on Darrin Campbell.

Investigators identified the bodies of Darrin Campbell, his wife, Kimberly and two children, 19-year-old Colin and 16-year-old Megan May 7 after a fire at a mansion in the exclusive Avila community in north Tampa.

Officials said Campbell shot the teens and his wife, set the home on fire and then shot himself.

Authorities are trying to determine if any current financial problems played a role in the murder-suicide.

According to partner newspaper the Tampa Bay Times, Campbell was part of a securities fraud scandal about a decade ago.

The fraud surfaced after the collapse of Tampa-based Anchor Glass Container Corp., one of the country's largest manufacturers of glass containers. Campbell, who formerly served as Anchor's chief financial officer.

Shareholders accused him and other executives of failing to disclose financial weaknesses before a public stock offering, leading to lawsuits and a multi-million dollar settlement. In May 2004, Campbell unloaded $750,000 worth of company stock just months before the then-struggling company filed for bankruptcy.

A settlement was paid in 2007 - making it unlikely that it contributed to financial problems Campbell could have faced more recently.

Most recently, Campbell served as an executive with Vastec, a digital records company.