• Re: Wife of slain Austin jeweler says daughter-in-law Jaclyn Edison got

    From Danart@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jun 24 21:06:57 2024
    Soros Needs To Die wrote:
    When "48 Hours" found Jaclyn Edison sitting on a bench
    with a book
    in her hand, we might have mistaken her for a young professional on

    her lunch break. But Edison wasn't on the job. She was on
    probation.

    She was sitting in front of an Austin, Texas, jail, where she'd
    just
    finished serving time after pleading guilty in a 2018 murder plot
    that sent three others to prison for up to 35 years. So why did
    Edison get a sentence of 120 days behind bars?

    "48 Hours" contributor Jim Axelrod reports on the crime
    – and the
    punishments – in "Shootout at the Shaughnessys,'" an
    all-new "48
    Hours" airing Saturday, Jan. 13 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming
    on
    Paramount+.

    The March 2, 2018 shooting murder of affluent jeweler Ted
    Shaughnessy, and the near-murder of his wife Corey shocked people
    in
    Austin, where many knew the couple and assumed they'd been targeted

    as part of some sort of botched robbery. With no relevant prints
    from any outsiders at the scene, authorities had to consider the
    victim's widow herself as a suspect.

    But in the following weeks, they cleared Corey Shaughnessey and
    concluded her son Nicolas Shaughnessy had planned the murder with
    his high school sweetheart Jaclyn Edison so they could live large
    on
    the Shaughnessys' money, hiring two hit men to do the dirty work.

    It was just after 4 a.m., when police say two intruders entered the

    Shaughnessys' sprawling suburban home. Corey said she woke up when
    she heard one of their two pet Rottweilers bark.

    "Ted sits up in bed … and he grabbed his gun … to go see
    what it
    was," she said. "I hadn't even gotten my head back on the
    pillow …
    before I heard the first gunshot … And then there was a barrage
    of
    gunfire."

    Corey said she was still in bed when the shooting suddenly turned
    in
    her direction. She grabbed a .357 revolver from above her headboard

    and returned fire. "I ran out of ammo … I just bailed into
    the
    closet."

    Trapped in the closet with bullets flying, she said she called 911.

    "Travis County 911 … do you need police, fire, or
    paramedic?" asked
    the dispatch operator. "I don't know," Corey responded.
    "I'm in the
    closet!" "There were shots fired … Help me!"
    "OK, we're helping you
    ma'am," the operator said. "Help me!" Corey sobbed
    again.

    Even in her hiding place, Corey couldn't escape the horror
    unfolding
    in the house. "I heard this horrible, horrible moaning,"
    she said.
    "When I came out of the closet … I saw Ted's legs and I
    could tell
    he was dead."

    When police arrived at the scene minutes later, it looked like a battlefield. Broken glass and bullet casings were scattered on the
    floor. Ted's lifeless body lay in a pool of blood near the kitchen
    table. One of the dogs had been shot dead in the master bedroom.

    Corey told authorities she hadn't seen the attackers' faces. But
    she
    did have an idea why they'd come. Though she said she and Ted
    rarely
    kept valuables from their business in the house, "being a
    jeweler …
    you might someday be a target."

    Sitting in the back of a police cruiser before dawn that morning,
    Corey spoke by phone with Nicolas, then 19, who lived with Edison,
    then 18, in the city of College Station more than 100 miles away.

    The couple made the two-hour drive to the scene, arriving around 8
    a.m. They had met in high school when Edison moved to Austin from
    New Jersey after her parents divorced. Nicolas brought her home in
    2016.

    "It was an awkward dinner," said Corey.

    She said Edison struck her as socially awkward, but before long,
    she
    was spending so much time at their house, Corey and Ted actually
    let
    her move in. Edison lived with the Shaughnessy family until she and

    Nicolas moved 116 miles away to College Station.

    About two hours after Corey notified Nicolas about the murder, he
    arrived with Edison at the scene. According to investigators they
    began acting strangely. When Edison learned they planned to test
    her
    hands for gunshot residue, she broke down sobbing.

    "That was a major red flag for me," said Sgt. James
    Moore, who was
    then a detective for the Travis County Sheriff's Office. "We
    knew
    there was something more to this at that point."

    Investigators began to suspect even more strongly that they were
    involved in the murder when they searched the couple's College
    Station home.

    "Once we get into the apartment we're going through it, we're
    finding ammunition," Moore said.

    Though common among gun owners, the ammunition was the same brand
    and caliber found at the crime scene. And investigators were about
    to find proof that Nicolas and Edison weren't telling the whole
    truth about themselves.

    "We find a marriage certificate for Nick and Jaclyn,"
    Moore said.

    "In all of the conversation you were having … they never
    said that
    they were married?" asked Axelrod. "No," Moore said.

    Corey said they'd never told her or Ted either. In fact, they
    didn't
    tell her the news of their marriage until after the murder.

    "I thought it was incredibly stupid," said Corey.
    "You're too young.
    This was really dumb."

    Trying to be a supportive mother to Nicolas, Corey said she
    accepted
    the marriage, but demanded the couple plan and host a proper
    wedding. She had ample opportunity to supervise that process,
    because just days after the murder, Nicolas and Edison moved back
    in
    with her.

    As investigators continued looking into the couple, they discovered

    suspicious text exchanges on their phones, written just days before

    the murder. To authorities, it sounded like they were in cahoots
    and
    arranging a hit.

    "Nick is saying he's 'working on it,'" said Axelrod,
    paraphrasing
    one of the texts. "Yeah," said Moore. "And Jackie's
    response to the
    text message was, 'do they want 50K or not?'" added lead
    detective
    Paul Salo. "And she said, "'we can't afford to pay half
    before.'"


    https://assets3.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2024/01/12/b744249a-f04b- 4b22-ad06-

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    ghnessy-mugs.jpg?v=50926e3bde2e7c9caafa13eb3f9693b5

    Over the next three months, police would come to believe Nicolas
    and
    Edison had masterminded the attack and on May 29, 2018, authorities

    arrested them for criminal solicitation in the murder of Ted
    Shaughnessy. When Corey read the arrest affidavits, she said her long-standing belief in her son's innocence started to crumble. And

    she remembered a particularly awkward conversation she'd had with
    Jaclyn back in 2017.

    "She even asked me … one evening when we were getting ready
    to go
    out, what would happen to all my jewelry when I was dead,"
    said
    Corey. "I just chalked it up to bad manners."

    Just two weeks after her arrest, Edison began cooperating with
    investigators – and pointing the finger at Nicolas. She
    acknowledged
    he had hired someone to kill his parents, but claimed she didn't
    know who.

    After her cooperation, authorities released Edison on a reduced
    bond.

    Using video from Edison and Nicolas' home security cameras, they
    then tracked down one of the attackers, 21-year-old Johnny Leon,
    who
    eventually acknowledged having been in the Shaughnessys' home the
    night of the murder. Leon's phone records around that time showed
    intensive communications with a man named Aerion Smith, age 20, who

    later confessed to firing the fatal shot. Both were arrested for
    capital murder.


    Corey thinks Edison's sentence is outrageous.

    "It is an outright dismissal of everything that I went through
    as a
    victim, she said. "And it's a dismissal of Ted's life."

    "Do you understand Corey's frustration?" Axelrod asked
    Salo.
    "Absolutely," he replied.

    "Is she innocent?" Moore asked rhetorically.
    "Absolutely not."

    "She knew, Amy Meredith added. "She knew what he was
    trying to do."


    In a prison interview during the summer of 2023, Nicolas told
    "48
    Hours" that Edison was a full partner in crime.

    "Was this a fifty-fifty thing?" asked Axelrod. "Most
    definitely,"
    Nicolas replied.

    And though Edison denies it, Nicolas told us killing his parents
    was
    largely her idea.

    Edison declined our multiple interview requests, but when she
    walked
    out of jail on Oct. 17, 2023, "48 Hours" producer Jenna
    Jackson was
    waiting.

    "Nick got 35 years, the hit men got the same," Jackson
    said to her.
    "You got 120 days … are you getting away with murder?
    "No … I think
    that it's fair, Edison responded. "I think it accurately
    reflects
    the level of involvement."

    Edison insisted the Shaughnessys are overstating her role.

    "Corey and Nick have both told us is that … you are a
    partner in
    this murder plot," Jackson told her. "Yeah … I think
    Nick is, is
    saying whatever he has to say to kind of clear his name,"
    Edison
    responded. "Corey is very much in denial about what really
    happened."

    "48 Hours" asked the district attorney for an interview
    to discuss
    why his office gave Edison 120 days behind bars, but Garza would
    not
    agree to speak with us on camera. A district attorney's
    spokesperson
    sent us a statement saying, "Our office takes acts of violence

    seriously and is committed to holding people who commit violent
    crimes accountable." The statement also said Edison is on
    probation
    for 10 years and if she violates the terms, she faces 20 years in
    prison.

    Corey says a full explanation from authorities would have helped
    her
    make sense of something that has always struck her as impossibly
    wrong.

    "So no one's ever explained to you why this enormous disparity
    … in
    sentence?" asked Axelrod. "No, absolutely not,"
    Corey replied.

    Now, more than five years after the murder and living out of state
    and under a different name, Corey seems finally to have made her
    peace with what happened. She hasn't spoken directly to Nicolas
    since the day of his arrest, but made sure Edison got the message
    in
    a video for authorities, played at Edison's plea hearing.

    "I'm alive because your plan to have me murdered … didn't
    succeed,"
    said Corey. "You are a monster. You are evil and everyone
    needs to
    know it."

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ted-shaughnessy-murder-austin-jeweler- jaclyn-edison-48-hours/

    Lot of pretty girls do wrong things.
    Sad reality why bother.


    This is a response to the post seen at: http://www.jlaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=659063228#659063228

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