MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Texas Shootout (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: February 3, 2025On an early morning in 2018, a woman in her 50s stood in the doorway of her bedroom in Austin, TX – firing off shots from her .357 revolver into the dark kitchen a few yards away. Someone i...n the kitchen fired back, and bullets whizzed past her and crashed into the wall. The woman saw shadows moving back and forth in the kitchen, but no matter where she aimed in the darkness, she just couldn’t hit anyone. She kept firing until she heard a CLICK – her gun was empty. Terrified, she turned and ran into her bedroom closet to hide. Later that morning, when detectives arrived at the house and walked into the kitchen, the scene looked almost like something out of an old western movie – like some insane shootout had taken place in this quiet, upscale neighborhood. The dead body of a middle-aged man lay on the floor, surrounded by multiple bullet casings from what looked like several different weapons. And a handgun rested near the dead man’s out-stretched hand. The woman who lived there described the wild events of the morning to the detectives, and she claimed people had broken into her house and killed her husband, but they must have run when she opened fire on them. But the detectives had no way of knowing what had really happened, and they immediately started to wonder if this entire crime scene – this massive shootout – had just been staged to cover-up a good old-fashioned case of a wife murdering her husband.For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In early 2018, a woman in her 50s stood in her Austin, Texas bedroom doorway firing shots
from her 357 revolver into the dark kitchen in front of her.
Someone in the kitchen fired back at her and bullets tore through the house as she aimed at shadows but missed. When her gun finally emptied, she fled to her closet
to hide. Later, detectives found a chaotic scene in the kitchen. Bullet casings everywhere,
a middle-aged man dead on the floor, and a handgun near his hand. The woman claimed intruders
had broken in, killed her husband, and fled when she opened fire.
Detectives, however, began to suspect that the scene was staged to cover up something
darker.
Possibly a wife killing her husband.
But before we get into that story, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious
delivered in story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we
do when we upload twice a week.
Once on Monday and once on Thursday. So if that's of interest to you, please offer to do the follow buttons colored
laundry, but instead of using detergent, just use bleach. Okay, let's get into today's story. On the evening of March 1, 2018, 55-year-old Ted Shaughnessy placed a necklace and a glass
display case in his high-end jewelry store in Austin, Texas.
Ted adjusted his glasses on his face and then leaned in a bit closer, and he saw the lights
in the case bounce off the gold and jewels in this necklace, and it was so beautiful,
he just smiled.
He and his wife, Corey, had owned this jewelry store for 20 years.
Corey had a keen eye for jewelry, so she worked as the appraiser, choosing which pieces to buy and then sell inside of the store and also determining how much they were worth. And Ted was a great
salesman. Ted took pride in the way he displayed the jewelry in the store. He wanted to draw the customers in, and then once they were there, Ted would approach them
like they were lifelong friends.
Now, part of the reason he did this was just because it was an effective sales tactic.
But also, Ted really did love meeting and talking with people who came in to shop off
the street.
That's actually one of the reasons he'd worked in retail for most of his adult life.
Ted locked the display case and walked around the shop, turning off lights, and closing things up for the day. Then he set the security alarm,
headed out the door, and locked it behind him.
Some nights, Ted would stay at the jewelry store long after it had closed to go over the books or
to redo the displays. But tonight, he wanted to get home as
quickly as he could. He and his wife had plans to spend the entire night doing one of their
favorite things, eating a great home-cooked meal together and just relaxing and watching TV.
After leaving the store, Ted climbed into his car and headed home.
About 25 minutes later, he pulled into his neighborhood and he looked around at all the
huge houses with sprawling front yards and swimming pools out back.
He found his house, which was just as big as all the others, and he pulled into the
long driveway and came to a stop.
He got out of the car, walked inside his house through the front door, and the moment he
was inside, he was hit with this wonderful smell of something delicious cooking in the kitchen.
But before he could even call out to his wife, he heard loud clacking sounds on the hardwood
floors as two large dogs bounded through the front room towards him.
Ted enthusiastically knelt down and began goofing around with the dogs and asking them
how they were doing like they could answer back. Then he stood back up and the dogs followed at his heels as Ted
made his way through the house, which could feel like walking through a maze for somebody
who had never been there.
Ted and the dogs got to the kitchen and Ted saw his wife, Cory, standing over the stove.
Cory turned around and Ted immediately walked over, Cory, standing over the stove. Cory turned around and Ted
immediately walked over, put his hands on her waist and gave her a kiss. Ted helped his wife put some
finishing touches on the meal and then they both got excited about the night ahead of them.
They knew a lot of people would find this to be a pretty boring way to spend the night,
but Ted and Cory really were never happier than when they were just hanging out together.
After the food was finally done cooking, the couple sat down and ate their great meal at
the dining room table while their dogs just stared at them hoping for some scraps.
After they were all done eating, Ted cleared the table and took the dishes into the kitchen.
One of the dogs, a Rottweiler named Bart, followed
him every step of the way.
After Ted rinsed off the dishes, he joined his wife on the couch in the front room. He
draped his arm around her shoulder, and she leaned her head on his chest as they began
to watch TV.
They spent the night flipping between channels, really only half paying attention. Most of
the time, they just talked. Talked about things at the jewelry store and also how their son and his girlfriend seemed to be getting pretty serious.
Even though their 19-year-old son only lived about two hours away in College Station, Texas,
and they saw him often, it still felt strange to be empty nesters and not to have him in
the house anymore. Before they knew it, they had spent hours just sitting there talking and they had both
begun to feel tired.
So Ted flipped off the TV and the couple headed to their bedroom with both of their trusty
dogs trotting along right behind them.
A little before 4.45am on March 2nd, 2018, so several hours after Ted and Cory had gone
to bed, they both suddenly woke up to the sound of their dogs barking in their room.
Ted flipped on the light on his bedside table and he and his wife looked over and saw their
dogs barking away standing right by the bedroom door.
Ted tried to get them to calm down but they just kept on barking over and over again.
Ted could see his wife looked frightened and he was feeling a bit freaked out too.
The dogs were both really good guard dogs and they usually only got agitated when they'd
heard something.
And so Ted slowly got out of bed, opened the drawer on the bedside table and pulled out
a.45 caliber handgun.
He checked to make sure it was loaded and then told his wife to stay in the room. Ted walked over to the door, opened it up, and headed outside. He made
his way into the dark kitchen, and Bart the Rottweiler followed right behind.
Just a few minutes later, Cory threw open her closet door, jumped inside, and slammed
it shut behind her.
She crouched down in the corner trying to make herself as small as possible, and as she sat there panting out of breath, she clutched her phone in one hand, and in the other
hand she was holding a.357 caliber revolver. She dialed 911 on her phone and pressed it to her ear,
and at the same time she held the gun out in front of her aimed at the closet door in case anybody approached her.
She heard the sound of the emergency operator on the other line and she said the police
needed to get to her house right away.
Multiple gunshots had been fired, she didn't know if her husband was even alive at this dead within seconds.
Fifteen minutes later, so just after 5am, Travis County homicide detectives James Moore
and Paul Salo headed up the long walkway toward Ted and Corey's front door.
By this point, crime scene tape had already been stretched across the large property,
several uniformed police officers stood on the lawn, and two officers stood near the
front door with Corey, who was there in her nightgown, sobbing.
Detectives Moore and Salo introduced themselves to Corey, and told her they'd be back to
her shortly.
Then they put on their gloves
and headed inside of her house. Just standing in the front room, both detectives got a sense of how
big this house was and how many different hallways and paths there were to take.
They made their way through the front room and walked into the kitchen, where a team of
forensics officers were already searching for evidence. On the floor, sprawled out under the
kitchen table, the detectives saw Ted Shaughnessy's body. Blood covered his face and his chest,
but the detectives also saw something that completely threw them off.
Because in the call they got, they'd already been told about Ted being deceased,
but they didn't expect to also see his pet dog lying
right there with him. Bart, the Rottweiler, had clearly been shot and killed, laying just
a few feet in front of Ted, like he'd been trying to maybe protect him.
One of the forensics officers joined Detectives Moore and Salo and pointed out multiple bullet
casings littering the kitchen floor. In fact, there were so many casings that the detectives thought it looked like a massive shootout had taken place
right there in the kitchen.
The detectives walked over to the kitchen table and knelt down by Ted's body. Near
his outstretched hand, they saw a.45 caliber handgun. Moore checked the magazine and saw
it was full, so it appeared like Ted had not fired
a single shot from his weapon.
However, Moore asked the forensics officer if there was any chance that Ted maybe did
fire off some shots and actually emptied out a magazine and then reloaded, and then once
it was reloaded maybe he didn't fire again giving the impression he had not shot at all.
Now Moore didn't think this was likely, but he just wanted to be sure.
The forensics officer told him they were still looking at everything, but so far, none of
the casings they'd found matched the caliber of Ted's gun, so very likely Ted did not
fire a single shot.
After spending some time searching the kitchen and also studying Ted's wounds, Moore and
Salo began to make their way through the rest of the house.
They found a home security system that was not armed, and they didn't find any evidence
of forced entry at the front, back, or side doors.
They thought maybe whoever had killed Ted had been invited inside the home, or at the
very least had a key.
However, as soon as they stepped into one of the bedrooms, they immediately began to
rethink that theory.
Based on the way the room was decorated, it appeared to belong to a young man.
But more importantly, when they looked inside this room, they could see that one of the
windows was open, and the window screen had been removed and dropped down onto the ground
just outside.
Moore and Salo went back to the kitchen and told the forensics officers what they just
found, and as members of the forensics team headed to that bedroom, the detectives made
their way to the front of the house and walked outside.
They saw Ted's wife, Corrie, still standing with the two officers.
They approached her and gently asked if she was up to answering a few questions.
Corrie wiped some tears away from her face face but then nodded and said she was.
And so Detective Salo asked her if she could just walk them through what had happened that
morning.
Corey said that she and her husband had woken up sometime around 4.45am when they heard
their dogs barking.
Ted had grabbed his gun and walked out with one of the dogs while she had stayed back
in the bedroom with the other dog.
But then she said she heard gunshots coming from the kitchen, so she grabbed her own gun
and ran out of the bedroom.
She could hear her husband screaming, but there was also this bright light shining directly
at her making it really hard to see.
All she could see were shadows moving around in front of her.
But then she saw one of these shadows fire a gun and kill one of their dogs, and so instinctively
she raised her own gun
and unloaded her weapon, trying to hit the shadow. Detective Salo asked her what kind of weapon she
had and Corey said she had a.357 revolver. Salo and Moore looked at each other but didn't
say anything. Corey had just admitted she fired her weapon inside the house and they've just
found her husband dead from gunshots.
So either she was lying and was making this whole thing up about shadows to cover up her
part in the crime, or this really happened.
Detective Moore asked Corey if one of the bedrooms in the house belonged to a young
man.
Corey said they must mean her son's room.
She said she still had his room, but he was 19 years old now and lived a couple of hours
away with his girlfriend, and she'd already asked an officer to call them right after police had arrived
and they were on their way right now. Detective Zalo asked Corey if she could give any description
of the person she'd fired her gun at, even though it was dark and shadowy. Corey shook her head and
said no. She figured it was just a burglar. After all, she and Ted were well known in the
area for their jewelry store and for having made a good amount of money. And so they knew
they were a target for a robbery. After this, Salo and Moore stepped away from Corey and headed
back inside the house. And already, they were starting to question some of Corey's answers.
Like most spouses in murder cases, Corey was immediately considered a suspect,
and the fact that her weapon had been fired in the house only made her a stronger one.
On top of that, when she called 911, she said she was hiding in the closet, and she was sure
whoever was inside her house was coming for her. But when the police had arrived and done a sweep
of the house, nobody was there. Finally, Corey had just claimed that she thought this was all a robbery gone bad. However,
the detectives had walked through the house and seen stacks of cash, high-end jewelry,
and expensive electronics just laying out untouched. And Corey and Ted Safe did not
look like anyone had even tried to break into it, so why would a robber leave without taking
a single thing of value?
Still, the son's bedroom window had been opened, and so if Corey had done that to try
to stage things to make it look like a break-in and robbery, she didn't do anything else
to the house to back that up.
The detectives talked this over as they went back to the son's bedroom, and when they
walked in, one of the forensics officers had a smile on his face, and he said they had just pulled a really clear fingerprint off the outside of the window, so they hoped
that would lead them right to the person who had climbed in.
And as Moore and Salo stood there, something began to hit them.
If somebody did really break into the house through this window, climb into this bedroom,
and then make their way all the way to the kitchen, they would almost have to have some previous knowledge of the layout of this place. Because even with all the lights on,
this was not an easy house to navigate. It was massive and basically like a big labyrinth.
So now, the detectives felt almost convinced that even if Ted's wife was not involved,
somebody who Ted knew and who had very likely been to this
particular house many times must have been his killer.
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A couple hours later, at 8am on March 2nd, a car pulled up in front of the house.
Ted's 19-year-old son Nicholas Nicholas, and Nicholas' girlfriend, Jackie Edison, harked behind the
line of police cars outside the house that Nicholas had grown up inside of.
They both got out of the car and immediately spotted Cory, who was still standing in the
front yard, and began running towards her.
An officer stopped them, but when they said who they were, he let them by.
A moment later, Nicholas and Jackie were hugging Corey, and all three of them
just stood there, crying. Inside the house, Detectives Moore and Salo got word that Ted
Son had just arrived, so they quickly went outside and found Nicholas and Jackie still
standing with Corey. The detectives apologized for interrupting, but they asked Nicholas if they
could talk to him for a few minutes. Nicholas said of course, and then followed the detectives apologized for interrupting, but they asked Nicholas if they could talk to him for a few minutes.
Nicholas said of course, and then followed the detectives across the yard to a spot where
they'd be able to talk without anybody else hearing.
More started off by asking Nicholas where he'd been around 4.45am that morning, the
time the 911 call had come in, and Nicholas said that he and his girlfriend were asleep
at their place in College Station. Jackie was a student at Texas A&M down there and Nicholas worked trading stocks as a day trader.
Moore took down a few notes and then asked Nicholas if there was anyone he could think
of who had a problem with his father and might have wanted to do this.
But Nicholas shook his head and said basically everybody who knew his parents loved them.
Moore asked if there was anything at all about Nicholas' dad that he could think of that could
maybe help them, even if it was really small. Nicholas thought about it for a few seconds,
and then suddenly his eyes went wide like he just remembered something.
He said there was one thing that could be important, but it was a really weird situation.
When he'd still been living at home, his next-door
neighbor had come to him and said she thought that her husband was cheating on her. This neighbor
knew Nicholas was pretty good with technology, so she'd asked if there was any way he could track
her husband or something, and she told him she would pay him for his services. Nicholas had felt
strange getting involved in something like this, but his next door neighbor was a nice woman and a good friend of his mother's, so he had helped her.
He had put a tracker on her husband's car and followed him one night to another woman's
house and it became clear pretty quickly that the man was cheating on his wife.
Now Nicholas got a worried look on his face.
He'd always assumed the husband never knew he was involved in helping the wife catch him cheating. But if this man had found out it was him, he might
have wanted revenge and his dad might be dead because of it.
After that, the detectives told Nicholas he could go rejoin his mother. After he had walked
off, the two men just looked at each other and shook their heads in disbelief. That was
a really weird story.
Neither of them had ever run into a teenager who had acted like a private investigator to
catch a cheating husband. It almost sounded made up, more like something the kid might have
watched on TV. But regardless, it was a good lead. After Moore and Salo finished up their initial
work at Ted and Corey's house, they walked
next door to the neighbor's house.
They knocked on the front door and a woman answered, and quickly she invited them inside.
They all sat down at her kitchen table, and the detectives didn't waste any time.
They needed to know if Nicholas' wild story about trailing this woman's husband was true.
The woman looked a little embarrassed,
but she said Nicholas was telling the truth. She felt bad for dragging a teenager into her
marital problems, but she had been desperate. Detective Moore leaned in and told her he did
not need all the details about her marriage, but he needed to know one thing that was extremely
important. Had she ever told her husband about Nicholas' involvement in all of this?
The woman didn't hesitate, she said no way would she ever do that.
Her husband, who had since moved away and was soon to be her ex-husband, had no idea
at all about Nicholas.
And as she was talking, the reason for this line of questioning finally dawned on her,
and she stopped and just said her husband might have cheated on her, but there was no way he would have ever attacked
Ted or anybody else like that.
The detectives left the house not long after that and headed back to the station.
Despite what the woman said about her husband, they knew they still had to track him down
and get more information directly from him.
In the days following the murder, while members of their investigative team followed up on
the neighbor's husband, Moore and Salo contacted Ted's closest friends to see what else they
could learn about him.
But not much new came from that.
Everybody seemed to like Ted, and nobody could understand who would do this unless it was
a robbery. Now while the detectives still were not convinced Ted's death was the result of a robbery gone
wrong, they did start to look more into the jewelry store to see if maybe somebody had
been staking the place out and following Ted home.
However, they got a phone call from Ted's son, Nicholas, that caused them to quickly
change the direction of their investigation.
Nicholas was aware that his bedroom window had been found open on the night his father
was killed, and he said he just couldn't stop thinking about it, and in fact, there
was something he felt like he needed to share with the detectives.
He told them when he was younger, he would use his bedroom window to sneak out of the
house, and then get back inside without his parents knowing.
It was just stupid teenager stuff, nothing serious. But he did it so often that he made a habit of just keeping that window unlocked. Now he realized that particular window might have been left
unlocked even after he had moved out. But what Nicholas said was really weighing on him was that
there was only really one other person who knew he did this with his window, and that was his friend Spencer Patterson.
Because he and Spencer had crept out of that window a bunch of times together when Spencer
had slept over.
Detective Salo asked Nicholas if the reason he was so worried was because maybe Spencer
had some reason to come after Nicholas now?
Like had they had a bad fight or something?
Nicholas said no, but he said Spencer would have gone to their house and potentially used
that window to get in there and get his parents' money and jewels.
Nicholas said Spencer had not really grown up with money of his own and he'd always been
kind of jealous of how wealthy Nicholas' family was. And there was more. Spencer not only knew about the bedroom
window, he also knew exactly where to find Nicholas's parents safe.
About a week after the murder, Detective Salo and Moore sat together in an office going over
the notes they'd already put together.
And even though their investigation was still relatively new, they felt like they had some promising leads. They still thought there was a strong chance that Corey had simply shot her
husband, because in addition to what they'd learned at the house, they'd now discovered that
Corey was the beneficiary of Ted's $1 million life insurance policy. She also stood to gain
sole ownership of the jewelry
store and the house, which were both worth a ton of money too. The detectives believed they'd have
a clear idea about Corey's potential involvement in the murder when they got the results of the
ballistics tests that would show if Corey's gun had fired the bullets that killed Ted.
But the detectives had also started to consider that maybe Corey had been right,
maybe this was a robbery gone bad. And if that was the case, Nicholas' friend Spencer had to be high
on their suspect list. Even if this robbery had not actually been successful, Spencer did know
that Ted and Corey were wealthy, he knew how to sneak in through Nicholas' window, he knew his way
around the maze-like house, and he knew where the safe was.
Detective Moore picked up the phone, put it on speaker, and called the number he had for
Spencer.
Spencer picked up, and Moore quickly introduced himself and then immediately launched into
a series of questions.
The detectives learned that Spencer had gone over to Ted and Cory's house for dinner about
a month ago when Nicholas had been visiting, and they said that they had treated him like
he was one of the family, just like they'd done since he was a kid.
Moore asked Spencer how he and Nicholas used to sneak out of the house when they were younger,
and Spencer talked about using the bedroom window, just like Nicholas had said.
While the detectives talked to Spencer, they kept getting the feeling like he was holding
something back. The kid was being very cooperative and answering their questions, but there just
seemed like there was always this hesitation, or like he was about to say something and then
chose not to. By the end of the call, Moran-Salos still did not feel satisfied, so they scheduled
an in-person meeting with Spencer, and in the meantime, they decided to keep a close eye on their other major suspect.
About a week later, in late March, Nicholas and Jackie were sitting on the couch in the front
room of Ted and Cory's house looking at Cory as she stared out the window onto the street.
Nicholas didn't want his mom to be alone, so he told her that he and Jackie would stay at the house as long as they needed to. That had cheered Cory up,
but it was clear she was still struggling. And today, Nicholas and Jackie were extra
worried about her, because she kept standing there just staring out the window. They had
no idea why. But suddenly, Cory turned around and told them to come over and take a look
for themselves.
And so Nicholas and Jackie walked over to the window and Cory pointed to a plain looking
sedan on the street.
She told them she thought it was a cop and that he was watching her.
At first, this seemed like paranoia to Nicholas and Jackie.
However, when Nicholas looked out the window and he got a good look at that car before
it drove off, he thought his mom was right.
It definitely could be an unmarked police car.
Corey stepped away from the window and collapsed onto the couch.
She didn't understand why the police would be watching her.
Why weren't they out finding the person who had actually killed her husband?
Nicholas looked over at his mom and he could tell she was just in total despair,
and so he leaned over to Jackie and whispered something in her ear.
Jackie was surprised by what she just heard, but she quickly smiled and nodded her head.
And so Nicholas took Jackie's hand and together they walked over to the couch where Cory was.
And then Nicholas took a breath and said that he and Jackie had something very important he wanted to tell her.
They were not just boyfriend and girlfriend anymore, they had actually gotten married.
Corey instantly sat up and just stared at them for a second, shocked.
Nicholas quickly said that they had planned to tell her and dad when they came to visit
next and they still wanted to have a big ceremony, but they had just decided they wanted to spend the rest of their lives together and so they had just gotten it done and gotten
married.
After a tense couple of seconds, Corey broke down in tears, but these were tears of joy.
She got off the couch, smiled and hugged Jackie and told her how happy she was to welcome
her to the family.
Then Corey said Jackie should go pick an engagement ring from
their jewelry shop and then they should have a big engagement party. Even if they were already
married, she didn't want her to miss out on anything. And who knows, maybe this was a way
for them to start to heal a bit and move forward as a family. Nicholas was very relieved. He was
so glad the news had made his momas happy as he hoped it would.
But as excited as she seemed, and as much as they all wanted something to celebrate during
this terrible time, Nicholas just couldn't shake the image of that unmarked police car
staking out his mother's house.
Over the following weeks, the investigative team continued to dig into the Shaughnessy's
financial records and they also did keep eyes on Corey's house.
While that was going on, Detectives Moore and Salo met in person with Nicholas' friend
Spencer, and somehow being face-to-face with him made them feel even more like he was hiding
something.
And it was strange, because on the surface, Spencer seemed cooperative and like he wanted
to help.
But there was just something about the way this kid spoke that convinced Moore and Salo
that they couldn't fully trust him.
So after meeting with Spencer at the station, the detective secured warrants to search Spencer's
house and his car.
Now the search of the house didn't turn up anything out of the ordinary.
However, when they went through Spencer's car, they found a.380 caliber gun.
Spencer had never mentioned having this gun, which seemed a little odd since he knew he
was being investigated for a shooting.
The detectives thought if he had wanted to clear himself, he wouldn't try to hide the
fact that he owned a gun. And within days, this new piece of evidence looked a lot more damning. Because when
Ballistics reports came back, they showed that some of the bullets fired at the crime scene came from
a.357 which matched Cory's gun and some of the others came from a.380, just like Spencer's.
came from a 380, just like Spencer's. About a month after Ted's murder, Detectives Moore and Salo believed they had Ted's killer
in their sights. They collected more financial records and cell phone data to try to tie
up any loose ends, and then they brought Spencer into the station for one last interview. Spencer
sat down at a small table across from Salo and Moore in a brightly lit, cramped
room.
He'd always seemed a bit nervous to the detectives, but today he looked like he was carrying the
weight of the world on his shoulders.
But despite that, Moore and Salo didn't go on the attack.
Spencer was young, and he was nervous and scared.
So Moore tried to put him at ease. He told him
they thought they knew what happened on the morning Ted died. They just needed Spencer
to help them fill in the blanks. And before Spencer could even begin to talk, the detectives
confronted him with all the evidence they had in the case, since they told him there
really wasn't any point trying to hide anything anymore.
After a very tense minute, Spencer looked across the table
at the detectives and then told them everything he knew. Following that interview, it would take
Moore and Salo several more weeks to nail everything down, but in May of 2018, two months
after Ted's murder, they knew exactly what had happened and who had fired the shots that killed Ted Shaughnessy.
Based on Spencer's interview, cell phone data, and evidence collected throughout the
investigation, here is what police believe happened to Ted in the early morning hours hours of March 2, 2018.
On that morning, the killers crept through the dark house led only by the light shining
from one of their phones.
They each held a gun in their hands and they tried to move as slowly and quietly as possible.
But when they made it to the kitchen and quietly as possible. But when they made it
to the kitchen and turned towards the main bedroom, they heard dogs start barking. The
killers froze not sure what to do, one of the dogs sounded really aggressive. The killer
holding the phone shined the light towards the bedroom door, and right away they both
saw something moving towards them. As the barking got louder and they heard footsteps
and loud clacking on the wooden floors, suddenly
the light illuminated the dog, and it was the Rottweiler, Bart, bounding towards them,
baring his teeth.
One of the killers instinctively raised their gun and fired off a shot.
The dog squealed and fell to the kitchen floor.
Ted screamed and ran into the kitchen after the dog. He raised his gun, but before he could get a shot off, now both killers started firing. The sound
of gunshots crashed through the house as bullets hit Ted in the back, the thigh, and the head.
Ted collapsed to the floor under the kitchen table, dead.
The killers began shouting at each other, starting to panic.
This had not gone the way it was supposed to.
But before they could make another move, bullets came whizzing out of the dark into the kitchen,
hitting the wall and sending pieces of plaster onto the floor.
The killer with the cell phone shined the light in the direction of the gunshots, trying
to get a clear look at the shooter.
Their hands were shaking and they couldn't really aim well, but still the killers just held their guns and started firing wildly.
And then finally the shots stopped and the kitchen fell silent.
One of the killers shouted that they needed to get out of there, so they ran out of the
kitchen into one of the bedrooms and climbed out the open window. Outside, they ran as fast as they
could through the darkness back to a car they ran as fast as they could through the
darkness back to a car they'd parked down the street. They got in, and one of the killers
hit the gas and floored it through the neighborhood while the other killer sat panicking in the
passenger seat. They both knew they had screwed up, and now they were going to have to get
in touch with the people who had hired them and tell them they'd only taken out one of the intended targets.
The killers were two men who had no connection to Ted.
However, the two people who hired these men were Ted's own son, Nicholas, and the woman
Nicholas had secretly married, Jackie Edison.
Nicholas knew if both of his parents were dead, he would inherit their store and their house
and benefit from their life insurance policies, all of which would have made him a multimillionaire.
And Nicholas really wanted that money, because he had gone into quite a bit of debt from
playing the stock market as a day trader.
So with Jackie's help, he found two hitmen and offered to pay them a lot of money to
kill both Ted and Cory and to make it look like a robbery.
Nicholas told the hitmen about his bedroom window and gave them a complete layout of
the house.
But, on the night of the murder, the hitmen did not imagine they would find themselves
in a full-fledged shootout, so when Corey started firing off her.357 at them, the whole
plan fell apart.
And so when Corey rushed back to her closet to call 911, instead of the hitmen going after
her and killing her, they just ran out of the house and didn't even attempt to make
it look like a robbery.
And then a few hours later, when Nicholas and Jackie arrived at the house, they knew
their plan had not worked, so they tried to play the perfect son and daughter-in-law.
Nicholas also sent the cops after the neighbor's husband and his close friend Spencer.
The neighbor's husband was cleared as a suspect very quickly, but Spencer remained high on the suspect list, just like Corey was, for
a significant amount of time. However, when ballistics tests came back, they confirmed
that none of the bullets fired from Corey's gun had actually struck Ted, and that the
gun that was found in Spencer's car had not been used in the murder.
And that fingerprint that had been found on the bedroom window did not match Spencer's car had not been used in the murder. And that fingerprint that had been found on the bedroom
window did not match Spencer's.
In fact, it just turned out to be an old print from when
the window had been manufactured.
So the detectives no longer believe Spencer committed
the murder.
And the more they talked to Spencer, the more they
realized he wasn't hiding something to protect himself.
He was hiding something to protect his best friend,
Nicholas. But in his final meeting with police, Spencer would admit that Nicholas had talked to
him on several occasions about wanting to murder his parents and hiring hitmen to do it.
And after this, when police dug deeper into Nicholas' phone records, they found a couple
of things that sealed the case. Nicholas, being the family member who was the most tech-savvy, set up an app on his
phone that enabled him to control the alarm system on his parents' house.
And the second discovery, and the far more damning one, was a series of text messages
between Nicholas and Jackie in which the two of them were clearly arranging a murder for
hire.
Nicholas and both shooters were sentenced to 35 years in prison.
Jackie cut a plea deal and received 10 years of probation.
But with one very specific caveat.
She had to spend two nights in jail every year on the anniversary of Ted's murder.
A quick note about our stories, they are all based on true events, but we sometimes use
pseudonyms to protect the people involved and some details are fictionalized for dramatic
purposes. stories, bedtime stories, wartime stories, run fool, and redacted.
Just search for Ballin Studios wherever you get your podcasts to find all of these shows.
To watch hundreds more stories just like the ones you heard today, head over to our YouTube
channel which is just called Mr. Ballin.
So that's going to do it.
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A few miles from the glass spires of Midtown Atlanta lies the South River Forest.
In 2021 and 2022, the woods became a home to activists from all over the
country who gathered to stop the nearby construction of a massive new police training facility
nicknamed Cop City. At approximately nine o'clock this morning as law enforcement was moving through
various sectors of the property an individual without warning shot a Georgia State Patrol troop.
of the property, an individual without warning shot a Georgia State Patrol trooper.
This is We Came to the Forest, a story about resistance, The abolitionist mission isn't done until every prison is empty and shut down.
love and fellowship,
It was probably the happiest I've ever been in my life.
and the lengths will go to protect the things we hold closest to our hearts.
Follow We Came to the Forest on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of We Came to the Forest early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus.