Texarkana Gazette

Texas teen, girlfriend accused in his jeweler father’s death

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AUSTIN—The son of an Austin-area jeweler and the teen's girlfriend are charged with hiring someone to kill his father, who was gunned down in March during a home break-in, authoritie­s said Wednesday.

Nicolas Patrick Shaughness­y and Jaclyn Alexa Edison, who are 19 years old and live together in College Station, were arrested Tuesday on a count of criminal solicitati­on to commit capital murder, Travis County sheriff's officials said. They remained in jail Wednesday, with Shaughness­y's bond set at a $3 million and Edison's at $1 million. Neither had an attorney listed in online jail records.

According to investigat­ors, Shaughness­y's mother, Corey Shaughness­y, called 911 in the early morning hours of March 2 to report an intruder in the home of her and her husband, Theodore Shaughness­y. Deputies sent to the home found Theodore Shaughness­y dead of multiple gunshot wounds. A family dog was also killed. Authoritie­s say the plot called for Corey Shaughness­y to be killed as well, but she was physically unharmed.

The shooter hasn't been caught, but sheriff's spokeswoma­n Kristen Dark said in a statement that detectives "are following new leads in the case." She declined to elaborate when later reached by phone.

Theodore Shaughness­y was the owner of Gallerie Jewelers in Austin. The company had posted on its Facebook page in late April that, "We are happy to announce that Nicolas, Ted's son, will be carrying on his legacy here at Gallerie."

An obituary for the elder Shaughness­y published in the Austin AmericanSt­atesman said he was "a proud father to his son, Nicolas."

In the months before the shooting, Nicolas Shaughness­y approached multiple people asking if they were willing to be paid to kill someone, investigat­ors allege in an arrest affidavit. He estimated that he'd receive some $8 million from the life insurance policies for his parents, from the sale of their home and sale of the jewelry store.

Authoritie­s say they found ammunition in the defendants' home that matched casings found at the crime scene.

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