Dateline NBC

The Mystery of the Murdered Major

July 07, 2021 41m
Army Major David Shannon is executed while asleep in bed. His wife Joan escapes unscathed but doesn’t see the shooter. The crime scene offers few leads until detectives make a bizarre discovery. Keith Morrison reports. Originally aired on NBC on August 12, 2011

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That's snhu.edu slash dateline. Three distinct all-electric Cadillacs.
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Escalate IQ, Optic, and Lyric. Here is the person I love.
He's dying. Her husband, a decorated military officer,

shot in the dark of night. It was an execution.

Was this some sort of hit? He was in special forces. There must have been something at work.

That's what police thought too, until they learned about the secret life of this husband and wife.

They would meet couples on the Internet.

Was there a forbidden affair?

They were probably meeting for sex about four times a week.

And did it lead to murder?

She is absolutely cold-blooded.

Soon, there'd be questions for a mother and daughter.

It was another shock.

I'm Lester Holt, and this is Dateline. Here's Keith Morrison.
The wind in the northern prairie sweeps across a vast flatland, sings through sparse woodlots, howls a dirge around the grave markers at a military cemetery a few miles south of the Canadian border. The final resting spot for a few dozen veterans, many of whom died in combat, including Major David Shannon, who lost his life in 2002.
His mother Shirley goes there to visit and remember.

His sister Brenda, too, when she's in town.

Oh, how they worry that war might put him there.

Except, war didn't.

No.

There never was a thought back then about what could happen far from combat.

What did happen.

All those strange things down south in North Carolina. Fayetteville is an old town, steeped in revolutionary and Civil War history, smack in the middle of the Bible Belt.
But now, cargo planes buzz in and out of Pope Air Force Base, and off past the confines of the city sprawls the immense Fort Bragg, home base of the computer whiz, the special ops major, David Shannon. His house was just a few blocks off base.
The major, his wife Joan, and their four children. It was July 2002, like a sauna that night, so hot and humid, and then a light rain.
The cool down began. David and Joan watched a movie on TV, fell asleep, and then...
I don't remember hearing the first shot. I remember something woke me up.
And then you heard a shot. And I know that whatever woke me up, I know my ears were already ringing.
When I turn the light on and I see that he's shot, it shocks you. Never, ever forget that image.
That's burning my brain forever, no matter how much I try to...

Here is the person I love.

He's dying. I can't hear you.

Okay, calm down.

And by the time the police and the ambulance wailed up to the door, it was too late.

David Shannon, just 40, was dead.

All it took was a look, in fact, for lead detective Mike Murphy to see that what happened in Major Shannon's bedroom was highly intentional. It was an execution.
David Shannon was executed. The intruder came in while he was sleeping and placed the gun to his head and shot and then placed it to the chest and then shot.
And Joan? Well, the shock of it didn't help, of course, or the fact that she was sound asleep when it happened, and by the time she calmed down enough to talk to police, she wasn't very helpful. I did not clearly see the person who shot David.
I'm not sure if I saw or just had a feeling of somebody just leaving the room, but I form it as a shadow. But did you actually see a shadow, or did you just tell the police it was like a shadow? There was just some movement, a shadow that had left.
She tried to follow the intruder down the hallway, and she was worried about the safety of her children. So she returned back to her bedroom, and that's where she made the 911 call.
The children. Joan and David's eldest daughter, Daisy, was out of town.
But their two young boys, just seven and ten, slept through it all, unaware of what happened. Down the hall was Shannon's 15-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, who told the cops she was also in bed.
And spending the night with Elizabeth was her best friend, Vera Thompson, also just 15. Both of their statements were similar.
They were listening to music, watching TV, and they fell asleep. Five people in the house and not a one saw or heard any useful thing that might help determine who committed this horrible crime or why.
And there weren't many clues either, at least not in plain sight. But that wasn't necessarily because the killer covered his tracks.
The home was cluttered. It was filth, clothes all over the floor, dishes in the sink, food on the countertops.
And the crime scene itself, what did that look like? Finding evidence is like finding, you know, a needle in a haystack. The house was in such disarray.
The cops picked their way carefully through the clutter, but found no fingerprints, footprints, or any usable DNA. Though on the floor near David's body, they found two live bullets for a nine millimeter semi-automatic handgun.
Joan confirmed to detectives the major kept guns in the house, plenty of ammo too, but couldn't say where those two live rounds came from. She also tried to help the police make sense of the shadow images her waking eyes saw.
But she just couldn't. I know I wasn't 100% wide awake and aware of what was going on.
There's a lot of blank spots in my memory. So little to go on.
Except there was one curious discovery in that bedroom, something quite unusual in a family home like this. The question was, what did it mean? Coming up.

Solving a murder means finding a motive.

There must have been something with what he was doing at work.

This must have been a hit.

Professional or personal.

The person who shot David Shannon might be familiar with Joan Shannon. When Dateline continues.
Dawn in Fayetteville, North Carolina. It had been a long night at the home of Major David Shannon, now deceased.
But the investigation was just beginning. The only thing that was perfectly clear was that somebody wanted this man dead, wanted it badly, shot him in the head and the chest while he slept.
His wife, Jones, sleeping soundly, then startled awake beside him. And she seemed a shadow of a person just described the subject as a male subject.
And just like that, in a split second, the kids lost a father, and their life together over their 11-year marriage was over. David and I had a good marriage.
If he were alive, he would say, we had a good marriage. I do miss him.
I miss what we had. There's not anybody that would ever be able to replace him.
Murder is really strictly a local event. Its waves are felt all over, and news of this one skipped up country and crossed the windy prairie to a place called Langdon, North Dakota.
That's where the Major grew up, where he became an unusual young man. He was quiet.
He wasn't one that was dating. He didn't have a lot of friends.
Brenda Strong is David's older sister. He wasn't into sports.
He just was introspective. But his mother, Shirley, says David always knew exactly what he wanted to do.
I am going to be an Army man, is what he said. How old was he when he first started saying that? Maybe about six, seven years old.
By 19, David had enlisted. He was eventually stationed in upstate New York, and that's where he met Joan.
He was funny. He had a sense of humor, and he was extremely shy.
David was different than the other guys. How? Oh, because he treated me a lot different.

He, um... He was extremely shy.
David was different than the other guys. How? Because he treated me a lot different.
He treated me like I had value. Which was something wonderful and new for Joan.
Sexually abused at 12, abandoned by her parents, married to an abusive husband, had a baby with him at 18, another one born in short order, and soon single again, working in a topless club, hooking up with the wrong kind of man. And then, then she met her knight, her savior.
She met David. So before, the man had wanted you for sex, but that was it.
This guy wanted you for you. He was willing to protect without controlling.
He treated me like an equal. Less than a year later, Joan asked David to marry her.
I realized he was this really, really great guy, and I didn't want anybody else to have a chance to find that out. So, in a small North Dakota church, Joan Taft became Mrs.
David Shannon. I thought he found somebody that was good for him.
He was obviously happy. And she? What was your impression of her? She just seemed very nice, very sweet, very attentive to him, very much in love.
They complimented each other is what they did. You know, it sounds almost as if you're talking about Joan as if she was one of your children.
She was almost like a daughter to me, yes. As for Joan's two young daughters, Daisy and Elizabeth, David wanted them to be part of his new family.
Because he loved me, he loved them. And so he did.
David Shannon became both a husband and a father. They were all having a good time being being a normal family.
You know, everybody getting along or fighting as you do. He loved them, definitely.
Soon the Shannons became six, with the birth of their two boys. And in 2000, David took the family south to Fayetteville, when he was transferred to Fort Bragg.
David loved the military. He loved being a

soldier. You talk about somebody having a first love or something that they love more than they he loved that uniform.
And the military had been good to David. He was Major Shannon by now well on his way to becoming a colonel and that was the phone call the Shannon family was really looking forward to from Fort Bragg.

Not the one they got that devastating morning in July 2002.

He said, um, David's been shot.

He's been murdered.

No, it couldn't be. He was in special forces.

He must have been into something odd.

You know, there must have been something with what he was doing at work that, you know, this must have been a hit. We felt that something had gone wrong.
That he found out something that he was not supposed to have known and that they had to get rid of him. Because it was so execution style.
Somebody came in there with the intent of killing him. With the intent of killing.
But here was an odd thing. There just wasn't any sign of an intruder getting into the house.
It was raining outside, remember, but nobody tracked any wet footprints inside. What she was telling us didn't really, it just didn't really match up at the time.
And something else that didn't seem to match? Stashed away in the bedroom were dozens and dozens of pornographic magazines and videos and a cache of sex toys. And when detectives asked what that was all about, Joan cheerfully gave them the completely unexpected and very surprising answer.
I told him that David and I were swingers. And suddenly, the investigation turned on its heel and headed in a whole new direction.
They would meet couples on the Internet, and her husband would prearrange it, and then they would engage in some type of sexual relation and of course with the couple itself.

Did that make your investigative mind

click a little bit into some sort of...

The person who shot David Shannon

might be familiar with Joan Shannon

and maybe the swing of lifestyle

might have had something to do with that.

Finally, a possible lead

at the Shannon's Unusual Sex Life created a motive for murder.

Coming up, an intriguing new lead.

David actually said you need to meet my wife, Joan.

Was there a fatal love triangle in this circle of swingers?

When Dateline continues. Three distinct all-electric cadillacs

some drive them for the performance others drive them for the range and some drive them because

it's the only way to make an entrance three different ways to turn every drive into an

occasion whatever your reason there's never been a better time to say let's take the cadillac

Thank you. ways to turn every drive into an occasion.
Whatever your reason, there's never been a better time to say, let's take the Cadillac. The all-electric Cadillac family of vehicles.

Escalate IQ, Optic, and Lyric. They seemed, from the outside at least, so ordinary, exemplary even.
Respected military officer, good marriage, four attractive kids. But murder investigations have a way of shattering what seems to be.
And now the Shannon family's secrets were spilling out. Of course, you can have no idea what might exist behind the photo of family values.
That's what detectives are for, after all. The Shannons may have moved to the Bible Belt, to Fayetteville, North Carolina.
Lots of churches. But there were also other activities that occurred at night that had nothing whatever

to do with family values.

Joan and David Shannon were swingers,

enthusiastic members of clubs whose sole purpose

is to organize various combinations of spouse swapping.

In fact, as Joan told the police,

she and David had been swinging for years,

long before moving to North Carolina.

But Fayetteville, after dark,

to their happy surprise,

offered plenty of fresh opportunities

to continue their lifestyle, as it's called.

David, who discovered that, said Joan.

We get here, he gets on the computer,

and he finds the location of a club. Right off the bat? Sure did, yes.
Who knew? It was as if this conservative Bible Belt state somehow needed secret outlets for its more lurid desires. He would go on the internet, and there were a lot of swinger sites.
David would look for people on these swinger websites. The swingers club David found was one of many in Fayetteville, and this particular one catered to both couples and singles.
And how did that affect your marriage? I think it improved it because, you know, so many marriages fall apart because somebody cheats, but it's not the sex, it's the betrayal, the lies. I don't associate sex and love together.
Right. In fact, you both liked it a lot.
We did. We did.
The Shannons often met couples at hotels, but sometimes they even brought them home. Always trying to be discreet, of course, so their four children wouldn't find out.
But when the kids found themselves hustled off to a friend's place for the weekend and returned to find their bedrooms rearranged, the elder daughters at least had a pretty

good idea something was going on in their absence.

But murder exposes secrets, as we say.

And now Detective Murphy wanted to know if that swinging was somehow connected with what

happened in their blood-spattered bedroom.

Maybe there was some sort of triangle involved here.

Is that the idea?

Some type of love triangle.

I started asking questions about, you know,

the couples that they might have met,

anybody that she was involved romantically with

that maybe her husband didn't know about or did know about.

Did she offer anything?

She identified a guy by the name of Jeffrey Wilson. Jeffrey Wilson? Turned out David actually met him first online.
Jeffrey was also in the Army, based at Fort Bragg, like the major. He went by the name Black Stuntman.
Now, Prosecutor Billy West was monitoring the investigations. And they were online chat friends, I think, chatting about the swinging lifestyle and that sort of thing.
And David actually said, you need to meet my wife, Joan, and invited him to a swinging party. They all got together at a local hotel, just social that first time, no sex.
And there was a second swingers party that both of the Shannons and Jeffrey attended. And at that party, he, I think as well as others, did have sex with Joan.
But after this happened, Joan and Jeffrey started seeing one another. That was okay, though, according to the rules the Shannons had established, as long as it was just sex and nobody got romantically entangled.
And anyway, Wilson was married with kids, and there was no indication that his wife knew what he was up to on the side with Joan. He started doing some one-on-one is what they call it when the other person's not there.
But David always knew when I was with Jeff. And the relationship with Jeff started, it was a sexual only.
And in the process, it had developed into a friendship. Sometimes Joan even brought her new friend by the house.
He introduced him to her daughters. Then according to Jeffrey and according to Daisy Elizabeth,

Joan fell in love with him, told Jeffrey she wanted to run off with him.

But this was no love affair, no matter what her curious daughters thought, said Joan.

She was emphatic about that.

Whether he knew it or not, she said,

Jeffrey was nothing more than a friend with benefits.

But this never became a romance from your point.

No, no.

There wasn't really an emotional attachment.

There was no love there.

But now, of course, police needed to talk to Jeffrey Wilson.

An affair was one thing.

But now, Wilson found himself caught in the middle of a murder investigation

of a high-ranking officer.

Coming up.

Jones says, I can't take this anymore. I want to be with you.

Might someone else have wanted David Shannon dead?

Police are about to put more than one person under the microscope when Dateline continues. It was quite an eye-opener.
That is, when Joan Shannon told detectives that she and her now-dead husband, Major David Shannon, were regular and enthusiastic swingers. But when Joan told them she developed a special one-on-one thing with a married man named Jeffrey Wilson, now that was a real lead.
Could it be the major was the victim of a jealous lover? So Detective Murphy paid a call on Wilson, also a soldier in Fort Bragg. Jeffrey did confirm that he was involved in a romantic relationship with Joan Shannon.
Where was he when this murder occurred? He was actually working at the time of the homicide. In fact, a little checking revealed it was a perfect unassailable alibi.
Jeffrey Wilson was innocent of murder, that is. But as for a three-month affair with Joan, Wilson was very cooperative.
He revealed every lurid detail. Back in April, they were probably meeting for sex about two times a week.
And in July, and of course the murder occurred on July 23rd, at least four times a week. So now now Deputy D.A.
Billy West began to flip that idea of a love triangle motive on its head. By the way Jeffrey Wilson was talking, it seemed to West the person who had reason to kill David was not Jeffrey, but Joan.
From Jeffrey's point of view, he describes how she was in love with him, that she was not in love with her husband, that she didn't want to be with her husband, that she financially could not afford to leave her husband. Wilson said he kept telling her he was only in it for the sex, didn't want to run off with her.
But if secret sex was all he wanted, Joan, he said, kept pushing for more. And the situation actually continued to escalate.
I think it was around July 18th, and again, that would have been five days before the murder, Jeffrey describes how he talks to Joan and Joan says, I can't take this anymore. I want to be with you.
Can't we just run off together? David Shannon knew, of course, that Joan was seeing Jeffrey Wilson. After all, he invited Jeffrey to join him in the first place.
But maybe he wasn't so happy about the cozy friendship Joan seemed to be developing. That broke the rules.
David told Joan that she could no longer see Jeffrey because he could see that Joan and Jeffrey had become romantically involved. And I believe it would have been Sunday she's actually having sex with Jeffrey Wilson.
And actually, David is killed the early morning hours of Tuesday. But if you ask Joan, and of course we did, Wilson just didn't understand.
Didn't understand that the affair was actually winding down. Why would he say you were in love with him then? He's very self-centered and into himself and believes the whole world loves him.
But I didn't. And we were actually pulling apart because it was coming to the end.
Really? Detectives added it up, and here's what they had. A story about some shadowy intruder that didn't seem to check out.
The swinging, the affair, the story, true or not, that she wanted out of the marriage. Oh, and by the way, she stood to collect $700,000 in insurance money.
The detective confronted Joan, and she, well, given her lifestyle, she said she wasn't surprised at his attitude. He's disgusted.
He's automatically prejudiced against me and focuses on that. He's determined he's going to get me.
Back in North Dakota, David Shannonannett's family tried to keep up with all the shocking information, the murder, the revelations about swinging. And now Joan was telling them she had become a suspect.
To which they replied, Joan? Not a chance. We tried to play the scenario.
Did Joan have a part in it? None of us can see that she could possibly have done that. It is just not in her nature to do that.
She can't. But Brenda did have somebody else in mind.
Now, Elizabeth, I could see it. Elizabeth, the Shannon's 15-year-old daughter? Is it possible she was a cold-blooded killer who executed her very own stepfather? The man who adopted her, raised her, provided for her? Maybe, said David's sister Brenda.
Daisy and Elizabeth were always troubled, said Brenda. And when Elizabeth hit her teens, watch out.
David and Joan did not have the tools needed to deal with what those two girls dished out. It was boys, drugs, and violence.
If she got angry with somebody, she would destroy something of theirs. That was hardly Elizabeth's view of things.
She conceded she was no angel. She acted out all right, never denied that.
But Elizabeth always claimed that it was the adults who made it ugly and hostile at home were arguments, not affection, with a family routine. Joan admits now that she was overwhelmed by the task of parenting Elizabeth, realized she said she was manipulated easily and often by her daughter.
And I gave up. I hate to admit it, but yes, I did.
I gave up on that child. I didn't know what to do.
So Joan turned the task of parenting Elizabeth over to Major David, the military man, who did what he could to keep military order. He was definitely the tough one.
He was the one that would decide the punishment, how long the grounding was going to be. A war of wills.
David would ground her. Elizabeth would escape.
David responded with locks and alarms under bedroom doors and windows. And she squirted out anyway.
Nothing seemed to work. What do you do if you can't keep your kids at home? You can't chain them.
Clear message to David. You cannot control me no matter what you do.
That's right. In fact, just a couple of weeks before he was murdered, David called home to North Dakota to vent.
Ask his mother for advice about dealing with that girl. I did ask him.
I said, would she do something? Do something? What did you mean? Would she do something? Do something violent, yes.

And he says, I don't think so.

But you asked the question for a reason.

I did ask him, yes, because I did not trust her.

Coming up, someone from inside the house that night steps forward.

She was extremely emotional and she began to lay the facts on the table. When Dateline continues.
Three distinct all-electric Cadillacs. Some drive them for the performance.
Others drive them for the range. And some drive them because it's the only way to make an entrance.
Three different ways to turn every drive into an occasion. Whatever your reason, there's never been a better time to say, let's take the Cadillac.
The all-electric Cadillac family of vehicles. Escalade IQ, Optic, and Lyric.
Hey guys, Willie Geist here, reminding you to check out the Sunday Sit-Down Podcast. On this week's episode, I get together with one of the hottest artists in all of music right now, Grammy winner Lainey Wilson, to talk about her path from the tiny town of Baskin, Louisiana, to country music stardom.
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Murder, that most abhorrent of crimes, is shocking enough. But within mere days of the late Major David Shannon's sudden passing, the shocks resumed as disturbing suspicions began to circulate and grow.
And by the time they laid the Major in the ground, the question of who did this dreadful thing seemed to be heading toward an early answer.

It was Elizabeth. David's family was convinced that rebellious Elizabeth was so full of hate, she actually shot and killed her own stepfather.
An opinion supported by several anonymous calls to the Fayetteville PD. We had Crimestoppers tips coming in saying that Elizabeth Shannon was actually bragging about the homicide.
Vera Thompson was telling people about the homicide that Elizabeth Shannon might be involved. Vera Thompson.
Remember her? She was Elizabeth's best friend who was staying at the house the night of the murder. Police brought her in again for questioning, and this time, they grilled her.
She was extremely emotional. She didn't want to tell on anybody.
And at that point in time, she began to lay the facts on the table. And oh, what facts they were.
Vera was Elizabeth's buddy, her BFF. They talked about everything, went everywhere together.
And when she started bringing up facts, we were able to corroborate some of the information. Vera provided plenty of supporting details.
How, just days before the shooting, she went with Elizabeth to a field and test-fired the murder weapon. Cops later found matching shells there.

And how Elizabeth dumped the gun that night with a guy from the neighborhood named D. Humphrey,

who was waiting near the house.

Humphrey was interviewed.

He admitted it was true.

Vera's story added up.

So everything was believable.

Then Vera, just 15 years old, naive, frightened, no attorney representing her, dropped her bombshell. Vera eventually became aware of, through Elizabeth, that Joan and Elizabeth had had some discussions about killing David Shannon, that her mother had attempted to poison David Shannon, that Joan Shannon and Elizabeth Shannon had conspired to kill David Shannon, and it actually was Elizabeth that had shot him that night.
A conspiracy? Joan the Brains and Elizabeth the Brawn? Given the tumultuous relationship between mother and daughter, who would have imagined they could agree on anything, let alone murder? But, said Vera,

that's the story Elizabeth told her, and it implicated both her best friend and Joan Shannon

in a homicide. The arrest warrants went out for both of them simultaneously.
Joan Shannon was

arrested actually before Elizabeth was arrested and before Elizabeth gave any statement in the case.

This is a production of WGBH. both of them simultaneously.
Joan Shannon was arrested actually before Elizabeth was arrested and before Elizabeth gave any statement in the case. David Shannon's family was in Fayetteville for David's funeral.
We're right there with Joan when the cops came, saw what they did. Joan had been practically paralyzed with grief, they said, and then arrested.
They put cuffs on I imagine they read her her rights right then, but I don't know. It was another shock.
Joan herself was unshakable in her insistence. She did not do it.
She had no part. She swore in any of it.
I might not be clear on that night. There's a lot I can't be clear on.
But I know I didn't kill them. I know

I didn't give Elizabeth a gun. I know I didn't try to poison them.
And I know I didn't try to get

anybody to kill them. Though to the police on the day of her arrest, she said nothing at all.

On the advice of Paul Herzog, the lawyer appointed to represent her in the battle of her life. I found it difficult to believe that she was involved in it with the way she presented herself.
Very quiet, very passive, and Joan insisted that she had not solicited Elizabeth to kill David. She loved David.
And with an experienced attorney on the case, Joan's loyal in-laws began to relax.

Once they finally started finding real evidence,

they would know

it was not Joan.

They would eliminate her.

Right.

They would eliminate her.

Right.

Especially once the police

arrested Elizabeth.

But there was a little problem.

Elizabeth had quite suddenly

disappeared. Coming up.
She is absolutely cold-blooded. She would have done anything.
When Dateline continues. On the outskirts of Fayetteville, North Carolina, is an old mobile home park, quiet, wooded, secluded.
And in the summer of 2002, it had a new resident. Elizabeth Shannon was holed up in a trailer, hiding.
We received a call saying that she was at such and such location. When we entered the home, we found her hiding underneath a futon in the living room.

They arrested her, took her downtown, read her Miranda rights, and then questioned her without an attorney.

At the time, Elizabeth, remember, was just barely 15 years old.

And what did she say after two hours in that room?

I told a story.

The whole story?

Mm-hmm.

Elizabeth confessed it all,

every grisly detail of that awful night in the Shannon house,

assuming, that is, that what she told the detectives was actually true.

It got to the point where I finally did for her, but it never would have happened without her. Her, her very own mother, Joan Shannon.
She insisted her mom had wanted David dead for months, first by trying to poison him, then later recruiting one of Liz's friends to kill him. And finally...
She was like, would you be brave enough to do this? To do what? She wanted me to kill my stepdad. In 25 years on the job, Detective Murphy had never heard a story quite like this.
He pressed further, he said, pushing Elizabeth to explain how her mother talked her into murder. And the answer, Elizabeth says now, was this.
It was love given and withheld. It wasn't really an affectionate home overall at all.
I wanted like a real mother-daughter relationship and that just was never there. Several months prior to the murder itself, her mom was taking a shop and they were going out.

They were actually being a family.

There was some type of parental involvement.

And she liked that a lot.

And she liked it because that was something that she was lacking.

But having finally offered her daughter the maternal affection she so craved,

Joan threatened to withdraw it

unless she got that gun and used it to kill her father, or so Elizabeth claimed. It sounds crazy at first, but when somebody's in your ear, let alone your mother, every day, it got to the point where it was like normal.
I just want to do this to please her. I just want to do this so nothing changes between me and her.
And so, Elizabeth said, on that night she took one of her stepfather's many guns, arranged ahead of time for a way to get rid of it, and waited while her parents watched their movie and fell asleep. She walked into the bedroom, placed the gun over her father's head, squeezed the trigger.

Then she placed the gun to the chest and she fired the second round.

As far as prosecutor Billy West was concerned, Elizabeth's tale had the ring of truth.

I think she did it at the behest of her mother and in some respects to please her mother.

So, in exchange for her testimony, the DA offered Liz a deal.

Instead of life without parole, she could plead guilty and get a sentence of 25 to 31 years.

We felt that was appropriate to offer June the same plea deal that Elizabeth had been offered.

So that offer was extended by the state. No, I wasn't going to do it.
Why not? Because when you're innocent, you're not going to say you did something you didn't. Besides, as victim David Shannon's own mother and sister insisted, Elizabeth was a devious and manipulative liar, especially when she got herself in a jam.
So it didn't sound surprising that Liz would try to set up her mom like that, because as a child, if there was trouble, Liz was usually there, but she always had to share the blame. She blamed somebody else.
Oh, yeah. She never took the blame.
She was caught red-handed. Absolutely.
Elizabeth always shared the blame. So now Joan Shannon's fate would be decided by a jury.
DA Billy West told them about Joan and David's swinging lifestyle. Joan's affair.
Jeffrey Wilson's claim that she wanted to run away with him, financed with insurance money from David's death. Then there was the allegation that Joan tried to poison David.
And testimony from a young man who insisted Joan asked Elizabeth to recruit him to commit the murder and dispose of the gun. But the DA saved his star witness for last, 15-year-old Elizabeth Shannon herself, who told the jury that Joan used a truly devious weapon, maternal love given and withdrawn, to manipulate her into murder.
I can take responsibility for my role in everything, but she was trying to put everything on me. That's the point I kind of woke up and realized, you know, like, let me just tell the truth.
Was it true? On the stand, Elizabeth's accusation was clear and powerful. Throughout the whole thing, while I was testifying, she couldn't even look at me.
Joan did not testify. She sat quietly and listened.
as her attorney Paul Paul Herzog, portrayed Liz as a liar and ruthless killer who acted entirely alone when she executed her stepfather. She is absolutely cold-blooded.
She is entirely self-interested. Elizabeth hated Joan.
She hated her parents. She wanted out.
She freed them. She would have done anything.
When she killed David, she killed the only disciplinarian she'd ever had. And then she made a deal to get herself out of it.
The idea that Joan manipulated Elizabeth wasn't even possible, said the defense. Certainly not for either of her parents.
They couldn't keep her in school. They couldn't keep her in the house.
They couldn't get her to do anything. And then all of a sudden, Joan's going to get her to turn around and kill David.
The jury deliberated a day and a half. Then they came back guilty.
My heart dropped. You go numb.
It's like so many things flash through your mind and you just realize life as you know it is gone.

It was so unbelievable.

We knew Joan was innocent and she'd just been found guilty.

It shattered our world in so many ways.

Joan Shannon will spend the rest of her life in prison for orchestrating the murder.

She has no chance of parole, no more appeals.

And Elizabeth, who actually pulled the trigger, she too was sent to prison for at least 25 years,

courtesy of the deal she cut with the DA.

I told the truth from day one.

I wouldn't gain anything by lying.

I would just sabotage my own life in the process. It doesn't make sense.
They are in separate prisons now, two hours apart by car, but really a world away. We asked if they wanted to speak to each other, make peace perhaps.
We told them we'd record it so they could speak from the heart. I still love you, Elizabeth.
It's very complicated. It's very difficult.
You're still my daughter. And I know the situation's hard for both of us.
And I am sorry I wasn't a better mother. I can't go back and change that.

But Elizabeth didn't like this idea.

I don't have anything to say to her.

Because it doesn't matter what I say.

It's like, she's not going to change.

She's not going to tell all these people that she lied.

In the years following their father's death,

Joan Shannon's two sons, David's sons,

with the She liked wanting to allow these people that she loved. In the years following their father's death, Joan Shannon's two sons, David's sons, were living in North Dakota and grew up in the Major's boyhood home in Little Langton.
His mother became, in Joan's absence, their mother and grandmother. The boys believed in Joan's innocence, visited her sometimes, and talked to her on the phone.

They were not speaking to their sister.

And Major David Shannon?

His remains will spend eternity just down the road from home,

in the old military graveyard, under the black prairie's sod and the wind.

That's all for now. I'm Lester Holt.
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