Dallas Couple Warned Son of Suicide Plans by Phone
Police: Parents phoned son at college to tell of suicide pact plans.
March 13, 2008 — -- Moments before a prominent Dallas couple died in an apparent murder-suicide pact, they called their son miles away at college to let him know of their plans, police told ABC News.
Dallas police said there was a gap of nearly four hours between when Lynn Flint Shaw, 53, and her husband, Rufus Shaw, 56, contacted their son, Ian Nicholas Shaw, and when paramedics entered their home to find them dead from gunshot wounds.
"They called their son and another friend at 6 p.m. Monday evening. The son spent the next few hours calling relatives and trying to reach his parents," Dallas Police Department homicide supervisor Lt. Craig Miller said.
"He kept calling them, but there was no response," Miller said. "It was rare for them to let the phone ring and go unanswered. The son called family members, who live in several states, and ultimately a relative came to the house. When they got to the location, they saw food on the table but no movement and that's when they called police."
When no one answered the door, the family member called 911 about 9:45 p.m. Paramedics arrived minutes later to find the couple dead in their bedroom at the back of the home.
A gun was found nearby and it appeared Rufus Shaw had shot his wife before killing himself, police said.
Lynn Flint Shaw was the former head of the Dallas Area Rapid Transit board. She stepped down in January amid allegations of fraud and forgery. Rufus Shaw was a well-known local political pundit and blogger.
A friend and colleague of Ian Nicholas Shaw was playing basketball with him at Roanoke College in Salem, Va., when the college senior, who works part time in the athletics department, received the shocking call from his parents.
"He picked it up and began to talk quietly like he normally does with his dad. He just sat down and dropped the basketball. He said, 'oh my God,'" Brad Moore, the school's sports information director, told the Dallas Morning News, Tuesday.
Moore told the paper that Ian Nicholas Shaw became upset and threw a basketball.
"From what he was saying, his dad was telling him, 'just make sure you graduate' and 'we love you, we just don't want to go on, we just can't go on like this anymore.' That is what he was saying," Moore told the News. "Then his mom got on the phone and said she loved him."