Senator Nancy Schaefer was murdered
|
Conservative political activist and former state Sen. Nancy Schaefer and her husband Bruce have died of an apparent murder-suicide. Few details were available Saturday, the day after the couple's bodies were found. It could be weeks, before autopsy results are available, Habersham county Coroner Kasey McEntire told the AJC Saturday... ...GBI spokesman John Bankhead told the AJC, there will be a thorough investigation into what happened. He could not say, who might have been the shooter. Six GBI agents and two crime scene technicians were at the scene of the Schaefer home in Habersham County Friday night. Sen. Don Thomas, a physician and who said, he knew the couple well, said, he believed, Bruce Schaefer, 74, had cancer. “In those moments you are not at your complete sanity," said Thomas, of Dalton. "Some people figure, the best way is to end it for both of you. They were married for so long. Loved each other so much. When you see somebody, that you love so much, every now and then, you think, the best way out of it is to go and be with the Lord.” Schaefer, a former Atlanta mayoral candidate and two-term senator, was beaten by Habersham County Commission Chairman Jim Butterworth in a North Georgia Republican runoff in 2008... Neill Herring, a veteran environmental lobbyist, said, Schaefer came to symbolize "a period in Georgia history, where the Christian right was really in the ascendancy. I almost feel, like her defeat in the last election was a sign, that that power had began to wane." Schaefer and her husband were the parents of five children and moved to Habersham County in North Georgia, after living in Atlanta for 35 years. The daughter of a North Georgia Superior Court Judge and granddaughter of a state legislator, Schaefer, 73, entered the public eye in 1985, when she organized a Constitutional Liberties Rally in Atlanta. The following year she founded Schaefer Family Concerns, Inc., a nonprofit foundation dedicated to issues, such as display of the Ten Commandments in public buildings and opposition to abortion. She was the Republican nominee for Lt. Governor in 1994. In 1998 she sought the GOP nomination for governor. According to her state senate biography she was an eight-year Trustee of the National Ethics and Religions Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC). She represented Family Concerns and the SBC at the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995, the U.N. Conference on Human Settlements in Istanbul, the U.N. Conference on Food in Rome, Italy and the U.N. follow-up Conference to Beijing in New York. She is a former First Vice President of the Georgia Baptist Convention, a frequent speaker to churches of all denominations, a speaker to civic and political organizations, and a frequent guest on radio and local and national television programs across the nation. She was also a Sunday school teacher. Nancy Schaefer was chosen as a Gracious Lady of Georgia, served on numerous advisory boards and directorships and in 2001 became the first woman Trustee for Toccoa Falls College in Toccoa, Georgia. As a state senator Schaefer represented the 50th district, including Banks, Franklin, Habersham, Hart, Rabun, Stephens, and Towns Counties, as well as part of White County. |
Note, that the "doctor", who said, he "believed", Nancy's husband had cancer, was also a politician. Now for the true story. I have been contacted by a very close friend of Senator Schaefer and he states, that she was wrapping up a self-funded documentary, that "named names" and exposed a very high-level, child-pedophile ring. That's enough to get anyone killed.
The above article also states, that they did not know, who pulled the trigger. I believe, that could clearly indicate, that the triggerman or -woman fled the scene. Note the following Update to the above story on WSB Radio/AP:
Investigators with the GBI and the Habersham County Sheriff's Department can't find any evidence, that the husband of former State Senator Nancy Schaefer was suffering from a terminal illness, when he shot her in the back and then killed himself in their Clarksville home.
Habersham County Sheriff Joel Terrell told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution "talking with the family, talking with the daughter, who saw them about every other day, they didn't know anything about it (an illness)."
Bruce Schaefer, 74, shot Nancy Schaefer, 73, once in the back, while she slept and then shot himself in the head. Investigators believe, the murder-suicide occurred some time Thursday night or Friday morning.
GBI spokesman John Bankhead said in a prepared statement, that investigators found a handgun near Bruce Schaefer's body and several letters written by Schaefer to family members, including a suicide note.
Sheriff Terrell said, "some financial problems were mentioned" in the notes left behind by Bruce Schaefer. But he said, "he had seen nothing so far, that establishes a clear motive."
The "very close friend" will be my guest tonight on the Paul Drockton Radio Program (4 PM Pacific/7 Eastern). All shows recorded. Click here to listen!