by Kerry Doherty
Autumn, with its crisp temperatures, pumpkin spice and vibrant colors, seems to be everyoneโs favorite season.
Not Paige OโShaughnessyโs.
In fact, each year when the season changes sheโs reminded of the hellish fall of 2000. That was the year her husband, Timothy OโShaughnessy, 40, was murdered in his downtown Norfolk office.
It was Tuesday, November 7, when he was killed by an unhinged former employee bearing a grudge, a golf club and a gun.
Paige OโShaughnessy was left alone to raise their four sons, ages 9 months, 2 1/2 years old, 4 1/2 years old and six.
The killer was stockbroker Joseph Ludlam. He beat the man whoโd fired him from his job five weeks earlier and when the golf club broke, he stabbed OโShaughnessy with the shaft and then shot him. Twice.
Ludlam stole OโShaughnessyโs wallet, car keys and car and sped to his parents’ house in South Carolina where he holed up for 18 hours. He was finally arrested and charged with capital murder.
After numerous delays, Ludlamโs murder trial was finally set. But on Columbus Day of 2002 then-Commonwealthโs Attorney for Norfolk, Jack Doyle (now a retired circuit court judge), contacted the widow and said Ludlam had agreed to plead guilty to first degree murder and the use of a firearm in the commission of a felony in return for a prison term of no more than 40 years.
Sheโd be spared the ordeal of a trial, the state would be spared the expense and the murderer would be locked up for a very long time.
Mrs. OโShaughnessy recalls the prosecutor reassuring her that, โHeโll be an old man when he gets out.โ
โThis gives us an assured conviction, and he waives his rights to appeal,โ Doyle told The Daily Press at the time. โForty years is virtually a life sentence.โ
Not exactly.
There was one factor no one mentioned: geriatric parole. (more…)