Texas attorney Claims He Shot His Adult son with Downs Syndrome After Mistaking Him for an Intruder [View all]
https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/texas/articles/2024-12-05/a-texas-man-claims-he-shot-his-son-after-mistaking-him-for-an-intruder-later-burns-the-body#google_vignette
A Texas Man Claims He Shot His Son After Mistaking Him for an Intruder, Later Burns the Body
Authorities say a father is being accused of fatally shooting his adult son with Down syndrome at a home in East Texas after claiming he had mistaken him for an intruder and then later burning his body
HOUSTON (AP) A father has been charged with fatally shooting his adult son with Down syndrome at a home in East Texas after claiming he had mistaken him for an intruder and then later burning his body in what authorities on Thursday described as a bizarre crime."
Michael C. Howard, 68, who is an attorney in Houston, told investigators he was at a home he owns in Sabine County on Sunday evening when he accidentally killed his 20-year-old son, Mark Randall Howard, with a shotgun, Sabine County Sheriffs Office Deputy J.P. MacDonough said at a news conference.
Howard did not call the sheriffs office until Monday afternoon, about 17 hours after he had used a tractor backhoe to take his sons body about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) away to a remote area on his more than 2,500-acre property and placed the body on a wood trash pile and then cremated him, MacDonough said. Howard and his son had arrived at the home in Sabine County located about 170 miles (274 kilometers) northeast of Houston either Thursday or Friday, authorities said.
https://www.cbsnews.com/texas/news/texas-man-charged-with-murder-fatally-shot-son-burned-the-body/
Texas man charged with murder after fatally shooting son with Down syndrome, burning the body
"It is a bizarre crime anywhere you are just because of the nature of the event," MacDonough said. "Mr. Howard committed this act and in the furtherance of that, burned the body and cleaned the crime scene, which as an investigator, I would take as indicative of nefarious purposes or for nefarious purposes."
Howard's son had been diagnosed with Down syndrome but was high functioning and did have a job, MacDonough said.
Two days before the shooting, authorities responded to a call Howard made in which he had reported the theft of some property, including a large mower and a trailer. MacDonough declined to say if the thefts might have played a role in Howard thinking his son was an intruder.