Franklin Bradshaw murder


The Franklin Bradshaw murder was a 1978 criminal case in which Utah industrialist Bradshaw was killed by his grandson at the instigation of his daughter Frances Berenice Schreuder.
The case inspired widespread coverage, including two books and two television movies. Prosecutors alleged that Frances Schreuder did not want to be cut out of her father's will and wished to continue funding her lavish lifestyle in New York City where she was living for almost the last 20 years before Franklin's death and wanted to stay.

The killing

Heiress Frances Berenice Schreuder pressured her son Marc Schreuder to murder her father, oil and auto parts millionaire Franklin Bradshaw. The murder was committed on July 23, 1978, when Marc Schreuder shot his grandfather in the back of the head.
Once Marc Schreuder's link to the crime was discovered, it was alleged that Frances Schreuder manipulated her son through an unhealthy and abusive form of triangulation, using her son to target and murder her father. One of the wrinkles of the case was that Frances Schreuder's mother Berenice Schreuder continued to support her daughter throughout the case and bequeathed to Frances a share of her estate.
Marc Schreuder was convicted of second-degree murder in 1982 and spent 12 years in the Utah State Prison. Frances Schreuder was convicted of first-degree murder in 1983 and spent 13 years in the same prison. She died in 2004, less than eight years after her release in 1996.

Books

The case has inspired at least two nonfiction books: At Mother's Request: A True Story of Money, Murder and Betrayal by Jonathan Coleman and Nutcracker: Money, Madness, Murder: A Family Album by Shana Alexander.

Television

Alexander's book was the basis for the 1987 miniseries , starring Lee Remick as Frances Schreuder and Tate Donovan as Marc Schreuder.
Coleman's book was the basis for the 1987 television movie At Mother's Request, starring Stefanie Powers as Frances Schreuder and Doug McKeon as Marc Schreuder.
On February 25, 2004, the case was discussed by Dominick Dunne in the episode "Family Secrets" of the true-crime series Dominick Dunne's Power, Privilege, and Justice.
On March 18, 2005, the case was featured on My Dirty Little Secret on the Investigation Discovery Channel.
The case is featured on the documentary television series Behind Mansion Walls
The April 7, 2018 episode "Mother's Little Helper", of the Investigation Discovery channel's A Crime to Remember focused on the case.