Family's fury over lenient sentence for madman who murdered GOP lawmaker's daughter while trying to break into nuclear bunker at family's $9.5m 'Obama-proof' mansion
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By WILL POTTER, US SENIOR NEWS REPORTER Published: 00:54, 30 May 2026 | Updated: 01:00, 30 May 2026 A Republican lawmaker whose daughter was murdered by an armed gunman who was trying to break into the family's nuclear bunker has hit out at his proposed sentence. On Thursday, a jury recommended Shannon Vince Gilday, 27, serve a life sentence of 25 years with eligibility for parole over the killing of Jordan Morgan. Her father, former GOP State Rep. C Wesley Morgan, 75, slammed the decision as a public safety concern after it emerged that Gilday could apply for parole in 2047, when he will be 48. 'Shannon Gilday will kill again,' he said at the end of the trial. 'Mark my words.' Morgan's daughter Jordan, 32, was gunned down in February, 2022, after Gilday broke into the family's $9.5 million mansion during a violent attempt to access the lawmaker's 2,000-square-foot underground nuclear bunker. Morgan built the underground bunker following the election of Barack Obama to the presidency in 2008, as the Republican believed US society would collapse and civil war would break out. A one-term state representative, Morgan put the home on the market when he lost Kentucky's Republican US Senate primary in 2020, a move that brought newfound attention on his bizarre home renovations. Prosecutors said this also attracted the focus of Gilday, a former Army Reserve Officer Training Corps doctor whose mental health deteriorated when he became obsessed over the threat of nuclear war. A jury recommended a life sentence for Shannon Vince Gilday, 27, a former Kentucky soldier who murdered the daughter of a Republican lawmaker Gilday, 27, broke into the $9.5 million mansion of ex-GOP State Rep C Wesley Morgan, 75, in February 2022, and killed his daughter Jordan in a violent attempt to access the lawmaker's 2,000-square-foot underground nuclear bunker Morgan built the underground bunker (pictured) following the election of Barack Obama in 2009 over fears it would trigger a civil war. Gilday broke into Morgan's home for the bunker after becoming obsessed with the threat of nuclear war in 2022 On the night of February 22, 2022, Gilday broke into the Morgan family home through a second-floor balcony and shot Jordan, 32. Her father returned fire and was shot in the arm before Gilday escaped out of a window. Following a month-long trial, Gilday was convicted of murder, attempted murder, burglary and criminal mischief, but the jury returned a verdict of guilty but mentally ill. At the time of the murder, Gilday's mother Katie said her son was 'not of sound mind' and was 'distraught with the certainty a nuclear war is imminent.' 'He spoke of building a bunker and the CIA following him. I tried to get him psychiatric help but to no avail,' she said. A source told the Daily Mail at the time that police were led to Gilday by a neighbor who noticed his car was missing, and recalled him showing off the real estate listing to Morgan's home. The listing boasted of a shelter 26 feet underground with a 39 inch solid concrete ceiling and 15 inch walls. 'This is reported to be the most secure home on the market in this country,' the realtors wrote. 'It is built to withstand a Seismic 12 earthquake, has 3 air filtrations from Switzerland and 2 escape tunnels, one is approximately 100 yards long.' Gilday broke into Morgan's $9.5 million Kentucky mansion through a second-story balcony window A smashed window from the crime scene in 2022 The home was listed for sale in 2020 and was advertised complete with a nuclear bunker and able to withstand nuclear attack and the strongest of earthquakes. Pictured, the food reserves Gilday joined the Army Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) while studying Bioengineering at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, according to social media Jordan Morgan's loved ones responded with outrage after a jury found Gilday guilty but mentally ill, handing him a sentence of 25 years that will allow him to be up for parole Gilday believed that the home would be perfect for surviving an imminent nuclear holocaust, and he broke in to take it for himself, prosecutors said. Despite its extravagant security features, Gilday was able to enter the home by creeping in through the second-floor balcony - where he entered Jordan's bedroom and shot her several times. During opening statements his defense attorney openly sobbed to the jury as he said the 27-year-old deserved a second chance, according to the Lexington Herald Leader. The attorney asked the jury to find Gilday not guilty by reason of insanity, however the jury went on to find him guilty but mentally ill - a legal term in some states that acknowledges a defendant committed a crime but was suffering from mental illness at the time. But furious Morgan branded Gilday's claims of mental illness a 'concocted story', and said civilians should be afraid of him potentially walking the streets again. 'We have got to have laws that protect the citizens, and don’t protect the killer,' he said. 'This could happen tonight. This could happen to us again, and there would be the same type of defense. 'And that is going to be the modus operandi that these public defenders are going to use on every case.' Mica Nicole, a friend of the family, added in a statement that Jordan's loved ones are 'deeply disappointed by this outcome.' Gilday seen in court this week as a jury found him guilty Gilday, seen in his original mugshot, spiraled into manic mental illness and feared an imminent nuclear holocaust, prosecutors said Jordan had recently joined the Reminger law office in Lexington before she was murdered 'This is not the result we wanted or the justice that Jordan deserves,' she said. Attorney General Russell Coleman said he was also frustrated by the result after prosecutors pushed for the death penalty, but said the outcome was still a 'strong sentence.' 'Justice is not only about holding those responsible, but it is also about honoring the life of a young woman whose promising future was so violently and suddenly stolen. 'Today, we remember Jordan Morgan and the bright light she was for so many. 'The jury delivered a strong sentence to bring justice to Jordan’s family and put this dangerous criminal behind bars.' The comments below have not been moderated. The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline. By posting your comment you agree to our house rules. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual We will automatically post your comment and a link to the news story to your Facebook timeline at the same time it is posted on MailOnline. To do this we will link your MailOnline account with your Facebook account. We’ll ask you to confirm this for your first post to Facebook. You can choose on each post whether you would like it to be posted to Facebook. 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