Shane Todd’s family seeks US Congress, Thai expert’s help
The parents of a US scientist found hanged in Singapore last year said on Thursday they will seek a US congressional inquiry and tap a celebrity Thai pathologist to prove their son was murdered.

The parents of a US scientist found hanged in Singapore last year said on Thursday they will seek a US congressional inquiry and tap a celebrity Thai pathologist to prove their son was murdered.
Mary Todd, mother of the late researcher Shane Todd whose death in June last year was ruled a suicide by the Singapore police, indicated the family did not expect the US government to intervene because of its interests in Asia.
“We don’t know, we don’t know what the US government will do,” she said in an interview at Singapore’s Changi Airport before she, her husband Rick and two sons boarded a flight back to the United States.
“We’ve got so much evidence backing up what we have claimed that our son was involved with,” she said, adding that the US government “is very tentative because of their relationship with Singapore and China.
“I think they’d rather have us go away. But we’re not going away.”