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Serial Shooter Trial ~

Archive for the 'jeff hausner' Tag

Dieteman confessed within hours of arrest

December 15th, 2008, 12:02 pm by Nick R. Martin

Prosecutors are continuing to play video this morning showing police investigators interrogating Dale Hausner in the hours of his arrest. Video playback already went on for several hours on Thursday and is expected to continue into this afternoon.

The detectives in the Serial Shooter investigation became increasingly intense with their questioning into the late morning of Aug. 4, 2006. By that time, they told Hausner, his suspected accomplice Sam Dieteman had begun to confess to his role in the shootings and also implicate Hausner in the crimes while being interrogated in another room. They even told Hausner that his brother, Jeff Hausner (pictured), had implicated him in the shootings, too. It’s not clear right now whether the detectives’ statements about the brother were true, or just a ploy to get Dale Hausner to talk. Either way, it didn’t work.

All the while, Dale Hausner maintained his innocence, saying he would not confess to crimes he did not commit. “You guys are trying to get me to confess to something I didn’t do,” Hausner said. “I’m telling you everything I know…I’m sorry, I don’t know what else to tell you guys.”

Dieteman has continued to cooperate with the investigation ever since. He is expected to testify against Hausner in the trial sometime in January.

Wednesday wrap: 2 place Hausner at attack scenes

November 5th, 2008, 8:51 pm by Nick R. Martin

Two witnesses. Both with different stories. Both with the same conclusion: It was Dale Hausner.

A month into a marathon eight-count murder trial, two people on Wednesday placed Hausner, the Serial Shooter suspect, at the scenes of separate attacks in May 2006.

It was the clearest link yet between the 35-year-old Mesa man and the 14-month string of murders and assaults that stretched across the Valley two years ago.

Hausner looked fidgety and nervous in court as the witnesses told their stories, but that didn’t keep his defense attorneys from aggressively trying to pick apart the testimony.

The first person to identify Hausner in court was Timothy Davenport, who was stabbed nearly to death by two strangers on May 17, 2006, as he was walking to a friend’s house in west Phoenix.

Davenport, 36, said he was crossing through a church parking lot just after midnight near 73rd Avenue and Camelback Road when a car pulled into the lot and the driver stopped to ask him a question.

“Are you OK?” the driver asked, according to Davenport.

Before he could answer, another man came from behind and stabbed him in the back, side and face. Davenport pointed to the scars he has from the attack.

Asked whether either of his attackers was in court on Wednesday, Davenport pointed to Hausner and identified him as the driver.

“He was the one that distracted me while the other guy stabbed me,” Davenport said. “One hundred percent.”

Read full story…

Programming note: The trial is taking a long weekend, and so is this blog. Live courtroom updates will resume Monday.

Two Dale Hausners, one with a mustache

November 5th, 2008, 3:49 pm by Nick R. Martin

Timothy Davenport said the only attacker he could identify from the night of his stabbing had a mustache and red hair. And the defense team has a problem with that. Dale Hausner, the man sitting in court today accused of the crime, is clean shaven and sporting arguably dirty blond hair. The jurors might have to squint hard to picture Hausner with either of the other characteristics.

It’s not so hard to imagine it, though, if you see the photos from the time of Hausner’s arrest. Take a look at his booking photo to the far right. It’s strikingly different than the image of Hausner in court last month. The booking photo distorts Hausner’s skin tone and hair color a little bit, but it shows him with a mustache and beard. Other photos from the time of his arrest show that Hausner’s hair was lighter and reddish in August 2006 when police arrested him and his confessed co-conspirator Samuel Dieteman.

Still, Hausner’s defense team attacked these differences this afternoon, quizzing Davenport about his attackers and how he identified Hausner as one of them. Davenport said he was able to see Hausner’s face for 6 seconds the night he was stabbed. He said Hausner pulled up in front of him one night while he was walking in a parking lot and asked if he was OK. That’s when “a dark figure,” who authorities have said was Jeff Hausner, Dale’s brother, came up behind Davenport and stabbed him multiple times.

Davenport admitted, however, that it was dark that night and he didn’t get a very good look at either man. “That night, the only light was coming from the streetlights themselves,” he testified. Hausner’s attorneys seized on this, trying to show that his identification of Hausner may not be reliable.

Man identifies Hausner as attacker

November 5th, 2008, 2:32 pm by Nick R. Martin

A stabbing victim has identified Serial Shooter suspect Dale Hausner as one of two men who attacked him in a West Valley parking lot in 2006. Timothy Davenport, 36, testified this afternoon that Hausner helped distract him while another man came from behind and stabbed him repeatedly.

Davenport still has scars on his face, side and back because of the May 17, 2006 attack. “He was the one that distracted me while the other guy stabbed me,” Davenport said in court this afternoon, identified Hausner “100 percent” as the driver.

Hausner is a Mesa man on trial in Maricopa County Superior Court on suspicion of eight murders and a number of assaults, including the stabbing. Authorities believe Hausner carried out the stabbing with his brother, Jeff Hausner (pictured at right), who has also been charged in the crime but is being tried separately.

The attack was not originally thought to be part of the Hausner case, but it came to police attention after his suspected co-conspirator, Samuel Dieteman, confessed to his role in the crimes.

Top photo from Tribune file. Dale Hausner answers media questions during a press conference in August 2006 at the 4th Avenue Jail in downtown Phoenix.

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