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Serial Shooter Trial ~

Archive for the 'shooting' Tag

First segment of ‘Shooter’ trial winding down

November 20th, 2008, 11:27 am by Nick R. Martin

For a month and a half, the testimony in the trial of Serial Shooter suspect Dale Hausner has been a litany of victims, family members and first responders — the police and paramedics called out to the incidents as they happened. Prosecutors call it the “scenes” segment of the trial. It was their chance to document every shooting, stabbing and arson they’ve linked to the Mesa man in the defendant’s chair.

That segment of the trial is expected to end today. Prosecutors are bringing out their final witnesses laying out the 87 crimes attributed to Hausner. More than 100 witnesses have taken the stand so far. Only three of them have linked Hausner to any of the crimes or crime scenes:

  • John Kane, a Gilbert man, testified that Hausner confessed to shooting up an empty car outside of a Tempe bartending school on Dec. 29, 2005. That shooting is believed to have kicked off the bloodiest night of the killing spree.
  • Timothy Davenport testified that Hausner distracted him on May 17, 2006 so that another man could stab him from behind. He identified Hausner “100 percent” as one of the men who participated in the nearly fatal attack.
  • Marianne Thone said that Hausner and his suspected co-conspirator Samuel Dieteman appraoched her outside the scene of her brother’s shooting on May 30, 2006 and told her they were looking for a lost cat.

Some of the final testimony will be in the shooting death of Robin Blasnek, who was killed while walking alone in Mesa on July 30, 2006. Blasnek is believed to be the final victim of the Serial Shooter.

After the Thanksgiving break next week, prosecutors will return with riveting testimony about how investigators began to track a serial killer and eventually came upon Dieteman, who has already confessed to two murders, and Hausner as the suspects. The evidence will include hours of secret recordings that police obtained of the two men reportedly discussing the crimes. The jury may get to hear the recordings by the first week of December.

Photo by pool photographer. Prosecutor Laura Reckart questions a witness while defendant Dale Hausner looks on in the background.

He heard the bang, then saw his own blood

November 13th, 2008, 3:18 pm by Nick R. Martin

Tony Long heard a gunshot and began running. He didn’t know where it came from, but he didn’t care to find out. He just took off. Then he looked down.

“I didn’t feel nothing at first,” Long testified in court this afternoon. “But then I looked and I saw blood on my shirt and stuff, and I knew I had been shot.”

It was the early morning June 20, 2006, and Long was walking along 44th Street just south of Van Buren Street when he was hit on his left side with a number of shotgun pellets. He had just come from a friend’s house where they had been drinking beer and hanging out.

Two or three men came to help Long get to a nearby Circle K gas station and called 911. He was hurt pretty badly, but it turned out later he was one of the lesser injured victims of the Serial Shooters. He spent just two days in a local hospital before being released. On the stand today, he appeared healthy and recovered. Of course, though, there’s no way to really know.

Map shows the area where Tony Long was shot the night of June 20, 2006. Click here for a larger, interactive map.

Trial highlights to hold you over till Monday

November 6th, 2008, 4:21 pm by Nick R. Martin


The trial is on hold until Monday, so why not catch up with what you might’ve missed?

Highlights so far:
Man identifies Hausner as attacker
‘A young woman crawling in the street’
The bloodiest night of the killing spree
Surveillance camera captured car near 3 shootings
Juror: I may look like I’m falling asleep, but…
Witness says Hausner confessed to shooting
Hausner disputes Tribune story

Photo by Paul O’Neill, Tribune. Phoenix teen Kibili Tambadu shows where he ran after being shot in May 2006. Prosecutors say Dale Hausner, a Mesa man suspected of being the Serial Shooter, was behind the shooting.

He thought it was a heart attack

October 23rd, 2008, 2:25 pm by Nick R. Martin

Timmy Tordai stepped off the bus and was walking the two blocks to a halfway house where he was living when he felt something hit his back. The blow knocked him to the ground.

“I did hear a pop, but it seemed like I was having a heart attack at first,” recalled the 42-year-old Tordai on the witness stand this afternoon. Authorities say he as one of the lucky ones from the night of Dec. 29, 2005. Tordai was shot and survived. Not so fortunate were Jose Ortis, 44, and Marco Carillo, 28, who were shot and killed that night just blocks away from Tordai in central Phoenix.

The shootings are part of perhaps the bloodiest night attributed to the Serial Shooters, who chalked up eight bodies and dozens of other victims before their 14-month string of cimes was done. Dale Hausner, the Mesa man on trial in Maricopa County Superior Court, is accused of being the main half of the duo.

On the stand, Tordai (pictured) said he finally realized he was shot when he saw the blood gushing out of him onto the sidewalk. After a minute or two on the ground, Tordai said he picked himself up and walked the rest of the way to his halfway house where he could get help. “I knocked on the manager’s door and said I think I’ve been shot,” he said.

Police recount a bloody night

October 23rd, 2008, 12:03 pm by Nick R. Martin

Prosecutors this morning have questioned a pair of Phoenix police officers about the particularly bloody string of shootings on the night of Dec. 29, 2005. The series of shootings left at least two men dead and another wounded in central Phoenix. The dead men, both believed to be homeless, were Marcos Carillo and Jose Ortis, and their bodies were found within blocks of each other.

None of the officers has connected Dale Hausner to any of the shootings, but all happen to fall within hours after Hausner is said to have shot up an empty car in Tempe.

More testimony is expected after the lunch break.

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