miércoles, 3 de abril de 2013

Prosecutor: Wis. Dad Killed Girls to Hurt Ex-Wife - ABC News

The day his ex-wife could legally remarry, Aaron Schaffhausen hopped aboard a train and left North Dakota to go back to Wisconsin. The next day, he cut their three young daughters' throats, wrapped their necks with his spare T-shirts and tucked them into bed.

Prosecutors used those details in opening statements Tuesday to press their case that Schaffhausen was driven by revenge — not mental illness — and decided the best way to punish his ex-wife was to kill their girls. His defense attorney argued that Schaffhausen sank into depression after the divorce and couldn't control his emotions or actions.

Jurors will weigh those contrasting portraits to decide if Schaffhausen, 35, was sane when he killed his three daughters — 11-year-old Amara, 8-year-old Sophie and 5-year-old Cecilia — on July 10 in River Falls.

As testimony began, jurors heard a recording of a 40-minute 911 call from Schaffhausen's ex-wife, Jessica Schaffhausen, in which she begged police to send officers to check on her daughters.

"My ex-husband just called and said he killed my kids," she told the dispatcher.

In his opening statement, Wisconsin Assistant Attorney General Gary Freyberg said Aaron Schaffhausen was angry because he thought his ex-wife had begun seeing another man.

This July 11, 2012 photo shows a poster with photographs of the Schaffhausen sisters: Amara 11, left; Sophie 8, center, and Cecilia, 5, right, at Greenwood Elementary school in River Falls, Wis. The girls' father on Thursday, March 28, 2013 changed his pleas to guilty but insane in the killings of his three young daughters last summer in Wisconsin, which means the defense at his trial will have to prove he had a mental disease or defect so severe that he wasn't responsible for his actions. (AP Photo/The Star Tribune, Jerry Holt) MANDATORY CREDIT; ST. PAUL PIONEER PRESS OUT; MAGS OUT; TWIN CITIES TV OUT Close

"Help was available if he wanted it. He didn't want help; he wanted revenge," Freyberg said. "He was so angry and so bitter that he decided to punish her in a way that he calculated would cause her the most harm possible."

Besides the timing of the killings — right after a six-month waiting period for remarriage written into the couple's divorce decree — Freyberg cited as evidence of Schaffhausen's planning that he brought the tool he used to cut his daughters' throats with him from North Dakota and tried to destroy evidence afterward.

Defense attorney John Kucinski described Schaffhausen as a man in decline after the divorce. He described him as an obsessive person: first with work, then with school after he quit his job. After dropping out of school and moving out of the house, his obsession turned to his ex-wife, Jessica, Kucinski said.

Kucinski said Schaffhausen was prescribed several different antidepressants following the divorce. Schaffhausen sometimes mixed alcohol with his medication and his behavior grew increasingly erratic, the defense attorney said. He would call his ex-wife up to 30 times a day, and once threatened to tie her up and force her to choose which of their daughters to kill, Kucinski said.

He said Schaffhausen told a cousin in a phone call that he was "thinking of slitting the girls' throats."

The cousin, Jessica Schaffhausen and others urged Aaron Schaffhausen's family to make him get mental health treatment or even commit him to a mental institution, the defense attorney said.

Of the killing themselves, Kucinski said: "When he's with Cecilia, something happens. The next thing he recalls, there's a lot of blood. The girls' throats are cut."

According to court papers, Schaffhausen then tried to set the house on fire before calling his ex-wife.

She then called 911. Through sobs and shallow breathing, she told the dispatcher her ex-husband had history of mental illness and had stopped taking his antidepressants in March or April. But she also said he had stopped drinking and had told her he was feeling a lot better.

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