Watch, upload and share HD and 4k videos with no ads. Defending Santa; SCHEDULE; HOLIDAY. Santa is put on trial to defend his identity. As the small town learns to. Eric Hanson Trial Begins Today. 4/24/2017 0 Comments Business extras and features from 11Alive and the Atlanta Business Chronicle in Atlanta, Georgia.
The sun cast a shadow Sept. 30, 2005, on crosses erected in memory of four people found slain a day earlier in an Aurora home. A trial may begin later this week for a relative accused of the murders. Marcelle Bright Staff Photographer An undated portrait of Terrance and Mary Hanson, with their children, from top, Jenny, Kate, and Eric, in the late 1970s. Photo Courtesy of Memory-of.com Support Two Aurora police officers inspect a car for clues Sept. 29, 2005, hours after the grisly discovery of four slain family members in a home on the city's east side.
More than two years later, jurors are being tapped in the trial of Eric Hanson. Brian Hill Staff Photographer. First of two parts Editor's Note: This story, which includes new details about the crime, is based on interviews, police reports, jail booking documents, court testimony, pre-trial filings and the coroner's inquest. The license plate caught the trooper's eye. Earlier, he'd read a bulletin to be on the lookout for a dark 2005 Chevy Trailblazer, with Illinois plates, that might be heading through Wisconsin. Police wanted to question the driver -- possibly armed and dangerous -- about a murderous rampage in an Aurora neighborhood. The trooper followed.
The plate matched. He radioed for backup.
Minutes later, Eric C. Sub 7 Free Download For Windows 7 here. Hanson was in custody, a day after the Sept. 29, 2005, discovery of his slain parents, sister and brother-in-law. Detectives developed Hanson as a suspect a half hour after uncovering the savagery.
Bringing charges would be more difficult. The Full Reports • • • • • They traveled four states, secured search warrants for homes, cars, bank and phone records, interviewed dozens of witnesses and analyzed GPS and cellular technology. As pathologists autopsied the dead, evidence technicians scoured two crime scenes.
More than two years later, Hanson is about to stand trial for a crime the 31-year-old Naperville man insists he did not commit. Prosecutors accuse him of executing his family after they learned he stole more than $80,000 in forged checks and credit cards from his parents, with whom he lived. Hanson admits stealing, but he says they agreed he'd pay it back over time, without involving police. His accusers lack a confession, any murder weapons and will be challenged on how one person could have pulled off such a crime alone. But they said other physical evidence and a reconstructed timeline point to just one person -- Eric Hanson. He may face the death penalty if convicted in a DuPage County case sparked by a chilling 911 call. The unfathomable When the four victims didn't show up at work, worried relatives and co-workers went to their homes.
Katherine 'Kate' Hanson-Tsao and her husband, Jimmy, lived in the affluent White Eagle subdivision on Aurora's far east side. There, Jimmy's brother, Chiu-Ter, couldn't shake the feeling something was wrong. He and his daughter, Annie, peeked in a window and saw a body. Annie alerted police. Her 911 call came at 2:39 p.m. 29 -- a Thursday.
More than 50 officers swarmed Jeremy Ranch Court. They first came upon the bludgeoned body of Kate, 31, likely attacked with a golf club as she walked out of a bedroom, just 10 feet from the front door. Both her arms were broken when she covered her face. She suffered a broken nose, ribs and horrific face and head injuries. But police suspect the killer struck her husband first, and most brutally. Tsao, 34, a successful computer exporter, was attacked from behind. The killer hit him in the head while he sat on a couch working on his laptop.