12/2/2017
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In the weeks leading up to the murder of four members of Eric Hanson's family, prosecutors allege his conflict with them about money spiraled out of control. They said the Naperville man was banned from his sister's home and their mother complained of needing a loan to pay back his alleged $90,000 debt. To cover up the financial crimes, Hanson is accused of fatally beating his sister, Kate, and her husband, Jimmy Tsao, and shooting his parents, Terrance and Mary Hanson, with whom he lived.

Hanson, 31, denies involvement in the quadruple homicide, which was discovered Sept. 29, 2005, in the Tsaos' home in Aurora's White Eagle neighborhood. After more than two years of pretrial court wrangling, a panel of about 100 potential jurors will convene this morning in DuPage County to fill out a questionnaire as lawyers begin the arduous process of jury selection. From the pool, lawyers begin Tuesday handpicking the 12-member panel and alternates in the death penalty case. Circuit Judge Robert Anderson ruled Hanson's other sister, Jennifer Williams, can testify that Kate complained Eric threatened to kill her if she told their dad about the forgeries and credit card fraud. Three weeks later, 31-year-old Kate and her husband, Jimmy Tsao, 34, were found beaten to death in their home.

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The bodies of her parents, Terrance, 57, and Mary Hanson, 55, also were discovered there. The parents were shot in the head and both had on their bedclothes. Police theorize their killer shot the elder couple in their bed on Rock Spring Court in Naperville and then took the bodies to their daughter's home. Investigators found blood on the Hansons' mattress and a bullet lodged in their headboard. The mattress had been flipped over and moved into a guest room. Someone tried to hide the damage to the headboard with wood putty.

The vacuum contained wood chips. Csr Racing Hack Apk Download Ios here. From the onset, Jennifer Williams identified her brother as a suspect. A state trooper stopped Eric Hanson's Chevrolet Trailblazer near Portage, Wis., about noon the next day, Sept. 30, 2005, after he returned from a 24-hour trip to visit a girlfriend in Los Angeles. Prosecutors argue they have the financial motive and key physical evidence implicating Hanson.

Eric Hanson Murder

They said police found a glove that had traces of the slain father's blood as well as Jimmy Tsao's Rolex and Kate's diamond ring in the SUV. But the prosecution will have to sell its theory to a jury without the murder weapons, eyewitnesses or a confession from Hanson.

He acknowledges the financial mess, but argues the family was working it out on its own without involving police and, thus, he had no motive to kill them. He denies ever threatening Kate. There's also the issue of whether Hanson could have physically pulled off the crime on his own. Terrance Hanson's car still was at his daughter's house.

So, how would Eric Hanson get back to his parents' home five miles away? And how did he move both bodies on his own, without leaving behind any DNA evidence? There also was a small window of opportunity for him to have committed the crime alone. Jimmy Tsao's computer showed the last keystroke at 10:43 p.m. He was using it when attacked, authorities theorize.

They also know Terrance Hanson still was alive at 11:30 p.m. 28 because he answered the telephone in his home, before Eric picked up another line, when his girlfriend called. Hanson was on a plane at 11:10 a.m. That next morning for Los Angeles. He had rescheduled his earlier 10:10 a.m. Hanson is being held in the DuPage County jail without bond and may testify in his own defense.

Hanson trial The crime: On Sept. 29, 2005, the badly beaten bodies of Kate and Jimmy Tsao were discovered in their Aurora home in the White Eagle subdivision. The slain woman's parents, Terrance and Mary Hanson of Naperville, were found shot to death there, too. The allegation: Eric C. Hanson, 31, is accused of murdering his parents, sister and brother-in-law to hide the fact he'd stolen about $90,000 from them with forged checks and credit cards.

The response: Prosecutors will ask a DuPage County jury to sentence Hanson to death if he is convicted and found eligible for capital punishment. Hanson maintains his innocence. The court battle: A pool of 100 potential jurors today will fill out a 12-page questionnaire. Lawyers will begin hand-picking the 12-member jury and alternates Tuesday.