Man bound over for trial in daughters' deaths

Aaron Schaffhausen
This photo provided by the St. Croix, Wis., County Sheriff's Office shows Aaron Schaffhausen who was under arrest July 11, 2012, and charged with three counts of first degree intentional homicide, authorities said. Police found his three young daughters dead July 10, 2012, in a house in River Falls, Wis.
AP Photo/St. Croix County Sheriff's Office

A North Dakota construction worker must stand trial in the deaths of his three young daughters, a Wisconsin judge ruled Tuesday after hearing how the girl's terrified mother called police and an investigator found the children tucked in bed with their faces covered in dried blood.

St. Croix County Circuit Judge Scott Needham said prosecutors presented enough evidence during a preliminary hearing to persuade him Aaron Schaffhausen should stand trial.

The burden of proof in a preliminary hearing is light, and faced with three bodies and an alleged confession, Schaffhausen's attorney didn't call a single witness.

Schaffhausen is charged with three counts of first-degree intentional homicide and faces three mandatory life sentences if he's convicted.

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According to court documents, Schaffhausen, 34, and his wife, Jessica Schaffhausen, divorced in January. He lived in Minot while the couple's three daughters, 11-year-old Amara, 8-year-old Sophie and 5-year-old Cecilia, lived in a house their mother rented from her ex-husband in River Falls, a city of 15,000 about 30 miles east of the Twin Cities.

Aaron Schaffhausen texted his ex-wife on July 10 and asked for permission for an unplanned visit with the girls. The mother was out but agreed to the visit. He showed up at the house that afternoon and the girls' babysitter left.

River Falls memorial
A woman and children pay their respects at a memorial at Greenwood Elementary School to Amara, Sophie and Celia Schaffhausen as investigators continued their investigation Wednesday, July 11, 2012 in River Falls, Wis. Police found the girls dead in their mother's River Falls house on July 10.
AP Photo/Jim Mone

He called his ex-wife two hours later and said she could come home because he had killed the children. An hour later, he turned himself in to police.

Ailene Splittgerber, who answers the phones at the River Falls Police Department, testified she took a call from Jessica Schaffhausen that afternoon. The mother was on her way back from Ramsey County, Minn., and was in tears, Splittgarber said.

She told Splittgarber of her ex-husband's phone call. Splittgarber described Jessica Schaffhausen as "hysterical, hyperventilating, very much in distress."

Speaking in short, clipped answers, River Falls Police Investigator John Wilson described how he entered the house with a paramedic and discovered each girl in their respective bed, covers pulled up to their neck, their eyes open and lifeless and what appeared to be dried blood on their mouths and cheeks. The walls of one bedroom were splattered with blood and the carpet was covered with a large pool of blood, he said.

Autopsies revealed what Wilson described as "gaping" wounds across all three girls' necks. Wilson also testified he noticed what appeared to be blood on Aaron Schaffhausen's shorts. Schaffhausen refused to say anything to detectives, he added.

Jessica Schaffhausen did not testify Tuesday.

"I think that's more than enough to show a felony was committed by this person," Assistant State Attorney General Gary Freyberg told the judge.

Schaffhausen's attorney, public defender John Kucinski, tried to raise doubts about whether River Falls Police were operating out of their jurisdiction, questioning whether the house lies in St. Croix or Pierce counties. Freyberg assured the judge the house is in St. Croix County.

Kucinski managed to get Wilson to say he didn't know if police had recovered any weapons, but he called no witnesses and declined to make a concluding argument as to why his client should be released. He said he'd review the hearing transcript and file something later.

Schaffhausen remains jailed on a $2 million cash bond. He's due back in court on Aug. 28 to enter a plea.