Author: Trench Reynolds

  • Hainstock sentenced

    Hainstock Sentenced To Life In Prison But With Parole Possibilities:

    Eric Hainstock has been sentenced to life behind bars with the possibility of parole in 30 years for the shooting death of Weston Schools principal John Klang.

    Judge Patrick Taggart said that he considered Hainstock’s age and background before sentencing. He said that he believes the teen can be rehabilitated, WISC-TV reported.

    Defense attorneys had requested parole eligibility after 20 years while the state had requested 49 years with the date of eligibility being Sept.29, 2056 — or 50 years after the shooting at Weston Schools, WISC-TV reported.

    The jurors who convicted Hainstock said that they focused on the guns and ammunition that he brought to school and the number of shots fired in determining his intent to murder.

    Juror Brian Ludolph, of Prairie du Sac, said on Friday the fact numerous shots were fired by Hainstock convinced them the student intended to kill Klang. Ludolph said that Hainstock bringing the guns and ammunition to school also played into their finding of intent.

    Juror Diana Mielke, of North Freedom, said that the jury was initially split on whether Hainstock intended to kill Klang.

    Mielke said that she was initially among the six who thought Hainstock didn’t have intent to kill, but changed her mind after recalling Hainstock’s lack of emotion during the trial.

    Thankfully there was a jury with common sense who recognized Hainstock’s intent and weren’t fooled by his lies.

    Justice has been served.

    While you’re at WISC’s website take the poll and let them know how you feel about the verdict and sentence. You can probably guess how I voted.

  • Hainstock guilty

    Wisconsin Teen Guilty in Principal’s Death:

    Not only was Eric Hainstock found guilty in the shooting death of principal John Klang he was also convicted on the first-degree intentional homicide charge. He’s looking at life in prison.

    Sentencing is scheduled for tomorrow.

  • Breaking out the violin for Hainstock

    violin
    Wis. teen who shot principal testifies he was bullied at school:

    Here we go. Now we get to see how rough poor widdle Eric Hainstock had it.

    On the morning of the shooting, Hainstock testified, he awoke feeling tired of being picked on at school and said to himself, “I have to get all of this to stop.”

    At school, he was stuffed into lockers, had his head dunked into toilets and was called a “fag” by his classmates, he said. As a result of the bullying, he attempted suicide three times.

    His classmates’ comments “cut a little deeper,” he said, because at the age of 6, he was sexually molested by his 12-year-old stepbrother. He kept the alleged assaults a secret, he said.

    Hainstock’s father, Shawn Hainstock, cried as his son testified.

    Wait a minute. I thought his father was an abusive ogre who didn’t care about his son.

    When he came home from school, Hainstock said, his parents forced him to do most of the housework. When he failed to do so, he was disciplined.

    Hainstock testified that his father often kicked him and also used a wooden board called “the board of education” to spank him.

    He said his father also refused to provide him with medication to help curb his attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.

    Yeah, like that. If they were as poor as everyone is making them out to be they more than likely would have been eligible for government assistance where the medication would have cost them next to nothing. Not to mention the fact that ADD and ADHD is probably the most misdiagnosed and over-diagnosed condition of the modern medical age in my opinion. And which one is it that makes the kids go crazy? Is it being on meds or not being on meds. I forget since I’ve seen both used as criminal defenses.

    After loading his father’s 20-gauge shotgun and .22-caliber revolver, he drove to school, hoping he could force Klang to listen to his problems, he said.

    Again, no reason to load the guns if his intent was to scare, which it wasn’t. Not only that but what made him think that taking two guns to school to threaten people with wasn’t going to land him in jail. Did he think that miraculously all his problems would disappear and there would be no repercussions to his actions? What a dumbass.

    When he entered the school, he screamed, “Everyone get in the office. I’m not f—ing kidding!”

    He said he didn’t get flustered when the school’s maintenance man, David Thompson, was able to grab the shotgun out of his hand. Hainstock said he reacted by pulling the handgun out of his pants.

    That sounds strangely like the characteristics of a cold-blooded killer to me. He’s lucky that Mr. Thompson didn’t blow him away right then and there.

    When Klang turned the corner, Hainstock testified, he pointed the gun at him and said, “I ain’t going to do nothing … let’s go to the office, I want to talk.”

    Hainstock said Klang agreed to talk to him in his office, but as they walked there, Klang grabbed him and the gun went off accidentally.

    “The gun was caught in the clothing of my arm and when he pulled my arm it went off,” Hainstock testified.

    He said he then aimed the gun at Klang’s arm and fired “so he would let go of him.”

    After an accidental third shot fired, Hainstock said he was in shock.

    “I didn’t think Mr. Klang was going to die … I hoped not,” Hainstock said. “I didn’t plan to hurt nobody.”

    “The gun was caught in the clothing of my arm and when he pulled my arm it went off,” How in the hell would he have to be holding the gun for that to possibly happen?

    Closing arguments are scheduled for today.

  • Defense testimony in Hainstock trial

    Defense rests in Hainstock trial:

    First, let’s hear from Hainstock’s grandmother…

    The last witness to testify was Hainstock?s grandmother, Irene Hainstock, who said Eric called her from jail after his arrest.

    “What have you done,” she recalled asking her grandson. “I don’t know, grandma. Something snapped in my head,” was the response.

    Some more students…

    Other defense witnesses included five students at Weston who saw Eric enter the school with a shotgun and saw it taken away from him. None remembered hearing him say, “I’m here to (expletive) kill somebody,” as one witness recalled.

    On cross-examination, however, most said they weren’t sure they could hear everything that was being said that day.

    Now let’s hear from Hainstock himself…

    In his own testimony, Hainstock said he brought the shotgun and pistol to the school to make people listen to him and did not intend to kill Klang.

    Hainstock said he needed the weapons — a 20-gauge shotgun and a .22-caliber revolver — “because they would be scared,” he said, referring to people at the school. “If they were scared they’d listen, hopefully.”

    Hainstock, 16, testified unemotionally as the first witness in the defense case after prosecutors rested their case Wednesday morning.

    Mounting frustration with his home life and with persistent taunting at school led him to the desperate action, he said, which he said was not intended to hurt anyone.

    But after Klang grabbed him from behind at the school, Hainstock testified, the gun went off.

    “It was accidental,” he said. He heard a grunt from Klang, he said, who continued to hold him. Hainstock said a second shot, which struck Klang on the side of the head but did not penetrate his skull, was intended for Klang’s arm, to get Klang to let go of him.

    Hainstock said he underestimated the lethal power of the .22.

    “I didn’t think it would hurt nobody that bad because it was so little,” he said.

    I don’t buy any of it. According to this article when asked by his attorney why Hainstock loaded the weapons he said it was “just a reaction.” Loading two separate weapons is not a reaction. That’s intent. And what did he think the .22 would do? Just bounce off people? And what if the shotgun was not taken from him. Did he think that a shotgun “wouldn’t hurt nobody?”

    Anything less than a conviction of first-degree murder is a travesty of justice.

  • Fry cook pleads guilty

    Boy, 15, charged in plot to attack LI high school pleads guilty:

    The unnamed 15-year-old accused in the plot to attack Connetquot High School and a Long Island McDonald’s has pleaded guilty to charges against him.

    The 15-year-old boy entered the plea in Family Court in Central Islip on Tuesday. He was originally charged with fifth-degree conspiracy, a misdemeanor, but his plea was for a less serious charge.

    The 15-year-old could face prison, probation or hospitalization when he is sentenced on Aug. 21. He also could be permanently removed from his home or placed in a residential treatment center or in foster care.

    The next court date for his 17-year-old cohort Michael McDonough is August 6th.

  • Conn. AG turns to Facebook

    Popular Web site is target of probe:

    Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal is up to his usual misguided ways. This time he’s focusing his wrath on Facebook.

    Connecticut’s attorney general is scrutinizing Facebook, the popular social-networking site, for allowing convicted sex offenders to register, calling into question whether the company is doing enough to protect users.

    The inquiry by Richard Blumenthal is designed to force Palo Alto’s Facebook to take a more aggressive stand against sexual predators after his office uncovered at least three cases of such offenders becoming members, a spokesman confirmed. In addition, Blumenthal’s team found that some of Facebook’s users had posted sexually explicit material that was not swiftly removed.

    A whole three, compared to MySpace’s 29,000. Ooooooooh, Facebook really is a criminal haven.

    Connecticut officials have contacted Facebook and asked it to remove the sex offenders’ profiles. Blumenthal plans to continue his inquiry.

    A Facebook spokeswoman did not return telephone calls seeking comment. Chris Kelly, the company’s chief privacy officer, told the New York Times that he is not familiar with the Connecticut investigation but that the company receives many reports about sex offenders registering on the Web site. The profiles are usually removed within 72 hours, he said.

    “We want to be a good partner to the states in attempting to address this societal problem,” Kelly told the Times. “We’ve worked with them for quite some time now, and we look forward to continuing our fruitful partnership.”

    Facebook maintains more-stringent security rules than some of its competitors because of its early days as an online destination for students. Full user profiles aren’t visible to the general public, for instance, and can be seen only by people who have been confirmed as friends.

    It’s bad enough that AG Blumenthal places the blame on MySpace instead of inattentive parents now he’s going after a site that has very little criminal activity. In the year and a half that I’ve been doing this site the stories about Facebook pale in comparison to the stories about MySpace.

    As I’ve said before AG Blumenthal needs to concentrate on keeping sex offenders off the streets than off of MySpace or Facebook.

  • Hainstock’s videotaped statement

    Wis. Teen Told Police He ‘Freaked Out’:

    The videotaped statement that Eric Hainstock gave to investigators was shown to the jury yesterday.

    The video, filmed just hours after the Sept. 29 shooting, shows Hainstock slouched in a Sauk County Sheriff’s Department interview room with Klang’s blood on his clothes. He tells detectives that he complained to Klang for three years about kids teasing him and calling him a “fag,” but that Klang did nothing to stop them.

    That morning after his parents left their home, he says in the video, he “was still ticked off” at various students and the principal.

    According to the criminal complaint, Hainstock, then a 15-year-old freshman, went to school outside Cazenovia, about 65 miles northwest of Madison, with a shotgun and a revolver.

    A janitor tore the shotgun away, and Hainstock pulled out the revolver, cocked it and got ready to fire, he tells detectives in the video.

    Hainstock was well-trained in firearms. You don’t cock the hammer on a gun unless you have full intentions of using it.

    He says Klang came toward him and asked him, ‘What’s going on?’”

    “I’m like, ‘I’m sick of you guys,’” he says in the interview.

    He ordered Klang into an office, and as they turned to walk there, Klang jumped him, Hainstock says. He stuck his pistol under Klang’s left armpit and fired three times, he says. Klang later died.

    “I just freaked out,” Hainstock says.

    Yet multiple witnesses have testified that they heard Hainstock say he was there to kill someone. To me cocking the gun definitely shows intent. If he wanted to scare someone he could have just pointed an empty gun at them. But no Hainstock went in there with two different loaded weapons with multiple rounds available for reloading. He was planning on a massacre. He didn’t freak out. He probably realized that when John Klang went for his gun that it was probably the only chance he was going to get for revenge. John Klang probably saved a lot of lives that fateful day.

  • More testimony against Hainstock

    Student: ‘We don’t need a Columbine here’:

    From special needs teacher James Nowak who had a metal stapler thrown at him by Hainstock.

    During testimony Monday afternoon in a Baraboo courtroom, teacher James Nowak recounted his own rising sense of tension with Hainstock, beginning with an incident on Sept, 14. That day, he said, Hainstock threw a metal stapler at him, narrowly missing his head and chipping the wall. When he returned to the classroom with Klang and Buildings and Grounds Director Phillip Rachuj, they found Hainstock holding a chair.

    “He had a chair above his head and he looked like he was going to swing it at us,” said Nowak.

    Rachuj was able to take the chair from Hainstock, and he was suspended from school for three days.

    Apparently, someone fashions himself as Stone Cold Steve Austin. Well, Trench 3:16 says your ass is going to prison.

    From Angela Young, the guidance counselor at Weston Schools…

    She said Hainstock was a boy who sought attention, enjoyed playing the victim and often placed blame for his actions on others. Young said he was often teased by other students, but he picked on them in return.

    Young testified that she was in the hall when Hainstock walked into the school but said she could not see him because of the decorations. She testified she heard Hainstock say “I’m going to (expletive) kill somebody.”

    You can’t play the bullying card when you’re a bully yourself. Then again this whole incident was never about bullying. It’s about a selfish and self-absorbed punk kid who wanted to exact his revenge on a man who cared enough to actually discipline Hainstock.

  • Beware craigslist bearing iPods

    Meridian Man Arrested in Park with a Knife:

    This story comes to us from the bustling metropolis of Boise, Idaho and it’s a rather bizarre tale. It seems there was an ad on craigslist for a free iPod Nano. Too good to be true you say? You have no idea.

    “I responded to it with the anticipation that several other people would because it seemed a little odd,” said a woman, we’re calling Sarah to hide her identity.

    Sarah heard back almost immediately.

    “I did get response back from him with a little story about how he had a wife cheating on him and he needed to take her ipod from her and give it away because of the situation he had with her,” said Sarah.

    The man told Sarah he was going to hide the Ipod from his wife in a public place and arrange for someone to take it.

    All she had to do was show up to at the Youth Sports Complex Park on McMillan Road around 10:30 p.m.

    Those who responded to the ad were told to come to this porta potty and that the Ipod would be right in front of the toilet paper holder

    “It sounded very odd so what my husband and I did was get the emergency dispatch number for the police… drove past the park saw a car sitting there,” said Sarah.

    Sarah says the car was right next to the porta potty.

    She and her husband drove across the street to a near by shopping area and called Boise police.

    They responded quickly and took the man into custody.

    “The police told us that he had a black nylon mask on his face, a lap top in his car that he had been email people on, a black pair of gloves a butcher knife and a beebe gun,” said Sarah.

    32-year-old, Stephen Donald Newman, of Meridian was arrested and charged with 2 misdemeanors – being in a park after hours and carrying a concealed weapon.

    Since no felony had been committed, he was able to quickly bond out of jail.

    Now that Newman is free, Sarah is afraid of retaliation which is why she has chosen to hide her identity.

    And what did craigslist have to say? The usual…

    We attempted to reach Craigslist for comment but have not yet heard back from them.

    Craigslist says that their ads are policed by its users. But in this case, every cop is a criminal.

  • Students testify against Hainstock

    Students Say Hainstock Also Picked On Others:

    Today students from Weston High School testified about the bullying allegations in the trial of Eric Hainstock.

    17-year-old Samuel Brandt testified that he saw Hainstock get in pushing and shoving matches with other kids in the halls, that he often tormented younger students and tried to pick on older kids, who in turn picked on him.

    18-year-old Kimberly Durst says others may have dished it out to Hainstock, but “he dished out right back.”

    So basically he was a belligerent punk.

    Another student testified on Saturday that Hainstock was asking about Columbine the day before the shooting.

    Caitlyn Goldben, a freshman at Weston Schools last year, testified Saturday that Hainstock joined a conversation she had with a friend about a report on Columbine on Sept. 28. Hainstock is accused of murdering Principal John Klang the next morning.

    Goldben said Hainstock asked what Columbine was. After he was told that students Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris killed 12 students and a teacher and wounded 23 others at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., in 1999, he replied, “Oh.”

    Goldben said she was friends with Hainstock. Twice he asked her to homecoming, but she turned him down both times.

    It was she who told Klang that Hainstock had the tobacco, she testified. During gym class on the day before the shooting, Hainstock approached her and pointed his finger at her like a gun, accusing her of snitching on him, she testified.

    She said she feared him so she denied telling Klang. He then began complaining about Nowak again.

    “He said he would throw a stapler at him again or shove marijuana down his throat,” she said.

    Then he got into the Columbine discussion, she said.

    “Eric said, Oh.’ Then he got quiet for a little bit and started talking about Mr. Nowak again,” Goldben said.

    Goldben said she told teachers about the conversation, but the district attorney didn’t press her for details.

    One of Hainstock’s attorneys, Jon Helland, tried to defuse the testimony by asking Goldben if Hainstock had said Klebold and Harris were “stupid.” Goldben said Hainstock said no such thing.

    So he became an insta-mutant. Just add firearms.