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Sunday, February 28, 2010 - 7:17 PM
Back at State Police Headquarters, Hansen denied any involvement in
the murders. After a brief game of cat and mouse, he grew tired of
the allegations and requested an attorney. Hansen was then placed
under arrest and charged with assault, kidnapping, weapons offenses,
theft and insurance fraud. On November 3, 1983, an Anchorage grand
jury returned four indictments against Hansen: first-degree assault and
kidnapping, five counts of misconduct in possession of a handgun, theft
in the second-degree, and theft by deception in insurance fraud.
Investigators were still awaiting the ballistic test results on
Hansen's rifle, so the state decided to hold off on charging him with
murder. Hansen pleaded not guilty to all charges. Bail was set at a
half-million dollars.  Hansen's rifles, police evidence
Newton wrote that the ballistic test results finally came in on November 20, 1983. The FBI crime lab in Washington, D.C.,
determined that the shell casings found at the gravesites had all been
fired from Hansen's rifle. The firing pin and the extractor markings
were identical. Given the mass of evidence building against him,
Hansen realized that the chances of him winning in court were slim.
So, on February 22, 1984, Hansen had his defense attorney, Fred Dewey,
arranged a meeting with Anchorage D. A. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. During the
meeting, Krumm offered Hansen a deal. In exchange for a full
confession, the D.A. guaranteed him that he would only be charged with
the four cases that they knew of, and he would be able to serve his
time in a federal facility, rather than a maximum-security
institution. Hansen reluctantly agreed to the conditions. After
both sides signed off on the agreement, Hansen began describing one of
his typical abductions. The following transcript, which has been
edited for space, was originally published in Gilmour and Hale's book:
"I pull out the gun—I think the standard speech was, 'Look you're a
professional. You don't get excited, you know there is some risk to
what you've been doing. If you do exactly what I tell you you're not
going to get hurt. You're just going to count this off as a bad
experience and be a little more careful next time who you are gonna
proposition or go out with,' you know. I tried to act as tough as I
could, to get them as scared as possible. Give that right away, even
before I started talking at all. Reach over, you know, and hold that
head back and put a gun in her face and get 'em to feel helpless,
scared, right there I'm sure--maybe it's not the same procedure for
you--you always try to get control of the situation, so some things
don't start going bad maybe I've seen some cop shows on TV, I don't
know, OK?"  Robert Hansen's plane, police evidence
Whenever
Hansen got a victim under his control, he would normally take her to
his plane and fly them out to his remote cabin. According to Newton,
he would brutally rape and torture the women. Afterwards, he would
strip them naked, so far as blindfolding them, and set
them free in the woods. Hansen would give his victim a brief head
start and then hunt them down with a hunting knife or a high-powered
rifle. In describing his hunts to investigators, Hansen said that it
was like "going after a trophy Dall sheep or a grizzly bear."  Hansen's trophy goat
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