
Michael Hansen released on bail
ahead of new trial
by Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio
August 18, 2011
Alexandria, Minn. — A Minnesota man convicted of killing his infant
daughter was released on bail Thursday after he was granted a new trial
based on new evidence presented by the Innocence Project of Minnesota.
Michael Hansen was released from the Douglas County Jail in Alexandria.
The 34-year-old man has been incarcerated there for six years of a
14-year sentence, after being convicted in May 2004 of second-degree
murder in Avryonna Hansen's death.
His case came to the attention of the Innocence Project, a group that
works on behalf of people it believes have been wrongly convicted.
Innocence Project attorneys argue that Hansen was found guilty because
of a flawed medical examiner's report. Now they've won him a new trial
that's scheduled to start in late September.
"I just want to be with my family. I just want to sit by the lake and
have one of my mom's home cooked dinners. That's what I look forward
to," Hansen said as he walked out of jail to the cheers of a small
group of relatives. Wearing a white t-shirt and baggy jeans, he glanced
up at the sky and then walked over to hug his mother, Debra Meyer.
"Well, it's been hard, really hard for the whole family," she said,
adding that she never doubted her son's innocence. "But six years of
separation has taken its toll. They all believe in Michael. They know
he's innocent, and just waiting, waiting, and waiting for that day when
he's going to be out and with us."
Hansen is out of prison, but he still faces a new trial for the death
of his infant daughter, Avryonna. At the original trial, a jury heard
from Ramsey County medical examiner Michael McGee, who said the
three-month-old baby suffered a skull fracture before she died. McGee
called the death a homicide. The jury agreed, and Hanson was sentenced
to 14 years in prison.
But attorneys with the Innocence Project say the medical examiner was
wrong. They agreed to look into the case after Hansen sent them a
letter asking for help.
Innocence Project attorney Bridget Sabo asked five doctors to review
the autopsy report, including two medical examiners, an emergency
medicine physician, a forensic pathologist, and an expert in child
abuse. Sabo says the doctors all found it's more likely that the baby
accidentally suffocated to death as she slept next to her father and
three-year-old sister.
"We certainly hope that the jury will listen very closely to the
medical evidence. This case has always been I think dependent on the
medical evidence," she said. "I think it flowed from an erroneous
conclusion by the original medical examiner. There's never been any
direct evidence that Mr. Hansen hurt his daughter in any way. There
still is no direct evidence that he hurt his daughter."
Douglas County Attorney Chad Larson and the Ramsey County Medical
Examiner declined to comment on the case.
Hansen says he looks forward to the opportunity to clear his name. He
has two other daughters and says being away from them has been
difficult.
"I'd just like everything to come to light and for my -- just for my
innocence to be shown, you know?" he said. "I just want to be with my
children, I miss them more than anything in the world, they're
everything to me. They're everything positive that I am today is
because of them, I just, I miss them and my family a lot."
"The thing that matters the most to Mike is clearing his name," Sabo
said. "He would have never hurt his infant daughter, and the idea that
he might... have damaged his relationship with his other two daughters
just breaks his heart."
The new trial is scheduled to begin Sept. 26.
|