Jake Wagner, 29, testified this morning that it was his father's idea around January 2016 to "do something" about Hanna Rhoden. And he said he was initially against it 1/8
He said he was growing increasingly worried that the daughter he and Rhoden shared may become a victim of child or sexual abuse. "I had a fear for my own daughter." 2/8
"At first I blowed up and said that was my daughter's mother,'' said Wagner, who is the younger brother of #GeorgeWagnerIV who is on trial in the eight shooting deaths of member of the Rhoden family. 3/8
He said he thinks that "he thinks" his mother, Angela Wagner was there for the conversation. But then, he and Hanna Rhoden had an an argument and after that "I went to my father and told him we had to do it." 4/8
At that point, he testified that he and his father, George "Billy" Wagner — who has pleaded not guilty and his trial is pending — began to plan the homicides. At first, Wagner testified that he wanted to kill Hanna and her then boyfriend, Cory Holdren. 5/8
He said he thought he could make it look like a murder-suicide. But he determined he couldn't get access to the couple. His father said there was no way they could kill Hanna without killing her father, Chris Rhoden, Sr. 6/8
So then the plan become that they would kill Hanna; her father, Chris Sr., 40; her brother, Frankie, 20; and her uncle, Kenneth, 44. However, Wagner said they knew the others living with them would likely have to be killed as well. 7/8
"I think the proper word would be they would be witnesses,'' he said. His father would plan the timing and the "surroundings. Jake Wagner's role: Buy a truck to avoid detection and get firearms and silencers. 8/8
CORRECTION (typing too fast) Should be Corey Holdren (who, by the way, previously testified in the case). Unknown if he was aware of this plan.
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When he walked into the courtroom, handcuffed by a leather belt around his waist and in a mis-matched jail uniform, he sat and looked directly at his brother and held the stare for a few seconds. His brother looked down, as he often does doodling and writing on a legal pad. 1/6
At one point when lawyers were on a sidebar at the bench, Wagner scanned the packed courtroom and seemed to lock eyes with someone sitting among the family members. "I'm sorry" he mouthed. 2/6
Then he looked down, blinked quickly and cleared his throat. Throughout his testimony, he has shown little emotion and often pauses appearing to look for the right word. He often asks Special Prosecutor Angela Canepa to repeat her questions. He has impaired hearing. 3/6
#GeorgeWagnerIV trial concludes it seventh week (6th week of testimony) with stunning testimony from Jake's Wagner's former wife, Elizabeth Armer, 29, who appeared calm and collected during cross examination. 1/5
Armer said her father was in the military and that is why her family moved often when she was a child. She testified she lived in an Amish-Mennonite community for seven years before she moved to Alaska, where she ultimately met Jake at church. 2/5
She recounted Wagner family meetings of which she overhead conversations of which she was not a part. She said Jake was "not very interested in learning in general," he didn't read books, was not a good writer and didn't have a good understanding of Christianity. 3/5