Motive in
By ALLISON WISK
Staff Writer awisk@dallasnews.com
Published: 02
February 2013 08:14 PM
KAUFMAN — Two days after his top prosecutor was gunned down
just blocks from the courthouse, Kaufman County District Attorney Mike
McLelland said Saturday that although a motive remains elusive, he is counting
on more tips to come in thanks to a growing reward fund.
McLelland said investigators are still digging into
Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse’s caseload — even going back through
work dating from his days in other counties — to try to find possible reasons
for the fatal shooting.
Before heading into work Thursday morning, Hasse, 57, was
fatally shot near his car in a parking lot regularly used by Kaufman
County officials. Authorities
confirmed witness accounts that up to two people shot him multiple times, with
at least one of the assailants fleeing by car afterward.
No suspect descriptions have been released. Kaufman Police
Chief Chris Aulbaugh said at a news conference Friday that there were no big
developments in the case. Authorities were reviewing days of video footage from
retail surveillance and squad car cameras, he said.
By Saturday, Kaufman County Crime Stoppers was offering a
total of $71,150 in reward money, including $30,000 supplied by the Dallas
County district attorney’s office.
In perhaps his most extensive discussion of the slaying with
the media since it occurred, McLelland said he hoped the reward fund would hit
$100,000 by Monday and eventually grow beyond $500,000.
“The main thing I want to do is get the reward fund up to an
astronomical amount so that whoever this scum is, they can’t hide from it,”
McLelland said.
“The more money that stacks up, the better the things that
come in,” he said. “Sooner or later, this idiot’s going to say something to
somebody. If there is sufficient motivation out there, that will get back to
us.”
Though the district attorney’s office has been closed to the
public since Thursday, all hands are on deck, McLelland said. Still processing
the shock of Hasse’s loss, staff members are working through the weekend — at
both the district attorney’s office and at a command post set up at Kaufman’s
former National Guard Armory — to pore over Hasse’s files for leads.
“All of my prosecutors said: ‘You’re not going to leave me
out of this, boss,’” McLelland said. “I said, ‘You’re in it, don’t worry about
it.’”
McLelland said he has been contacted by district attorneys
across the country asking how they can provide support.
“Everybody wants to get their licks in on these guys,”
McLelland said.
Taking precautions
During a short break from the investigation Saturday,
McLelland went about his business as he stopped in to visit his wife, Cynthia,
at the 2 Sisters Quilt Shoppe on Mulberry Street .
With sheriff’s deputies taking visible posts around
Kaufman’s square, and state and federal law enforcement working alongside
police on the case, McLelland said he wasn’t scared for his safety, but was
taking precautions.
“An old TAC officer at Fort
Sill told me a long time ago, ‘Son,
the details will get you killed.’ And so I’ve shifted up my details some, but
otherwise I can’t do that much,” McLelland said. “There’s no holes for me to
hide in, and that’s not my style anyway.”
Cynthia McLelland, who works as a psychiatric nurse at Terrell
State Hospital ,
came to the square to attend her monthly quilt guild meeting.
“I use the creative arts to help get rid of tension, just
like a lot of people do,” she said.
Hasse’s death has shaken up her family, she said.
“Mark was my husband’s good friend as well as his employee;
he’s grieving,” she said. “It’s very sad. I feel like my husband could be in
danger, too.”
Cynthia McLelland’s friend, Kaufman County Tax Assessor
Tonya Ratcliff — whose office faces the parking lot where Hasse was killed —
said a constant law enforcement presence has allayed her fears, but her staff
remains anxious.
“I think that most of my staff and other people are walking
around saying, ‘You know, you don’t know when it’s going to happen to you,’”
said Ratliff, who is in her first month on the job. “I think there’s a real
sense that it could have been any of us.”
Mike McLelland said he was disturbed by what he called the
“fairy-taling” he’s heard in the days since the slaying — that Hasse was
constantly afraid, frequently changed his routine, and didn’t go outside
without his pistol in hand.
“Total BS,” McLelland said. “He and I, three-quarters of the
time, we went out of the building together in the afternoon. We went out the
same door. He was never cowering in any corners, or sneaking around skulking in
any shadows. He was not afraid of anybody or anything.”
Hasse’s routine
McLelland said that Hasse may have taken more precautions
during his tenure as a prosecutor for the Dallas
County district attorney’s office,
but not in Kaufman.
“[The late former Dallas District Attorney] Henry Wade made
him carry a pistol in Dallas when
he was on the gang task force,” he said. “But he never related to me at any
time that he was ever afraid of anything.”
Hasse’s routine never changed, McLelland said.
“He always parked in the same place, walked up the same
sidewalk,” he said. “He usually came in that corner door of the courthouse.”
Hasse was a “wolverine” as a prosecutor but privately was
more reserved, McLelland said.
“He was a very multi-talented, multi-faceted guy, but he was
a private guy,” McLelland said. “As far as I know, he never was out partying
and stuff like that. He was fairly sedate.
“I don’t know of anybody that ever ran across Mark that
didn’t like him,” he said. “He was very personable; he was always willing to
help anybody with anything.”
Renee Dodds, who works at Lott’s Cleaners on the square,
said Hasse came in two to three times a week, like clockwork.
“He was a regular customer. [He was] serious; I guess you
would have to be in that line of work,” Dodds said. “He was very nice. He never
had a bad word to say about anybody that I knew about.”
McLelland said that in addition to helping lead the
investigation into Hasse’s death, he is helping to arrange his slain colleague’s
services. And, he said, part of paying tribute to his friend and employee is
making sure the district attorney’s office remains vigilant as ever.
“I’m not going to let them make me change up the way I do
business,” he said. “I must assume that would be part of their motivation, and
that ain’t happening.”
AT A GLANCE: Tips wanted
Anyone with information on the slaying of Mark Hasse can
call Kaufman County Crime Stoppers at 1-877-847-7522. Donations to the Crime
Stoppers reward fund can also be made payable to the Mark Hasse Fund at any
area American National Bank of Texas
location.
Prosecutor Shot to Death In a Town Near
By LAUREN D’AVOLIO and MANNY FERNANDEZ
Published: January
31, 2013
KAUFMAN, Tex. — A county prosecutor in this small town southeast
of Dallas was fatally shot on Thursday morning near the courthouse by one or
perhaps two gunmen, whom witnesses described as wearing masks, black clothing
and tactical-style vests, the authorities said.
The prosecutor, Mark E. Hasse, worked in the Kaufman County
district attorney’s office in Kaufman, a town of 6,800 people about 35 miles
from Dallas. He was shot several times shortly before 9 a.m. as he walked in an employee parking lot about a
block from the courthouse.
The authorities said the suspect or suspects got out of a
Ford Taurus, opened fire on Mr. Hasse and then returned to the car and drove
away. Investigators were trying to determine why Mr. Hasse was targeted and if
the shooting had anything to do with cases he had prosecuted.
“I’ve been doing this 43 years, and I’ve never seen anything
like this,” said David A. Byrnes, the Kaufman
County sheriff.
Mr. Hasse, 57, was the county’s lead felony prosecutor and a
well-respected assistant district attorney. He received his law degree from
Southern Methodist University in Dallas
and in the 1980s served as a prosecutor in the Dallas
County district attorney’s office,
where he had been the chief of the organized-crime section.
Officials said they were reviewing Mr. Hasse’s current cases
— as many as 400 of them — and previous ones for leads.
Lawyers and prosecutors throughout North Texas
were stunned by the attack. The Dallas
County district attorney, Craig
Watkins, sent an e-mail encouraging his employees to exercise caution.
“There’s a lot of shock,” said David Finn, a criminal defense
lawyer in Dallas and former federal prosecutor who knew Mr. Hasse. “Where this
happened, it’s not New York City or
Dallas or L.A.
or Chicago . This is a very, very,
very small community, and for this to happen out there, it’s a huge deal. It’s
incredibly brazen.”
The Kaufman County
district attorney, Mike McLelland, said his office had suffered a devastating
loss. “Mark was an excellent friend and a spectacular prosecutor,” he said.
After the shooting, the Kaufman County Courthouse went into
lockdown and then was closed as officers and agents from local, state and
federal agencies searched the streets nearby.
Area schools, including the campuses of the Kaufman
Independent School District ,
were also placed on lockdown.
Lauren D’Avolio reported from Kaufman, and Manny Fernandez
from Houston . Clifford Krauss
contributed reporting from Houston .
Kaufman Co. Asst. DA Mark Hasse Likely Targeted in Fatal
Shooting: Police
$36,000 reward offered for information leading to the
arrest, conviction of gunman
Kaufman County Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse was
gunned down Thursday morning in what appears to be a targeted attack, police
say.
Hasse was shot multiple times while walking from the parking
lot toward the county courthouse at about 8 a.m. ,
officials said. He was transported to a nearby hospital where he later died.
When asked if Hasse appeared to have been targeted by his
attacker, Kaufman County Sheriff David Byrnes said, "I would say from all
appearances it is. But we have no concrete information on that. We're pursuing
every avenue right now."
"We suffered a devastating loss today. We lost a
really, really good man. He was an excellent friend and a spectacular
prosecutor. He will not be easily replaced. He will be sorely missed by
everybody in the office," said Kaufman County Criminal District Attorney
Mike McLelland. "I hope that the people that did this are watching because
we are very confident that we are going to find you, pull you out of whatever
hole you're in, bring you back and let the people of Kaufman
County prosecute you to the fullest
extent of the law."
Chris Aulbaugh, the Kaufman Chief of Police, said no
official arrests have been made in connection with the shooting but that they
are following up on several leads, including multiple witness reports from
various angles around the crime scene.
Agents with the ATF, FBI, the Texas Rangers and State
Troopers from the Texas Department of Public Safety are at the scene assisting
local and county law enforcement with the investigation.
Police said witnesses have reported two shooters wearing all
black, one or both of them possibly wearing a tactical-type vest, and driving
an older, silver Ford Taurus. Aulbaugh said they have not yet confirmed that
there were two people involved in the shooting and if the shooter(s) were
wearing a tactical jacket as described.
Police taped off the parking lot near the Tax Assessor/Collectors
office, which is near the courthouse and is commonly used by judges and
prosecutors. Officers later expanded the taped-off area to include two city
blocks. Several streets around the courthouse and parking lot are closed as the
shooting is investigated.
Investigators said they were not aware of any threats made
toward Hasse and that they didn't know of any cases that might explain the
shooting, but that Hasse was aware of the dangers associated with his
profession.
"Mark was fully aware of the dangers of this job. He
accepted them readily and was, as I said before, an absolutely stellar
prosecutor and good friend," said McLelland. "Tell the people that
they have lost an outstanding man who will not be easily replaced."
Eric Smenner, a friend of Hasse's, told NBC 5's Scott Gordon
that while it was too soon to say what may have led to the shooting, Hasse had
dealt with cases involving methamphetamine in the county, gangs and white
supremacist groups. He
described Hasse as a hard-working lawyer who “loved to tell stories”
and often put dangerous criminals behind bars.
Tonya Radcliffe, a board member on the Kaufman County
Appraisal District whose office is adjacent to the scene of the shooting, said
a staff member heard the gunshots and called police. Radcliffe said she and her
staff of about 25 are in the building and under lockdown.
During the early stages of the investigation, a
hospital, several schools and county buildings, including
the Tax Assessor/Collector's office, were locked down as a
precaution. With Thursday being the last day for people to pay
property taxes without a penalty, officials advised Kaufman County residents
that they could still pay taxes using the county's pay by phone
option or make payments in person at sub-courthouses and drop boxes.
A 36,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and
conviction of the gunman is being offered with $10,000 coming from Kaufman
County Crime Stoppers, $10,000 from a local Kaufman business and donations
continue to pour in from local businesses. As always, tipsters may remain
anonymous. More information on the investigation and reward are expected to be
revealed after a 3 p.m. news conference.
Anyone with information is asked to call Kaufman County
Crime Stoppers at 1-877-TIPS-KCC.
Editor's Note: Greenville
ISD was under lockdown due to a search for robbery suspects. The lockdown was
not related to the Kaufman County
shooting.
NBC 5's Randy McIlwain, Scott Gordon, Ken Kalthoff, Keaton
Fox and Deborah Ferguson contributed to this report. We will continue to update
this story with more information as soon as it's available. As this story is
developing, elements may change.
John Bacon and William M. Welch, USA
TODAY
A manhunt was underway for two suspects after an assistant
district attorney was gunned down Thursday outside a courthouse in Kaufman ,
Texas .
Mark Hasse, 57, was walking from a parking lot toward the
Kaufman County Courthouse annex when he was shot multiple times just before 9 a.m. , Kaufman
County spokeswoman Pat Laney said.
Pat Laney, spokeswoman for the Kaufman sheriff's department,
said late Thursday that no arrests had been made in the case. She said earlier
reports of an arrest were in error. The Dallas Morning News had
reported that Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins said he understood
there had been an arrest.
Hasse headed many county drug and murder cases. Shortly
after the shooting, Sheriff David Byrnes said the killing was an attack on the
criminal justice system."This is the next level (of crime)," he said.
Security officers and deputies closed nearby streets in
Kaufman, a North Texas town of about 6,700 residents
less than 40 miles from Dallas .
Kaufman schools were put on lockdown.
Hasse's death raises the larger issue of security for
prosecutors who are responsible sending criminals to prison, Dallas County
District Attorney Craig Watkins said.
Watkins says he's most concerned that people who are out on
bail and awaiting trial will target him as the face of the office or his
prosecutors.
"These are people who are on the front line," said
Watkins, who leads an office of 250 prosecutors. "Why isn't there
security? We have a lot of individuals who have ill will toward our profession.
Maybe this unfortunate circumstance will provide a wakeup call for those
individuals who do hold the purse strings to make sure we're protected."
Hasse began his career as a prosecutor in Dallas
County in 1982 after graduating
from Southern Methodist University's law school. He worked as a prosecutor in Dallas
until 1988, Watkins said. Although Watkins did not know Hasse, he said he had a
reputation as a "very thorough and tough prosecutor."
Lawyer James Lee Bright told the Morning News he
arrived at the courthouse just as officers began swarming the scene.
"Within two or three minutes, the whole square was
literally flooded with officers," Bright said. He said he saw a woman
shaking as she told a bailiff she had witnessed the shooting.
People were allowed to leave the building in groups,
depending on where they were parked, he told the Morning News.
"When you hear a DA at 8:40
in the morning is gunned down by two people, I think there's a reasonable
presumption that it's not random," Bright said.
Kaufman County Judge Bruce Wood said the courthouse remained
closed and it would be up to the sheriff to determine when it would reopen.
Wood told the Morning News he saw Hasse every day
in the courthouse hallways.
"He was revered and he did an outstanding job,"
Wood said. "We see each other every day. … It's a very small
courthouse."
"It's a horrible situation," Wood told
the Morning News. "None of us would have ever expected anything like
this to ever happen in our county."
The Morning News is reporting that "authorities
with knowledge of the assistant DA's caseload say he had been heavily involved
in the investigation of members of the Aryan Brotherhood."
The shooting took place hours before two members of the
Aryan Brotherhood of Texas pleaded guilty in Houston
to racketeering and other charges. The pleas were part of a wide-ranging
investigation that included the Kaufman County District Attorney's office.
A probe is underway to determine if the shooting is
connected to that investigation, the Morning News says.
The U.S. Justice Department announced those guilty pleas in
a statement released Thursday.
The statement claims the brotherhood "enforced its
rules and promoted discipline among its members, prospects and associates
through murder, attempted murder, conspiracy to murder, arson, assault, robbery
and threats against those who violate the rules or pose a threat to the
enterprise. Members, and oftentimes associates, were required to follow the
orders of higher-ranking members, often referred to as 'direct orders.'"
The Morning News says Hasse was chief of the Dallas
County district attorney's
organized-crime section from 1985 until 1988 and a former president of the Dallas
chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving. In 1995, he suffered a skull fracture
when his small plane crashed in Luray , Va. The
Morning News says Hasse was flying the lead plane in "Freedom Flight America ,"
a cross-country convoy of hundreds of planes commemorating the end of World War
II. He was flying at AT-6 Texan, a World War II-era training aircraft.
His death led to warnings elsewhere. WFAA-TV in Dallas
reports that the email below was sent by the Dallas
County DA
to his staff:
"This message is not intended to scare anyone but
please be advised. A Kaufman County
prosecutor was fatally shot a few minutes ago outside the Kaufman County
Courthouse in Kaufman. Two masked gunmen are the suspects. They have not been
apprehended yet.
Please be aware of your surroundings when leaving the
building for your safety. This is probably an isolated incident but until
further notice if you plan to work past dark today please be careful and ask
security for assistance escorting you to your vehicles if needed. I will keep
you informed as to the arrest of the suspects when I am notified. Don't panic
but please be aware of your environment when leaving the building."
Kaufman Police Chief Chris Aulbaugh said the shooting would
have a major impact on Kaufman.
"Any loss of life, especially someone out there
protecting the community, would have that effect," he said.
Contributing: Doug Stanglin, Donna Leinwand Leger;
Associated Press
Update on the shooting in Kaufman County: Police and other
law enforcement agencies, including the Texas Rangers, are hunting for two
suspects in the death of an assistant district attorney, who was shot multiple
times while walking from his car to his office. http://d-news.co/hiKIP
UPDATE: Kaufman police chief, D.A. say Craig Watkins ‘made a
mistake,’ no arrest made in Mark Hasse’s killing
Update at 5:04 p.m.
from Ray Leszcynski: Kaufman Police Chief Chris Aulbaugh, County Sheriff
David Byrnes and District Attorney Mike McLelland took a break from their own
press conference to look in to media reports that an arrest had been made in Dallas .
“There has not been an arrest made yet on this offense,”
Aulbaugh said upon reconvening. “Our D.A. has been on a phone call to the
Dallas DA’s office.”
Mark Hasse (Courtesy
Kaufman County )
McClellan said that apparently Dallas County District Attorney
Craig Watkins was doing an interview and inadvertently referenced that there
had been an arrest made in the shooting of Mark Hasse.
“He made a mistake during that interview,” McLellan said.
The Kaufman County
DA ’s office will remain closed
Friday, according to County Judge Bruce Bell. But other county offices will
reopen, including the courthouse and other downtown properties and the county
library that was closed Thursday on the outskirts of town.
“The plans are to open so that we’re back to operating as
normal as soon as possible,” Byrnes said.
For the foreseeable future, however, uniformed personnel
will work the parking lot a block east of the courthouse during times when
employees are typically coming to or leaving from work.
McLelland said that walk would be different.
“But we’ll still make the walk. We’ll show up for work and
send bad guys out of Kaufman County
every chance we get.”
They thanked and vowed continued use of many resources, the
Department of Public Safety, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, FBI, DPS,
and Texas Rangers, as well as the city police who are heading the investigation
and the county sheriff’s department and constables.
“We’re in the process of running down many leads right now,”
Byrnes said. They have several leads but declined to discuss them at this
point.
Kaufman County Crime Stoppers and a local business have
combined to offer $20,000 for information leading an arrest and conviction in
the case. 1-877-TIPSKCC (1-877-847-7522).
Several people who heard shots or were nearby have been
interviewed and those interviews are being pieced together, officials said.
It was confirmed that much of the parking lot is visible
from a camera across the street on the roof of the county tax office, but it
was also confirmed that the video had been reviewed and was of little help in
the investigation.
Byrnes and Aulbaugh confirmed that the crime had the look of
a “hit,” that Hasse was specifically targeted.
“But we can’t definitely say that it was a hit,” or that
Hasse was targeted, Aulbaugh said. “We’re pursuing all possibilities.”
McLelland confirmed that his department had worked Aryan
Brotherhood cases in the last two years but said each of the 13 attorneys in
his office has 380-390 cases at a time, that as far he knew Hasse was not
currently working an Aryan Brotherhood case and that it was too early to narrow
the focus. Aulbaugh also said at this time there is no indication any prison
gang was involved.
Hasse was said to be armed, typically, but it was unknown
whether he was carrying a gun on Thursday when he was assaulted on the walk to
the office after he’d parked his vehicle.
“It’s apparent he was not expecting to have anything
happen,” Byrnes said. “He was on his way to his office.”
His boss did not know of any reason Hasse would have a
heightened sense of worry prior to the assault.
“Mark was fully aware of the dangers. He accepted them
readily,” McLelland said. “It was simply the nature of the beast to be working
and dealing with bad, bad people on a regular basis.”
McLelland spoke personably about Hasse, who had worked for
the office for about three years.
“Kaufman County ,
the state of Texas and especially
my office suffered a devastating loss,” he said. “We lost a really good man. He
was an excellent friend and a spectacular prosecutor.
“I hope that the people that did this are watching. Because
we’re confident we’re going to find you, pull you out of whatever hole you’re
in, bring you back and let the people of Kaufman
County prosecute you to the full
extent of the law.”
McLelland said Byrnes, 57, left no wife or children. He did
just bought a house in Kaufman County
and had started working on it.
Updated at 4:18 p.m. : Debbie
Denmon, a spokeswoman for DA Craig Watkins, said a “confidential source”
informed the DA’s office office that an arrest had been made in the case.
But Denmon said Kaufman
County officials subsequently would
not confirm that an arrest was made.
“We’re going to respect their wishes” on that, she said.
Updated at 3:25 p.m.
by Selwyn Crawford: Dallas County District Attorney Craig
Watkins says an arrest has been made in this morning’s
slaying in Kaufman.
Watkins won’t say when, where or who was arrested, however,
and Kaufman officials at a 3 p.m.
news conference seemed unaware of any arrest.
“I can’t overstep the bounds of Kaufman
County ,” Watkins said. “All I can
tell you is that there was an arrest.”
Investigators left evidence markers in downtown Kaufman near
where the prosecutor was shot this morning. (David Woo/Staff Photographer)
Watkins said that because the victim was a Kaufman
County prosecutor, he does not
believe that office can prosecute the case and said that he would like to
handle it.
“We’re going to make an offer to Kaufman
County to prosecute this case,”
Watkins said.
“But even if they choose another jurisdiction to handle it,
we will provide whatever resources or help they need since [Hasse] was a former
Dallas County
prosecutor.”
Updated at 3 p.m. : Kaufman
authorities have announced a $20,000 reward for information leading to the
capture and conviction of the shooters.
Anyone with information can call Kaufman police at
972-932-3094 or submit an anonymous tip to Crime Stoppers at 1-877-847-7522.
Updated at 2:45 p.m.
by Danielle Abril in Kaufman: All schools in Kaufman ISD will remain on
lockdown until the end of the school day, Superintendent Todd Williams says.
Parents will be able to pick up their children at the
regular closing time.
More on the victim from staff writer Diane Jennings (updated
at 2:40 p.m. ):
Mark Hasse, 57, loved flying, said his longtime friend
Marcus Busch of Washington , D.C. ,
even after suffering “catastrophic” injuries in a plane crash 17 years ago.
Hasse was piloting the lead plane in a cross-country convoy
commemorating the end of World War II when it crashed in 1995. Morey Darzniek,
who survived the crash with Hasse, said Hasse was “an incredible person in
every way. He had the right moral standards.”
Hasse suffered a skull fracture but recovered enough to
resume the practice of law and continued flying.
He also was active in the fight against drunken driving,
serving as president of the Dallas
chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
Suzette Pylant, a victim advocate for MADD North Texas, was
working with Hasse on a drunken driving case at the time of his death. She’d
last met with him on Dec. 21.
Pylant said Hasse was “a squeaky clean guy,” she said. “He
was one of those guys who was always going to wear the white hat.”
Hasse was not married and his relatives did not return calls
for comment.
Updated at 1:25 p.m.
byRay Leszcynski, Scott Goldstein and Ed Timms: The Kaufman County sheriff
has identified the assistant DA slain by masked gunmen as Mark Hasse, a onetime
Dallas County
prosecutor.
Word spread quickly in the legal community in Dallas and
Kaufman that it was Hasse who had been shot this morning.
The courthouse in downtown Kaufman was locked down
immediately after the shooting. (David Woo/Staff Photographer)
Veteran defense lawyer Eric Smenner, whose office is near
the courthouse, said his immediate reaction was that Hasse was likely targeted.
“I felt it very certainly had to be work-related,” he said.
“I can’t imagine the guy has any enemies that would cause that to happen on a
personal level.”
Smenner added that Hasse parked in the same area every day,
“so if somebody was out to get him all they’d have to do is watch him a little
bit.”
Mark Hasse was chief of the Dallas
County district attorney’s
organized-crime section from 1985 until 1988 and a former president of the Dallas
chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
In 1995, he was seriously injured while flying the lead
plane in “Freedom Flight America ,”
a cross-country convoy of hundreds of planes commemorating the end of World War
II. He was flying at AT-6 Texan, a World War II-era training aircraft.
He suffered a skull fracture when the plane crashed while
landing in Luray , Va.
The plane overshot the 3,000-foot runway at Luray
Caverns Airport
and hit a road embankment, according to authorities. Update at 1 p.m. by Scott Goldstein:
Lawyer James Lee Bright said he arrived at the Kaufman
courthouse just as officers began swarming the scene.
“Within two or three minutes, the whole square was literally
flooded with officers,” Bright said. “I just went inside, and by the time I got
inside the information that it was actually a shooting and who it might be was
just barely starting to filter into the courthouse.”
Bright said he saw a woman who was shaking as she told a
bailiff what she had just witnessed.
“I just saw it, I just saw it,” the woman said, according to
Bright.
The courthouse was quickly put on lockdown.
“It was a little surreal being locked in there,” Bright
said.
People were allowed to leave the building in groups,
depending on where they were parked.
As for a possible motive, Bright said there’s no telling how
many cases the veteran prosecutor worked over the years that could potentially
be connected.
“When you hear a DA at 8:40
in the morning is gunned down by two people, I think there’s a reasonable
presumption that it’s not random,” he said.
Update at 11:52 a.m. : Officials
continue to withhold the slain prosecutor’s name until his family can be
notified, but details have begun to emerge about his recent cases.
Authorities with knowledge of the assistant DA’s caseload
say he had been heavily involved in the investigation of members of the Aryan
Brotherhood.
Officials now are reviewing those cases to determine if
today’s shooting might be connected to that probe.
Update from staff writer Ray Leszcynski in
Kaufman: Kaufman County Judge Bruce Wood said he saw the victim every day
in the courthouse hallways.
“He was revered and he did an outstanding job,” Wood said.
“We see each other every day. … It’s a very small courthouse.”
The judge, who declined to identify the prosecutor, said he
was in his office at the time of the shooting but did not hear anything.
Wood said he did not know what cases the assistant DA may
have been involved in, but he was not aware of any heightened security.
He said the county courthouse is closed today and it would
be up to the sheriff to determine when it would reopen.
“It’s a horrible situation,” Wood said. “None of us would
have ever expected anything like this to ever happen in our county.”
Update at 10:50 a.m. : Kaufman
Police Chief Chris Aulbaugh said an assistant district attorney was shot
multiple times about 8:50 a.m. while
walking from his car to his office.
The victim, whose name has yet to be released, died from his
injuries, Aulbaugh confirmed.
Witnesses said that after shooting the prosecutor, the
gunman fired shots in the air to scare away bystanders as the two suspects
fled.
The police chief said Kaufman police reached out to other
law enforcement agencies, including the Texas Rangers, for help with the manhunt.
Aulbaugh did not say whether there was one or multiple shooters.
A Kaufman City Council member said the Rangers would be the
lead investigative agency because the victim was a county employee.
Updated at 10:30 a.m. : Kaufman
County officials have confirmed
that the prosecutor has died in this morning’s shooting outside the county
courthouse.
The victim’s name has not yet been publicly released,
pending notification of his family. But according to state records, the
prosecutor was certified as a peace officer in 1988.
Those that know him say he was a gun enthusiast who
typically wore a gun belt. It is unknown if he was wearing the gun belt
Thursday, but he almost always carried a weapon, they say.
Kaufman city leaders were stunned by the shooting.
“I’m just sad and concerned for the individual involved and
the family members,” Mayor Pro Tem Tony Rader told our Diane Jennings.
Rader, a city of Dallas
employee, said he was not in town when the shooting occurred but he was
monitoring developments through text messages and Facebook.
City councilman Jeff Jordan said he heard the news when a
friend called “to ask me what was going on.”
“We’re all shocked and very sad,” Jordan
said.
Rader said he didn’t think he knew the victim, and Jordan
said he knew who he was but did not know him well.
Kaufman is a town of about 7,000 located about 35 miles east
of Dallas .
Updated at 9:49 a.m. : A
Kaufman County prosecutor has reportedly been shot near the courthouse in
downtown Kaufman this morning.
The condition of the prosecutor was not known. His name is
being withheld, pending notification of his family.
The shooting reportedly occurred in a parking lot behind a
county building where many prosecutors and judges park. The courthouse is just
a short distance away, said Eric Smenner, a Kaufman defense attorney.
“My secretary heard the gunshots,” Smenner said.
He said she told him that she then saw a silver Taurus
fleeing down the street. Other media reported that the two suspects were in all
black, and one may have been wearing a tactical vest.
In addition to the courthouse on Mulberry
Street , several nearby Kaufman ISD campuses have
been locked down as a precaution.
Smenner said the prosecutor who was shot was well-liked by
all and had previously worked in Dallas
County .
Original post at 9:48 a.m. : There’s
been a shooting outside the courthouse in Kaufman this morning, and much of
downtown has been locked down.
The victim was reportedly a county employee and was shot
several times. That person’s condition is not known.
Early reports were that two armed men ambushed the victim
about 9 a.m. outside the courthouse
and opened fire.
They then fled and may remain at large.
Kaufman County
authorities plead for leads to find assistant DA's killers
KAUFMAN -- Kaufman County Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse is being remembered as thorough, tough, and fair by those who were in the courtroom with him.
"Well, he has dealt with some of the worst people in our society and was a very aggressive prosecutor," said Kaufman County Judge Bruce Wood.
BY JAMIE STENGLE AND
DANNY ROBBINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
KAUFMAN, Texas -- Authorities don't know whether a
Texas prosecutor who had extensive experience with organized crime feared for
his life before he was fatally shot, but they're poring through the cases he
handled for leads to his killer, officials said Friday.
No arrests have been made since Assistant District Attorney
Mark Hasse was gunned down Thursday morning in a parking lot about a block from
his office at the Kaufman County Courthouse. Authorities are searching for one
or two suspects. Witnesses have said the killer was dressed in black with
facial features covered.
Kaufman police Chief Chris Aulbaugh said there's no
indication that Hasse, 57, had been afraid he might be killed and, although the
prosecutor was a licensed peace officer, officials refused to say whether he
was carrying a weapon.
"We are reviewing Mr. Hasse's cases and following up on
any leads that would give us rise for a person of interest," Aulbaugh
said. In addition to local authorities, the Texas Department of Public Safety,
the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are
investigating the case.
That could be a daunting task. Hasse joined the Kaufman
County district attorney's office
three years ago and previously worked in the Dallas
County district attorney's office.
Hasse was chief of the organized crime unit when he was an
assistant prosecutor in Dallas County
in the 1980s, and he handled similar cases in Kaufman
County , 33 miles southeast of Dallas .
Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland said Hasse
was one of 12 attorneys on his staff, all of whom handle hundreds of cases at a
time.
"Anything anybody can think of, we're looking
through," McLelland said.
In recent years, Hasse played major roles in Kaufman
County 's most high-profile cases,
including one in which a justice of the peace was convicted on theft and
burglary charges and another in which a man was convicted of killing his former
girlfriend and her 10-year-old daughter.
"Hasse was a top-notch prosecutor who did a lot of
things," said Steve Hulme, a family law attorney who practices in both
Dallas and Kaufman. "There are a lot of cases to look at."
As a licensed peace officer in Texas ,
Hasse could openly carry a firearm and make arrests. According to the Texas
Commission on Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Education, Hasse obtained
his license in 1988 and kept it current through 1995. He then allowed it to
lapse for 16 years before renewing it in July 2011.
"If you saw Mark around the office or the courthouse,
he generally had a pistol," said Bill Wirskye, a Dallas
attorney who recently served as a special prosecutor on a murder case in Kaufman
County .
Wirskye, a former Dallas
County prosecutor, said prosecutors
in Texas have been known to carry
guns, although it's not typical.
"I don't think (Hasse) lived in fear, but he was always
careful," Wirskye said. "He knew the job carried certain
dangers."
Along with looking at Hasse's cases, authorities are
monitoring video surveillance cameras from convenience stores and other
businesses in the area to see if a vehicle linked to the killing was spotted.
The vehicle is believed to be an older model, gray, four-door sedan.
Authorities also hope that a growing pot of reward money
will lead to an arrest. By late Friday, more than $70,000 had been put up, with
$30,000 coming from Dallas County DA Craig Watkins' asset forfeiture fund.
"We will follow every lead that we receive,"
Aulbaugh said.
The Kaufman County Courthouse reopened Friday, and many
county employees were back at work, although the DA's office remained closed.
"We're in mourning," County Judge Bruce Wood said
during an interview in his office. "I think we're still in a state of, 'We
can't believe this happened.'"
Dallas DA Watkins apologizes for reporting false arrest in
Kaufman prosecutor slaying
by MATT GOODMAN
WFAA
Posted on February
1, 2013 at 5:18 PM
DALLAS –– Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins has
issued a statement apologizing for telling News 8 and the Dallas Morning News
that someone was arrested for the murder of Kaufman County Assistant District
Attorney Mark Hasse.
"I received what I thought was credible information and
regret that the source was wrong," he wrote. "In hindsight, it was
inappropriate to comment and I am sorry for any confusion this
caused."
Hasse was gunned down outside the Kaufman County Courthouse
on Thursday. Those responsible, at least one and possibly two, are still at
large. No one has been arrested.
On Friday, Watkins' office announced it would add $30,000 to
a tip fund to help find Hasse's killers. That fund has now reached $71,150. To
submit an anonymous tip, call Crime Stoppers at 1.877.847.7522.
In his apology, Watkins wrote, "Assistant District
Attorney Hasse was a tenacious chief felony prosecutor who gave the ultimate
sacrifice in the pursuit of justice."
"The Dallas DA's Office looks forward to assistant
Kaufman County Law Enforcement in any way possible," the statement reads.
The Dallas County Medical Examiner is conducting an autopsy
of Hasse's body. A report is not expected for eight to 12 weeks.
Investigators combing through murdered prosecutor's cases
for leads
by TERESA WOODARD WFAA
Posted on January
31, 2013 at 10:33 PM
KAUFMAN -- From all indications, the murder of Kaufman
County Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse was a planned attack according to
investigators.
It was likely a case of retaliation or revenge.
Detectives expected to work all night at the scene of the Thursday morning shooting onGrove Street in
Kaufman. Kaufman County Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse was gunned down
as he walked from his car to the courthouse.
Kaufman Police Chief Chris Albaugh said it appeared Hasse was targeted, but that detectives cannot say that with certainty yet.
Witnesses told police they saw a shooter, maybe more than one, approach Hasse. There was a short confrontation outside his vehicle, and then shots were fired.
"I heard one or two, and then it got chaotic," said witness Michael Townsend.
The suspect, or suspects, were dressed in black, possibly wearing tactical gear, and might have been driving an old silver Ford Taurus. And they seemed to know exactly where Hasse was going to be, and when he'd be there.
"It's shocking because it is in public, right in front of everybody," said Defense Attorney Eric Smenner, a longtime friend of Hasse's.
Since 1997, Smenner tried many cases against Hasse, inDallas
and Kaufman County .
He said Mark had no enemies, except the countless criminals he's put away.
"You could trust him. A man of honor, a man of his word," Smenner said. "Are they trying to make a statement by doing it at the courthouse? That's what makes it even that much more outrageous."
Hasse had been an attorney for 30 years, working in two counties. His reputation was spotless.
"He was a great prosecutor -- worked with him inDallas
for years," said court reporter Scott Smith. "We both came down here
at the same time. He was not only a great guy, but a great
prosecutor."
Investigators said new leads were developing as they combed through Hasse's caseload.
His boss, Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland, promised justice for a man who lived to uphold the law.
"I hope the people that did this are watching," he said to television cameras Thursday afternoon, "because we're very confident we will find you, pull you out of whatever hole you are in. We're gonna bring you back and let the people ofKaufman County
prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law."
The Kaufman County Courthouse will reopen Friday, but the DA's office will remain closed. The sheriff said he will add uniformed officers to the lot where Hasse was shot for the foreseeable future.
It was likely a case of retaliation or revenge.
Detectives expected to work all night at the scene of the Thursday morning shooting on
Kaufman Police Chief Chris Albaugh said it appeared Hasse was targeted, but that detectives cannot say that with certainty yet.
Witnesses told police they saw a shooter, maybe more than one, approach Hasse. There was a short confrontation outside his vehicle, and then shots were fired.
"I heard one or two, and then it got chaotic," said witness Michael Townsend.
The suspect, or suspects, were dressed in black, possibly wearing tactical gear, and might have been driving an old silver Ford Taurus. And they seemed to know exactly where Hasse was going to be, and when he'd be there.
"It's shocking because it is in public, right in front of everybody," said Defense Attorney Eric Smenner, a longtime friend of Hasse's.
Since 1997, Smenner tried many cases against Hasse, in
"You could trust him. A man of honor, a man of his word," Smenner said. "Are they trying to make a statement by doing it at the courthouse? That's what makes it even that much more outrageous."
Hasse had been an attorney for 30 years, working in two counties. His reputation was spotless.
"He was a great prosecutor -- worked with him in
Investigators said new leads were developing as they combed through Hasse's caseload.
His boss, Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland, promised justice for a man who lived to uphold the law.
"I hope the people that did this are watching," he said to television cameras Thursday afternoon, "because we're very confident we will find you, pull you out of whatever hole you are in. We're gonna bring you back and let the people of
The Kaufman County Courthouse will reopen Friday, but the DA's office will remain closed. The sheriff said he will add uniformed officers to the lot where Hasse was shot for the foreseeable future.
by MATT GOODMAN WFAA
Posted on January
31, 2013 at 9:30 AM
Updated yesterday at 9:14 AM
KAUFMAN -- Kaufman County Assistant District Attorney Mark
Hasse was shot dead outside the courthouse Thursday, spurring a complete
lockdown of the grounds and an active search for at least one, and possibly
two, shooters.
Kaufman County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Pat Laney
said the assistant DA was assaulted and gunned down on his way in to court. He
was shot multiple times in a parking lot at about 8:50
a.m. The courthouse was locked down and later closed for the day,
the suspect or suspects remain at large.
During an afternoon press conference, Kaufman County Sheriff
David Byrnes, District Attorney Mike McLellan and Police Chief Chris Aulbaugh
begged the public for any information that could identify those
responsible.
"We're very confident that we're going to find you,
we're going to pull you out of whatever hole you're in, we're going to bring
you back and we're going to let the people of Kaufman
County prosecute you to the fullest
extent of the law," McLellan said.
Hasse, a longtime prosecutor for the Dallas County District
Attorney's Office and current assistant DA for Kaufman
County , was a felony prosecutor who
headed murder and drug cases.
Hasse joined the Kaufman County District Attorney's Office
in July 2010, records show.
"Mark was really a great guy, he was the consummate
prosecutor, he was hard-working, loved his job, and juries loved him for some
reason," said Dallas attorney
Ted Steinke, who oversaw Hasse in the Dallas
County DA 's
Office. "He wasn't very large in stature, but juries loved him and he
exuded confidence."
Kaufman County Judge Bruce Wood told News 8's Jonathan Betz
that he was not aware of on any high-profile cases that required any extra
security for him. Investigators are following up on his caseload.
However, hours after Hasse was gunned down, the Department
of Justice issued a release on its websitecrediting the Kaufman County
District Attorney's Office with helping investigate two known members of the
Aryan Brotherhood of Texas gang. They pleaded guilty the day of the shooting to
racketeering charges.
Before the release was issued, The Dallas Morning
News credited "authorities with knowledge of the assistant DA's
caseload" as saying he was "heavily involved" in an
investigation of the Aryan Brotherhood. According to the DOJ release, Ben
Christian Dillon, aka "Tuff", of Houston, and James Marshall Meldrum,
aka "Dirty", of Dallas ,
both "agreed to commit multiple acts of murder, robbery, arson, kidnapping
and narcotics tracking" for the Aryan Brotherhood.
During the press conference, Byrnes and Aulbaugh each warned
against speculation, saying investigators are following "several"
leads.
"Due to the nature of them, we can't discuss
them," Albaugh said. "As soon as we're able to, we'd be be glad to
help you."
Earlier, Wood classified Hasse's shooting as an "ambush"
and told Betz that courthouse security is always tight, but not in the parking
lot where Hasse was murdered.
"It's a scary deal," Steinke
said. "Every prosecutor every once in a while gets a death threat,
and we take them seriously, but this is the first time in 20 years that I can
remember here in North Texas a prosecutor actually being
assaulted."
Byrnes and Aulbaugh said Hasse was heading to misdemeanor
court when he was killed. Both expressed disgust and outrage at the brazen
act.
"When you get up into the level, you are really
attacking society as a whole because our whole society is based on our criminal
justice system and getting our day in court," Byrnes said. "This is
not how to handle our business."
The Texas Department of Public Safety sent out an alert
shortly after the murder for troopers to be on lookout for a silver "older
model" Ford Taurus. According to the alert, two suspects were wearing all
black and at least one was in a tactical vest. Meanwhile, DPS choppers flew low
over the treeline in north Kaufman.
Kaufman County Crime Stoppers issued a reward that
quickly swelled to $30,000 Thursday afternoon for information leading to who is
responsible. To submit an anonymous tip, you're asked to call
817-847-7522.
Kaufman Independent School District Superintendent Todd
Williams said all schools in the district were locked down Thursday as
authorities search for the shooters. Forney ISD spokesman Larry Coker said all
schools were ordered to lock their doors until the suspects are caught.
Administrators will reevaluate the plan at 2
p.m.
Forney is about 22 miles northwest of Kaufman.
"This is a crime, as our county judge said, that is
against the very basis of our fabric," McLellan said. "As far as I
know, this has never been done before."
In an e-mail sent to staff Thursday morning, the Dallas
County District Attorney's Office confirmed the victim was a prosecutor and was
fatally shot. The message urged staffers to be aware of their surroundings as
they walked back to their cars.
Below is the entire email sent by the Dallas
County DA :
"This message is not intended to scare anyone but
please be advised. A Kaufman County
prosecutor was fatally shot a few minutes ago outside the Kaufman County
Courthouse in Kaufman. Two masked gunman are the suspects. They have not been
apprehended yet.
Please be aware of your surroundings when leaving the
building for your safety. This is probably a isolated incident but until further
notice if you plan to work past dark today please be careful and ask security
for assistance escorting you to your vehicles if needed. I will keep you
informed as to the arrest of the suspects when i am notified. Don’t panic but
please be aware of your environment when leaving the building."
Employees at businesses nearby said they saw heavy police
activity and heard reports of the shooting. Cathy Coulson, a real estate agent
at Re/Max across from the courthouse, said she was not at work when the shooting
happened, but reported seeing police helicopters searching overhead.
"I didn't hear anything, I came into my office right
after it happened, but I talked to one of my clients that's two blocks behind
us and he said that he heard it," Coulson said, adding that she's seen
police walking the streets. "They don't have time to come tell us to lock
down, we have enough sense to do that; we've seen them going around and the
helicopters."
Tonya Ratcliff, a clerk at The Kaufman County Tax Office
located to the right of the courthouse, said officers came inside and asked
them to lock their doors.
Kaufman is a town of 7,000 about 30 miles southeast of Dallas .
News 8's Bailey McGowan and Carla Wade contributed to this
report.
Colleagues remember murdered Kaufman attorney as
investigation continues
by TERESA WOODARD WFAA
Posted on February
1, 2013 at 10:38 PM
KAUFMAN -- Kaufman County Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse is being remembered as thorough, tough, and fair by those who were in the courtroom with him.
"Well, he has dealt with some of the worst people in our society and was a very aggressive prosecutor," said Kaufman County Judge Bruce Wood.
The reward for information that leads to a conviction in the
case climbed to over $71,000 Friday.
He could be "in your face," said attorneys who knew Hasse, but he never crossed the line. For the same reason criminals might not have liked Mark Hasse, the rest ofKaufman County
did.
"The thing I keep hearing over and over is how bright and intelligent he was," Wood said, "but also how fair he was to defendants as well."
Wood once testified in a case Hasse prosecuted. He remembers Hasse being confrontational, but professional. That was his reputation even in the 1980's, when he was an assistant DA inDallas .
"I just know he was a very good prosecutor. One of the best," said former Kaufman County Judge Wayne Gent. "To be a good prosecutor, that comes with the territory -- you have to be aggressive."
Hasse was known to carry a gun and sources confirm he was armed when he was ambushed Thursday morning, walking from his car to the courthouse. Witnesses saw a gunman, possibly two, in all black, maybe even in tactical gear confront him, shoot him, and then take off.
Investigators are going over hundreds of cases Hasse has worked - even cases from years ago - expecting to uncover a link between his life profession and his death.
While Hasse has tried cases involving the Aryan Brotherhood, he had no open cases involving them. That group is a part of the investigation but detectives say it is not the sole focus, by any means.
E-mail twoodard@wfaa.com
He could be "in your face," said attorneys who knew Hasse, but he never crossed the line. For the same reason criminals might not have liked Mark Hasse, the rest of
"The thing I keep hearing over and over is how bright and intelligent he was," Wood said, "but also how fair he was to defendants as well."
Wood once testified in a case Hasse prosecuted. He remembers Hasse being confrontational, but professional. That was his reputation even in the 1980's, when he was an assistant DA in
"I just know he was a very good prosecutor. One of the best," said former Kaufman County Judge Wayne Gent. "To be a good prosecutor, that comes with the territory -- you have to be aggressive."
Hasse was known to carry a gun and sources confirm he was armed when he was ambushed Thursday morning, walking from his car to the courthouse. Witnesses saw a gunman, possibly two, in all black, maybe even in tactical gear confront him, shoot him, and then take off.
Investigators are going over hundreds of cases Hasse has worked - even cases from years ago - expecting to uncover a link between his life profession and his death.
While Hasse has tried cases involving the Aryan Brotherhood, he had no open cases involving them. That group is a part of the investigation but detectives say it is not the sole focus, by any means.
E-mail twoodard@wfaa.com
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