Joe Senser knew his wife hit more than a construction cone or barrel when he examined the damage to his Mercedes-Benz the morning of Aug. 24.
He was still giving Amy Senser the silent treatment, he testified Wednesday, angry for being roused from bed the night before to pick up their teenage daughters and two of their friends from a concert at the Xcel Energy Center after she failed to show up.
The next morning, he said, his annoyance turned to panic when he looked at the "odd" damage to the front right fender, then saw a news report online that a man had been killed on the Riverside Avenue exit ramp. The report said parts at the scene belonged to a similar model as the damaged luxury hatchback parked in the driveway of their Edina home.
"I said 'Margaret, is this you? Were you in this area?'" he said he asked his wife of 22 years, referring to her by her middle name. "She said, 'I had exited that ramp.' I questioned her again. I said, 'Are you sure you hit a construction barrel?' She was adamant about it. I said, 'There was someone struck here fatally, Margaret.' She said there was no way."
Joe Senser testified that she was shaken, "but I believed her." Still, he reached out to his brother-in-law, an Edina police sergeant, and asked for the number of a good attorney.
His testimony on the third day of Amy Senser's criminal vehicular homicide trial detailed for the first time the Sensers' actions in the hours after Anousone Phanthavong, 38, was struck and killed as he put gas in his stalled car on the westbound I-94 exit ramp. Amy Senser faces three felony counts -- one for leaving the scene, a second for failing to call for help and the third over negligence.
'This looks like you hit a deer'
The former Minnesota Vikings star, public speaker and restaurateur was affable on the stand as he answered prosecutor Deborah Russell's questions about that night and the ensuing days before Amy Senser was charged. He gave his wife a supportive look and occasionally coaxed a smile or laugh from the jury or spectators with stories about his charity work, his differences with his daughters in musical tastes and his messy garage.