Aaron Schaffhausen never flinched as a police investigator described in horrifying detail Tuesday what he found when he climbed the stairs to three bedrooms to search for Schaffhausen's young daughters.
"I could see that the child was lifeless, no color, dried blood on the face," River Falls, Wis., detective John Wilson said of his first discovery on July 10. He found two other girls in the same condition. All three were tucked in their beds with blankets drawn to their necks, their eyes open.
During a 90-minute preliminary hearing in St. Croix Circuit Court, Schaffhausen sat still as a statue, his face devoid of expression. Schaffhausen, 34, appeared alert, mostly watching Judge Scott Needham. At least a dozen sheriff's deputies and police officers watched the room as he sat quietly in orange jail clothes with his wrists and ankles cuffed.
Schaffhausen, a divorcee who had been living in Minot, N.D., and working as a carpenter, was charged July 12 with three counts of first-degree intentional homicide in the deaths of Amara, 11; Sophie, 8; and Cecilia, 5. The two oldest girls' throats were slit. Cecilia was strangled and her throat was cut in two places, according to Tuesday's testimony.
In one of the bedrooms, Wilson said, he found a large pool of blood on the carpet and more blood spattered on the walls.
"It's most likely all three children were killed in that one bedroom," he told prosecutor Amber Hahn.
The two prosecutors, Gary Freyberg of the Wisconsin attorney general's office and Hahn of the St. Croix County district attorney's office, called three witnesses to convince Needham that Schaffhausen should be bound over for trial.
After hearing the testimony, Needham ruled that he found sufficient probable cause that Schaffhausen had committed the murders. The judge scheduled an August arraignment.