In the days after Neal Zumberge allegedly pulled a semiautomatic shotgun and aimed at his New Brighton neighbors, killing one and wounding another, authorities charged that his wife, Paula, shouted, "Shoot, shoot, keep shooting," as he fired away.
That inflammatory quote was so powerful that it became the basis for the criminal charges filed against Paula Zumberge. Prosecutors charged that the May 5 shooting that killed Todd G. Stevens and wounded of his girlfriend, Jennifer Damerow-Cleven was rooted in a dispute over the feeding of neighborhood deer.
But on the first day of Paula Zumberge's trial Monday in Ramsey County District Court, Damerow-Cleven acknowledged under relentless cross examination that she never said those exact words. Her eyes downcast for much of the questioning, Damerow-Cleven testified that Paula Zumberge had actually said, "Shoot 'em, shoot 'em," instead. And even then, Damerow-Cleven said, that information was relayed not by herself, but by the wounded woman's sister in a restraining order filed after the shooting.
The admission could deliver a blow to the prosecution's case against Paula Zumberge, 50, who is charged with aiding and abetting second-degree murder, attempted second-degree murder and two counts of second-degree assault in the killing of Stevens and the wounding of Damerow-Cleven.
The phrase has become so central to the case that Assistant County Attorney Anna Christie invoked it in her opening statements.
"Shoot, shoot, keep shooting," Christie said. "That is what Paula Zumberge encouraged her husband to do. … She was a key participant."
But Zumberge's attorney, Gary Wolf, said in his opening statements that his client's innocence would be corroborated by witnesses and surveillance video, even though the video has no sound.
"The reality is Paula Zumberge didn't say anything regarding firearms or shooting, did she?" Wolf asked Damerow-Cleven.