Amy Senser admitted to a daughter that she was drinking the night she struck and killed a man on a Minneapolis freeway exit ramp last year, prosecutors alleged Monday during the final hearing before jury selection begins next week in her criminal vehicular homicide trial.
Assistant Hennepin County Attorney Deborah Russell offered no details about the revelation -- including when Senser allegedly made the admission or to which daughter. Her remark was in response to a motion by Senser's attorney, Eric Nelson, to dismiss a felony count -- a third -- filed against her last Friday. In the latest charge, prosecutors contend she was "grossly negligent" because she was allegedly speeding and talking on the phone when she struck Anousone Phanthavong, 38, as he was filling his stalled car with gas on the Riverside Avenue exit ramp on Aug. 23.
Senser was already facing two felony charges for leaving the scene of an accident and for failing to alert law enforcement about it as quickly as possible. Nelson claims she didn't know she struck a person when she hit Phanthavong and left.
District Judge Daniel Mabley denied the motion. He is to decide later this week on other motions argued during the hearing. Among them:
• Nelson moved to strike from evidence video clips by the Minnesota State Patrol that show pedestrian-vehicle crashes. He claimed they were not an accurate depiction of the crash, and that they could unduly influence the jury. Russell countered that they will be offered only to bolster and clarify Sgt. Paul Skoglund's status as an expert when he testifies.
• Nelson argued that Senser's refusal to speak to investigators should not be used against her by prosecutors because of her Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination. He claimed that investigators from the State Patrol and the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension were "imploring and begging" him to allow Senser to make a statement. And, he pointed out, when he directed the State Patrol to pick up the vehicle from Senser's Edina home, three lawyers were standing in the driveway.
Russell countered that Amy Senser did not admit to being the driver until more than a week later, leaving the State Patrol in limbo about who to seek out for a statement.
•Nelson also moved to strike from evidence a $7,500 estimate for body repair to Senser's sport-utility vehicle. The estimate, created only from analyzing photographs, is unfair because the vehicle, a Mercedes, was expensive and requires foreign parts. Russell countered that the estimate lends to the amount of force necessary to create the damage incurred when she struck Phanthavong, which would counter her claim she didn't know she hit someone. Russell suggested that the vehicle be brought to the courthouse for jurors to examine during trial.