Las Vegas Review-Journal

You can learn a lot from a dummy

Officers, prosecutor detail its use in murder investigat­ion

- By Mike Shoro Las Vegas Review-journal

A homicide detective and prosecutor never thought it would work. They doubted dressing a Cpr-training mannequin as a person sleeping and placing it where two homeless men were bludgeoned to death with a hammer would lead to the arrest of the suspected killer.

Although authoritie­s never found enough evidence to charge Shane Schindler in the deaths of the two men, they caught him on camera attacking the decoy dummy with a hammer in February. Schindler was recently sentenced to eight to 20 years in prison for attempted murder for hammering the dummy.

And on Tuesday, Metropolit­an Police Department officers and a prosecutor Capt. Andy Walsh hatched the unconventi­onal idea to use the dummy and said he thought doing so saved lives. described how they used the decoy dummy to get a conviction. The mannequin was on display at an event held at the Mob Museum, 300 Stewart Ave., about a mile from where police used it as a decoy.

Capt. Andy Walsh hatched the unconventi­onal idea to use the dummy and said he thought doing so saved lives. As captain of Metro’s Downtown Area Command, he said he felt a responsibi­lity to the community to find whoever killed Daniel Aldape, 46, and David Dunn, 60, however he could and prevent another attack.

“It’s something we take personally,” Walsh said.

He joined homicide detective

Ryan Jaeger and prosecutor Marc Digiacomo to discuss the case.

Jaeger doubted Walsh’s idea would draw anybody to attack it, as did Digiacomo.

“Clearly, I was wrong,” Digiacomo said.

Authoritie­s have said they believe Schindler was in the area at the time of the Jan. 4 killing of Adalpe. On Schindler’s phone, police found a selfie taken in November that shows him on his back in the area. He told police in an interview that he knew he was attacking a dummy and not a person.

DUMMY

After police caught Schindler attacking the dummy on a February night, they initially booked him on an outstandin­g jaywalking warrant to buy time to devise their next plan. They released him the next morning, and police conducted surveillan­ce to determine where he lived. They requested and received a search warrant for Schindler’s house.

Metro arrested him that night on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon, as police said he put a hammer inside of a bag after he used it to attack the mannequin.

Yet Digiacomo said he wasn’t satisfied with the concealed weapon charge.

“He tried to kill somebody,” Digiacomo remembered thinking aloud. “That’s attempted murder.”

Prosecutor­s charged Schindler with attempted murder, but his case never made it to trial. Digiacomo and Schindler’s public defender, Ashley Sisolak, reached a plea deal. Schindler would plead guilty to attempted murder, and prosecutor­s wouldn’t pursue murder charges.

Had the sides failed to agree on the deal, Digiacomo said he would’ve indicted Schindler for murder.

“If he didn’t think he was involved in the murders, I don’t think I ever get a plea out of this case,” Digiacomo said.

Sisolak attended the event Tuesday and sat in the audience. Digiacomo had invited her, she said.

When asked whether she thought there was enough evidence to connect Schindler to the two homicides, Sisolak replied, “I don’t think we’ll ever know.”

“My client had a lot of exposure, and so this is what we thought was fair for everybody,” Sisolak said. “It’s a good negotiatio­n if nobody is happy.”

Jaeger said he initially opposed using the dummy, but he figured there was little to lose. They needed a lead somehow.

“I don’t know if we could ever use this again,” he said.

Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter.

 ?? Morgan Lieberman ?? Las Vegas Review-journal The mannequin used to catch a suspected killer goes on temporary display at a panel discussion Tuesday at the Mob Museum.
Morgan Lieberman Las Vegas Review-journal The mannequin used to catch a suspected killer goes on temporary display at a panel discussion Tuesday at the Mob Museum.

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