GUILTY FL - Bonnie Haim, 23, Jacksonville, 6 Jan 1993 *husband arrested*

DNA Solves
DNA Solves
DNA Solves
It was son who found remains of woman killed 23 years ago

http://www.news4jax.com/news/local/jacksonville/it-was-son-who-found-remains-of-woman-killed-23-year-ago

A transcript of a police interview with Bonnie Haim's son, Aaron Fraser, now 26, shows he was the one who alerted police to human remains in 2014.

Fraser sat down for an interview with investigators in June.

Fraser had claimed for years that he witnessed his mother's murder as a young child. In an interview with detectives earlier this year, he told the investigator that his family didn’t believe him and his grandparents told him, “You’re brainwashed. We love you. We care about you. We want to see you.”

Fraser also talked about going back to his childhood home with his brother-in-law to renovate it and finding his mother’s remains buried about 6 inches underneath a concrete slab in the backyard.

Michael Haim is due back in court at the end of this month.
 
Haim's defense team wants key witness' statements prohibited

http://www.news4jax.com/news/michael-haim-defense-team-wants-key-witness-statements-prohibited

The defense team for a man accused of killing his wife in 1993 is trying to get statements made by the state’s key witness prohibited – calling them hearsay.

Michael Haim is accused of killing his wife, Bonnie, and burying her body in his backyard. Their son, Aaron Fraser, who was 3 years old at the time, claims his father shot her. Ironically, 22 years later, it was Aaron, who now goes by the last name of Fraser, who found his mother’s remains in the backyard of the home on Dolphin Avenue in December of 2014 while digging out an old pool.

According to Haim’s defense, Fraser made several contradictory statements to police about what happened to his mother more than 20 years ago. The defense claims those statements varied.
 
A man accused of murdering his wife 23 years ago and burying her body in the backyard of their Jacksonville home is being allowed to leave the state for the holidays.

(...) A motion from his lawyer asking that Haim be allowed to live in North Carolina, where his current wife has a home, was denied.

But another motion asking that Haim be allowed to return to North Carolina to see his wife for Christmas was granted. He is permitted to travel to North Carolina from Dec. 22 to Jan. 3.
http://www.news4jax.com/news/judge-man-accused-of-killing-wife-must-stay-in-florida_
 
http://www.news4jax.com/news/man-accused-of-killing-wife-appears-in-court

Bonnie Haim's son, Aaron Haim, was 3 years old when she disappeared in 1993. Police said he was the primary witness in the case.

Aaron Haim, who now goes by Aaron Fraser, told police at the time that he saw his father shoot and kill his mother.

Michael Haim and his lawyer argued Friday in Duval County court that those statements should not be admitted at Haim's murder trial.

The judge said he would rule by Feb 2.
 
Anybody have an update? When is this trial starting?
 
Court dates since the last update. Can't find any MSM on these. Not sure if they have an actual trial date.

8/7/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
8/21/2017 9:00 AM FINAL PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308 Yes
9/20/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
10/23/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
12/4/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
1/29/2018 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 307
3/5/2018 9:00 AM HEARING ON MOTION (TO BE SET) 3rd Floor 307
4/9/2018 9:00 AM HEARING ON MOTION (TO BE SET) 3rd Floor 307
5/29/2018 9:00 AM HEARING ON MOTION (TO BE SET) 3rd Floor 307

Searchable from here:
https://core.duvalclerk.com/CoreCms.aspx?mode=PublicAccess

(You don't need to register to search, just click somewhere on the screen that isn't the registration box).
 
The fact that the son went back and found the remains as an adult is especially damning evidence, and should show his childhood memory should be trusted in court. It also raises the question - was that house kept in the family as part of the civil settlement? Or did he purchase it to be able to access the property to dig? Either way, it's so admirable that after all these years he was determined to get justice for his mom and finally was the one to find the remains.
 
Any idea when this trial is suppose to start?

Don't know yet when the trial will start, but see below:

Next court date is 04/04/2019
Case Number: 2015-CF-007825-AXXX
Haim, Michael Ray (D) [D = Defendant]
DOB: 04/14/1966 (as of 3/2019, age 52)
Circuit Criminal Division: CR-E

CORE - Clerk Online Resource ePortal
 
Court dates since the last update. Can't find any MSM on these. Not sure if they have an actual trial date.

8/7/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
8/21/2017 9:00 AM FINAL PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308 Yes
9/20/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
10/23/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
12/4/2017 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 308
1/29/2018 9:00 AM PRETRIAL 3rd Floor 307
3/5/2018 9:00 AM HEARING ON MOTION (TO BE SET) 3rd Floor 307
4/9/2018 9:00 AM HEARING ON MOTION (TO BE SET) 3rd Floor 307
5/29/2018 9:00 AM HEARING ON MOTION (TO BE SET) 3rd Floor 307

Searchable from here:
CORE - Clerk Online Resource ePortal

(You don't need to register to search, just click somewhere on the screen that isn't the registration box).

Thank you. Your link was invaluable!
 
B88658005Z.1_20190408095840_000_GNPI54BV.2-0_Super_Portrait.jpg

It was a single-story, three-bedroom ranch house on a quiet residential street in a northern stretch of Jacksonville, Florida. Aaron Fraser had not lived inside since he was 4 years old, and the four walls held plenty of ugly memories and unresolved questions. But in December 2014, after the 24-year-old took possession of the house, he and his brother-in-law rolled up their sleeves for a renovation.

According to the Florida Times-Union, the two men began by smashing apart a swimming pool in the back with a rented excavator. At one point, the machine cracked a large concrete slab near an outdoor shower. Aaron began hacking at the pieces with a sledgehammer. Below in the dirt, he found a plastic bag, and from inside he pulled something out. It was a coconut, he thought.

"Why would someone bury a coconut in a bag?" Aaron asked his brother-in-law, according to News4Jax.


Then, the men noticed the teeth and eye sockets. It was a skull.

The discovery alone was a shock. But for Aaron, the human remains sunk below a layer of concrete in his boyhood home snapped the jumbled pieces of a family mystery into place. In January 1993, his mother, Bonnie Haim, had vanished. Police suspected her husband, Aaron's father, Michael Haim, of murdering his wife. Those suspicions started with what Aaron, who was then 3, had told authorities.

"Daddy hurt her," Aaron had said, the Times-Union reported. But Aaron's own family doubted the little boy's foggy account, and no physical evidence tied Michael to the crime.

But that day in December 2014, standing amid smashed concrete, Aaron was holding the evidence that would eventually lead to his father's arrest.

On Monday, the murder trial will start in Florida against Michael for his wife's 1993 murder. He maintains he was not involved in his wife's death. According to the Times-Union, Aaron is expected to testify, relaying his memories from when he possibly witnessed his mother's death, as well as the gruesome discovery that jump-started the cold case in 2014.

"Next month is going to hurt," Bonnie Haim's family members wrote last month about the upcoming trial on a Facebook page decided to her memory. "It is going to rip off bandages and expose us to things we had long ago pushed to the back of our memories. But sometimes we have to rip off bandages to really begin to heal."

Read more: 'Daddy hurt her': Nobody believed a boy's story — until he dug up the backyard 20 years later
 
Bonnie Haim 1993 murder: Son digs up mother's skull in backyard in cold case

Michael and Bonnie Haim worked together at a construction supply company owned by Michael’s aunt, Eveann Haim. He was a manager. Bonnie kept the business accounts.

According to “Unsolved Mysteries,” by the holiday season of 1992, the relationship was at a breaking point. The couple fought frequently, and their blowups turned violent.

“One day they got into an argument . . . in the parking lot,” Eveann told “Unsolved Mysteries.” “And she came in crying and he had slammed her hand in the door and her nails were broke and she was very upset at that point.”

Bonnie reportedly had decided to leave the marriage, taking her son with her. She secretly opened a bank account to save money for her escape, the Times-Union reported. When Michael discovered the account and forced her to close it, Bonnie began secreting cash to friends for safekeeping – $1,250 by early January 1993.

She reportedly picked a date late in January to leave, when Michael was away on business. In early January, she placed deposits on two apartments where she and her son could start over.

But on Jan. 7, 1993, Bonnie, 23, failed to show up to work. Her husband would later say the two had fought the night before, and that she left the house alone around 11 p.m. He asked his mother, Carol, to come over to watch his son while he went looking for Bonnie.

“According to Carol and Mike, he was gone approximately 45 minutes,” Jacksonville Sheriff’s Department Detective Robert Hinson told “Unsolved Mysteries.” “Then after he allegedly did that, he returned to the house where he waited until the next morning and never called the police, and called in and told his employer that he was going to be sick that day.”

The day she went missing, a hotel worker discovered Bonnie’s purse chucked into a dumpster behind a Red Roof Inn, not far from Jacksonville International Airport, the Times-Union reported. Police later discovered her Toyota Camry in an airport parking lot. The car, however, further raised investigators’ suspicions.

ETA: Unsolved Mysteries episode also at link above. Includes home video of Bonnie and toddler Aaron on Christmas morning-- filmed by Michael. She disappeared 2 weeks later.
 
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The fact that the son went back and found the remains as an adult is especially damning evidence, and should show his childhood memory should be trusted in court. It also raises the question - was that house kept in the family as part of the civil settlement? Or did he purchase it to be able to access the property to dig? Either way, it's so admirable that after all these years he was determined to get justice for his mom and finally was the one to find the remains.
Aaron got the house in 2005 as part of his wrongful death claim against his father. He was renovating the house in 2014 when he made the discovery.

Aaron was eventually adopted by another family, taking their last name. In the early 2000s, he filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against his biological father, even though Bonnie’s remains had not been found. In April 2005, he won a $26.3 million settlement against Michael, which included the ownership of the family home, News4Jax reported. It was being used as a rental.

Bonnie Haim 1993 murder: Son digs up mother's skull in backyard in cold case
 
More than 20 years later - facts will be known this week about the disappearance and alleged murder of Bonnie Haim as her husband goes to trial for murder.

Michael Haim never reporting his 23-year-old wife missing. When police were contacted by co-workers about her not showing up for work, the young mother's car was found in a parking lot at Jacksonville International Airport and her purse containing $1,250, credit cards and medications was found in a dumpster nearby.
 

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