Neal Zumberge didn't shoot and kill his New Brighton neighbor last year over the man's long-standing habit of feeding deer. Rather, Zumberge's attorney said Wednesday, he shot Todd Stevens because of the "hillbilly hell" his family endured for years living across the street from Stevens, an inveterate drinker who fought with his father and the entire Zumberge family.
That alleged "hell" should be admissible as evidence at Zumberge's murder trial next month, his attorney, William Orth, argued at a hearing Wednesday in Ramsey County District Court.
Stevens, 46, died after being shot in the heart, brain and spinal column. His longtime girlfriend, Jennifer Damerow-Cleven, 49, was injured.
"These two, Jennifer Damerow-Cleven and Todd Stevens, are bad actors," Orth said. "They're always in trouble with the police, and they're dangerous."
Orth and his co-counsel, Gary Wolf, are expected to argue at trial that Zumberge, 58, acted in self-defense and in defense of his wife, Paula Zumberge, when he fired a 12-gauge semiautomatic shotgun at Stevens and Damerow-Cleven from his yard across the street on May 5, 2014.
Among Stevens' behaviors that alarmed the Zumberges, Orth said, was a habit of ordering his Doberman pinscher and boxer dogs to run up to the Zumberge mailbox and then back to his own property.
Assistant Ramsey County Attorney Anna Christie said much of the evidence Orth proposed admitting at trial was old and "irrelevant."
"It doesn't matter if Mr. Stevens may not have been a good person," Christie said. "Mr. Stevens has every right to be drunk in his home."