Susan walters
Susan Kuhnhausen wrapped her hands around his neck. The fight lasted about 15 minutes before she threw her leg over his body and climbed on top of him, pinning him down.
Somehow, using all her strength, she managed to pull him down to the ground. “You’re strong,” he said, uttering his only words during the ordeal.Īt one point, he spun her around and delivered a punch split that her lip and knocked her to the floor. Kuhnhausen managed to fight back, punching and biting Haffey. But she outweighed him and had that self-defense training on her side. Kuhnhausen was 5’4” tall and her would-be killer had five inches on her. Haffey lunged at her with a hammer and hit her square in the temple. Susan Kuhnhausen later said as soon as she saw Haffey she realized, “He is here to kill me.” She added, “I don’t know why. Unfortunately for her, her husband didn’t. In 2006, Susan reached her tipping point and found the strength to kick her husband out of the house and seek a divorce. Susan and Mike had been married for 17 years, during much of which Mike had been emotionally abusive toward her. Susan’s husband Mike Kuhnhausen agreed to pay him $50,000 if he killed her. His name was Ed Haffey and he had a criminal record. That was until she turned around to find a man she had never seen before standing in her home. She usually opened them in the morning, but she didn’t think much of it. It was dark in the house because the curtains had been closed. Then 51, Susan Kuhnhausen returned home from another tireless day on the job. But on that fateful evening, she discovered otherwise. She just didn’t think she’d ever need to use any of these skills outside of the ER.
#SUSAN WALTERS CRACKED#
She also had experience administering IVs into thrashing patients going through drug withdrawals, and occasionally cracked open the chests of patients in order to perform heart massages. Susan Kuhnhausen had been an emergency room nurse for 30 years at Providence Portland Medical Center in Portland, Oregon, where nurses are trained regularly in self-defense. The voice on the end of that phone call was Susan Kuhnhausen’s neighbor. Youtube Susan and Mike Kuhnhausen in happier times.