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Flathead County Man Convicted of Sexual Assault Charged with Intimidation

Convicted of sexual assault in 1995, Dale Michael Hanson allegedly said he was going to kill judges, attorneys

By Justin Franz

A man convicted of sexually assaulting a 5-year-old boy in the 1990s has been arrested after he allegedly sent a letter to law enforcement officials threatening to kill judges and prosecutors in Flathead County.

Dale Michael Hanson served 10 years in prison after he was convicted in 1995 of sexual assault and deviant sexual conduct, but maintained his innocence for more than two decades. Since his release in 2005, Hanson has refused to register as a sex offender and has been wanted by law enforcement.

Last month, Hanson allegedly sent letters to the U.S. Marshals Service in Missoula and the Flathead County Sheriff’s Office in Kalispell stating he was going to “start killing people to get public attention” and “have my revenge” for his conviction. Hanson’s letter listed multiple Flathead County employees, attorneys and judges as people he wanted killed.

Hanson has been charged with felony intimidation and failure to register as a sexual offender. He is scheduled for an arraignment on Sept. 22.

According to court documents, Hanson forced his girlfriend’s young son to touch his penis and perform oral sex on him in 1991 and 1992. A jury found Hanson guilty in March 1995 and in July of that year he was sentenced to 20 years in the Montana State Prison with 10 years suspended.

Four years after his release in 2005, local law enforcement discovered that Hanson, who had moved back to Flathead County, had never registered as a sexual offender. In September 2009, Deputy Flathead County Attorney Lori Adams filed felony charges of failure to register as a sexual offender against Hanson.

In 2015, Hanson filed a petition for post-conviction relief with the Montana Supreme Court where he continued to insist that he was innocent. Hanson, who was represented by attorneys from the Montana Innocence Project, argued that prosecutors suppressed evidence that was favorable to Hanson during the 1995 trial. The motion also stated that the detective leading up the case against Hanson had interfered with witnesses who wanted to testify on Hanson’s behalf. The Montana Supreme Court was not convinced and dismissed Hanson’s motion earlier this year.

In early August, the U.S. Marshals Service and the Flathead County Sheriff’s Office received multiple threatening letters from Hanson stating he was informing the agencies “that there are going to be a bunch of dead people if your agency does not intervene on my behalf,” charging records state. In the letter to the Marshals Service, Hanson allegedly explained that he had been fighting the “Nazi bastards of Flathead County Montana” for 22 years for crimes he did not commit.

“There are going to be some dead people over this [expletive deleted] up mess if they are not held accountable!” Hanson allegedly wrote. “That you can take to the bank.”

Hanson also wrote that he would have “revenge” before listing 18 individuals who have lived in Flathead County in the past, including the victim in the 1995 case, according to records.

In the letter to the Marshals Service, Hanson said he would wait a few weeks for law enforcement to intervene on his behalf before “starting the chaos and mayhem to see justice done myself vigilante style,” records state.

Hanson wrote similar statements in the letter to Flathead County Sheriff Chuck Curry.

“When they send their Nazi bootjack death squad after me, it will be to execute me,” Hanson allegedly wrote. “All I need is to see them and I’ll be pumping as much lead at them as I can before they kill me, and I will make them kill me! I’ll take as many of them with me as I can. They may take my life, but they’ll never take my freedom again!”

Hanson was arrested on Aug. 24. If convicted, he could face up to 15 years in prison and thousands of dollars in fines.