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Mollie Tibbetts murder trial: Boyfriend denies role in Iowa college student’s 2018 slaying

Video, DNA will be key as trial begins in Cristhian Bahena Rivera’s trial

Mollie Tibbetts murder trial: Boyfriend denies role in Iowa college student’s 2018 slaying
Mollie Tibbetts murder trial: Boyfriend denies role in Iowa college student’s 2018 slaying
Mollie Tibbetts murder trial: Boyfriend denies role in Iowa college student’s 2018 slaying
Mollie Tibbetts murder trial: Boyfriend denies role in Iowa college student’s 2018 slaying
Cristhian Bahena Rivera listens on the first day of testimony Wednesday in his murder trial, being held in the courtroom at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport. He is charged with first-degree murder in the death of University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

The boyfriend of University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts testified Wednesday that he had nothing to do with her 2018 abduction and stabbing death, saying he had been out of town for work and was heartbroken by her slaying.

Dalton Jack, her longtime boyfriend, was a key witness on the first day of the first-degree murder trial of Cristhian Bahena Rivera, 26, the Mexican national charged in her killing.

Video highlights from Day 1:

Prosecutor Bart Klaver said in his opening statement Wednesday that video evidence, DNA analysis and a partial confession by Bahena Rivera, a dairy farmworker, will be crucial to proving his guilt. Tibbetts, 20, disappeared while out for a run in Brooklyn, Iowa, on July 18, 2018. Her body was recovered a month later in a cornfield.

During cross-examination, defense attorneys for Bahena Rivera worked to try to cast suspicion on Jack, painting him as a man with a temper who had a tumultuous relationship with Tibbetts and had cheated on her with at least one other woman.

But Klaver said a homeowner's surveillance video shows Bahena Rivera's black Chevy Malibu appearing to circle Tibbetts as she ran. Bahena Rivera told police that he drove past Tibbetts and turned around to get a second look because he thought she was "hot," Klaver said.

A photograph of Mollie Tibbetts is shown in the courtroom as her longtime boyfriend, Dalton Jack, testifies Wednesday during the trial of Cristhian Bahena Rivera at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport. Bahena Rivera is charged with first-degree murder in the 2018 death of Tibbetts. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Bahena Rivera admitted to investigators that he got out of his car and ran to catch up with her, and became angry and fought with her after she threatened to call police, Klaver told the jurors. Bahena Rivera said the next thing he remembered was driving his Malibu with her bloody body in the trunk, which he then carried over his shoulder and hid beneath stalks in a cornfield, the prosecutor said.

Klaver said blood found in the trunk matched Tibbetts' DNA. He said an autopsy found she had been stabbed from seven to 12 times in the chest, ribs, neck, and skull, and that she died from sharp force injuries.

If convicted, Bahena Rivera faces life in prison without parole.

LIVE COVERAGE: Replay of Day 1 from the courtroom in Mollie Tibbetts murder trial

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The jury including three alternates comprises 12 white people and three of Hispanic, Latino or Spanish descent, according to demographic data released Wednesday. The case inflamed passions over illegal immigration, after then-President Donald Trump said Bahena Rivera had exploited lax immigration laws to enter the United States from Mexico as a teenager.

Interpreter Steven Rhodes, left, translates testimony Wednesday from English into Spanish for Cristhian Bahena Rivera during his trial at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport. Bahena Rivera is charged with first-degree murder in the 2018 death of Mollie Tibbetts. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Jack, 23 and now an Army sergeant stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, testified that he met Tibbetts at high school and had been dating her for three years. He described her as "happy, bubbly, goofy," saying she liked to have fun and that she went running most days.

On the day she disappeared, Tibbetts was staying at the Brooklyn home where Jack and his older brother, Blake Jack, lived. She had been watching Blake Jack's dogs while the brothers were out of town that week for work.

Brooklyn hairdresser Kristina Steward testified that she drove past Tibbetts while she was running on a road outside Brooklyn at about 7:45 p.m. on July 18. She said she had known Tibbetts for years and her "heart sank" when she learned the next day she was missing.

The Jack brothers testified they became concerned after learning on July 19 that Tibbetts had not shown up for work at a day care, and she was not answering her phone. Both returned to Brooklyn to search for her before calling police.

Dalton Jack testified he had been part of a crew building a bridge in Dubuque, about 140 miles from Brooklyn. He worked 12 hours on July 18 then drank beer and played yard games with the crew before going to sleep at a hotel, adding that he never returned to Brooklyn that night.

On cross-examination, Jack acknowledged he used to have a "short fuse" and would get into fights. He said he had "screwed up" and cheated on Tibbetts once, and that she discovered the relationship after looking through his phone.

Jack said the two worked through the problem and never broke up but acknowledged Tibbetts told him three days before she disappeared that she remained sad and upset about his infidelity. On the day before she went missing, she had discussed one of his previous relationships with a second woman, Jack admitted.

With friends and police searching for Tibbetts, a woman with whom Jack has previously had a relationship sent him a text message asking, "Dalton, is Mollie alive?" defense lawyer Chad Frese said, calling the question "odd."

Defense attorneys Jennifer Frese and Chad Frese chat as Chad Frese cross examines Mollie Tibbetts' boyfriend, Dalton Jack, on Wednesday during the murder trial of Cristhian Bahena Rivera at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)

Jack admitted that he initially told police that he was watching a movie in his hotel room on the night she disappeared and that he withheld information about his infidelity, calling it irrelevant. He also acknowledged that he told police his last communication with Tibbetts was a Snapchat he received at 10:30 p.m. that night, but phone records show it was after 1 a.m.

He also said he did not agree to voluntarily testify and required a subpoena because he didn't want to be in "the same room" as Bahena Rivera.

"I am obviously not his biggest fan," he said. "I wholeheartedly believe he's guilty."

Jack said he joined the Army three months after Tibbetts' body was found because he was heartbroken and "wanted to pretty much leave" their hometown.

The trial is being held at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport, where it was moved on a change of venue. Because of pandemic concerns, the public is not allowed to attend in-person. The trial is being livestreamed by Court TV and other media outlets, including TheGazette.com, and is expected to last through next week.