Graphic police body camera video shown to jurors on the fourth day of an attempted murder trial in Maui captured the violent aftermath of the alleged attack — a woman covered in blood on a remote hiking trail after witnesses said she cried out that her doctor husband was trying to kill her.

The video, shown in court Wednesday, begins after two hikers called 911, telling dispatchers they heard the victim, identified in court as Arielle Konig, screaming for help on a trail in Hawaii.

When officers arrived, Konig slowly approached from the trail, her face bloodied. The hikers who found her stayed close, helping her lower herself to the ground near a rocky area while trying to keep her alert.

At one point, a bystander held a bandage to her head as she leans back against the rocks, appearing disoriented and struggling to remain conscious.

DOCTOR’S WIFE TESTIFIES HE BEAT HER WITH ROCK, TRIED TO FORCE HER TOWARD CLIFF EDGE DURING HIKE

Bodycam video shows Arielle Konig injured on Hawaii trail after alleged attack

Body camera footage shows Arielle Konig being helped by hikers after the alleged attack on a Hawaii hiking trail. (KHON-FOX)

Honolulu Police Department Officer Kevin Chun testified that Konig seemed exhausted, short of breath and confused when he arrived and began assessing the situation.

Although jurors did not hear the audio from the footage, the video shows Konig attempting to communicate through hand gestures as blood continued to run down her face.

Prosecutors allege the encounter turned violent when her anesthesiologist husband, Gerhardt Konig, tried to force her off the trail before repeatedly hitting her in the head with a rock and attempting to inject her with a syringe.

JURORS SHOWN BODYCAM OF DOCTOR’S BLOODY WIFE, ROCK HE ALLEGEDLY USED TO BASH HER IN CLIFFSIDE ATTACK

Rock presented as evidence in Maui attempted murder trial

A rock entered into evidence during the Maui attempted murder trial is alleged to have been used in the attack on Arielle Konig. (KHON-FOX)

Authorities say he fled the area after the hikers intervened and called for help.

In addition to the bodycam footage, jurors were shown photographs documenting the scene.

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An evidence specialist testified that images captured what appeared to be blood on leaves, branches and the ground, along with key features of the area, including a side trail, a break in the vegetation described as a “hole in the bush” and a nearby cliff edge.

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Arielle Konig testifies during her attempted murder trial in a Maui courtroom

Arielle Konig testifies in court during the Maui attempted murder trial involving her estranged husband. (KHON-FOX)

Investigators collected multiple pieces of evidence, including a rock believed to be linked to the attack, clothing and swabs from suspected blood stains. Another evidence specialist testified that he photographed Gerhardt Konig and collected a DNA sample from him more than a day after a point in the timeline raised by the defense.

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Gerhardt Konig sits in court during his Maui attempted murder trial

Gerhardt Konig sits in a Maui courtroom facing charges in the attempted murder trial involving his estranged wife. (KHON-FOX)

Jurors also heard testimony about how police tracked down the suspect.

Officer Chauncey Nicola said he spotted Gerhardt Konig while driving in an unmarked van and noticed what appeared to be blood on his shirt, prompting a chase into a grassy area where a struggle followed.

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Gerhardt Konig and his wife

Gerhardt Konig is charged with attempted second-degree murder after he allegedly tried to kill his wife while hiking in Hawaii.  (Gerhardt Konig/Facebook)

Officer Riley Borges and other officers joined the pursuit after Konig ran from brush onto a roadway, ultimately helping restrain him when he resisted arrest.

Police testified that the arrest ended with officers taking him to the ground and using force to get him under control.

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Lead investigator Asten Koki detailed the broader investigation, including the recovery of a blood-stained rock and a backpack containing personal items and a cellphone, as well as a second bag later recovered that allegedly contained medical supplies tied to the defendant.

Gerhardt Konig has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

‘Nobody’s coming to save you’: Wife of ex-UPMC doctor facing attempted murder charges testifies 1 year later

The trial is expected to continue Friday.

Arielle Konig thought her husband, a former UPMC anesthesiologist who used to live in Mt. Lebanon, was joking at first when he threatened her after the troubled couple snapped a selfie while strolling down a Hawaiian hiking trail last year.

Then, she testified Tuesday in an Oahu courtroom, Gerhardt Konig said — and kept repeating — two words: “You’re done.”

“He’s saying, like, ‘You’re done. We’re done with you. We don’t need you anymore. You’re done. You’re done,’ ” Arielle Konig, who was celebrating her 36th birthday at the time of the attack, said on the witness stand.

“I walked up to him, he grabbed me really forcibly by my upper arms and he said, ‘I’m so (expletive) sick of this (expletive), get back over there,’ ” she added.

“And he starts pushing me back towards the cliff.”

Konig was unsuccessful.

On Tuesday, as the second week of Gerhardt Konig’s attempted murder trial unfolded in Hawaii, the former UPMC anesthesiologist, unshaven and wearing a light-blue dress shirt, listened as Arielle described in detail how her then-husband allegedly tried to kill her.

Authorities arrested Gerhardt Konig, 47, last March after they said he repeatedly struck his wife in the head with a rock, tried to inject her with a syringe, and struggled to push her off a cliff.

“Nobody’s going to hear you out here,” Konig said, according to Arielle’s testimony, which was broadcast on Court TV. “Nobody’s coming to save you.”

‘He was very aware of where I was’

In March 2025, the couple went on a weekend vacation, leaving their two children with family and a nanny. They traveled from their Maui home to a hotel on Oahu, a neighboring island in Hawaii.

Konig suggested the two hike to the Nu’uanu Pali Lookout, a scenic overview surrounded by steep cliffs.

As the couple descended, returning to the start of the trail, Konig asked to take a photo with his wife near the edge of a cliff, she said.

Arielle became dizzy — and said she refused.

“He was very aware of where I was, where my feet were, where he was and where the trail was,” she testified earlier this week. “I feel like he was often looking at my feet and just very spatially aware of where I was on the trail.”

After taking the photo, Arielle said, she walked about 10 feet away from the cliff’s edge. Her back faced the edge of a steep drop-off.

That’s when Gerhardt’s behavior and tone turned hostile, she said.

‘Nobody’s coming to save you’

Gerhardt grabbed his wife forcefully by her upper arms and began to push her back to the edge of the cliff, she said.

“I was surprised,” Arielle testified. “It felt almost like he was kidding at first. I was like, ‘What are you doing?’ ”

Arielle said she threw herself on the ground and reached for tree roots — all while screaming and wrestling to free herself from her husband’s grip.

Gerhardt straddled her and wielded a syringe, which he grabbed from his backpack, she said.

She swatted it out of his hand and bit his right forearm. He pulled what appeared to be a vial from his backpack, she said.


 

Arielle testified that she tried to reason with her husband.

“I’m saying, ‘You can’t do this. Everyone knows we’re on a hike. They’ll know this wasn’t an accident, and our kids will be orphans. You’ll go to jail — and I’ll be dead,’ ” she said.

“You’re done,” he replied, according to Arielle’s testimony. “We don’t need you anymore.”

Arielle said she tried to remind her husband about their children and family, including the birthday text Arielle had received from his mom.

Gerhardt responded by picking up a rock and bashing it into her head, she said.

As she cried for help, a woman nearby replied: “We’re here. We’re calling 911.”

Gerhardt froze, she said, and slowly backed away from her. She then crawled toward the voices. A group of women helped her down the trail, where Arielle, her head covered in blood, was treated by first responders.

Arielle said her husband fled, later calling his adult son from his first marriage.

“I just tried to kill Ari but she got away,” he told his son, according to court documents.

Police capped an hours-long manhunt by chasing Konig into a grassy area. A struggle ensued. Officers then arrested him.

The couple married on Sept. 4, 2018, at their million-dollar home on Roycroft Avenue in Mt. Lebanon. Konig had been married before.

Around three years ago, the Konigs moved from Pennsylvania to Hawaii, where Konig worked for Anesthesia Medical Group and Maui Memorial Medical Center.

Leading up to the attack, things had soured between the pair.

Arielle wrote in a restraining-order petition that her husband accused her of having an affair, leading to “extreme jealousy.”

“Since then,” she wrote, “he has attempted to control and monitor all of my communications.”

The couple had been seeing therapists, both individually and as a couple, after their marriage started to sour.

Konig suggested the weekend getaway on Oahu to celebrate his wife’s 36th birthday.

Arielle — who studied nuclear engineering at Penn State University and earned a Master of Business Administration from the University of Pittsburgh — filed for divorce in May, two months after the attack.

The trial is slated to continue Friday, court records show.

Bodycam Footage Shows Hawaii Doctor’s Blood-Soaked Wife After Alleged Murder Attempt

Gerhardt Konig is on trial for attempted murder one year after he allegedly tried to throw his wife Arielle Konig off a cliff in Hawaii

Arielle Konig and witnesses, Arielle Konig in court

Arielle Konig and witnesses; and Arielle Konig in court.

The wife of a Hawaii anesthesiologist who survived his alleged murder attempt atop a steep cliff was seen bloodied and being helped down the trail by two women in police bodycam footage shown in court.

Arielle Konig, 36, testified in a Hawaii court this week in the attempted murder trial of her husband Gerhardt Konig.

Gerhardt, an anesthesiologist from Maui, is accused of trying to push Arielle, a nuclear scientist, off a cliff before trying to inject her with a syringe and bashing her head with a rock during a hike on March 24, 2025 on the Hawaiian island of Oahu.

In the bodycam footage, Arielle could be seen with blood smeared across her face after she survived the alleged attack.

The footage shows a responding officer approach Arielle and the two hikers who called 911 when they heard Arielle screaming, “He’s trying to kill me.”

They can be seen slowly coming down to the landing where the officer had arrived. One person helps Arielle sit down on the ground while they, along with the two witnesses, sit by her to render aid.

Another person is seen putting a bandage across Arielle’s head as she rests against some rocks.

The responding officer told the court on Wednesday, March 25, that Arielle sounded weak as she spoke to officers.

The audio was not played in court, but Arielle can be seen trying to communicate using her hands as blood streams down her face.

Earlier this week, Arielle recounted the harrowing details of the alleged attack, and how she went on the hike feeling “hopeful” about the future after marital issues she was facing with Gerhardt.

While on the hike, which was to celebrate Arielle’s birthday, Gerhardt allegedly tried to drag her to the edge of a steep cliff and when she tried to fight him, he got on top of her and said, “Nobody’s coming to save you.”

Gerhardt escaped after the two hikers, seen in the bodycam footage, heard Arielle screaming and called 911.

Gerhardt Konig in court, Mugshot for Gerhardt Konig

Gerhardt Konig in court (left); and Mugshot for Gerhardt Konig.