THE DEFENSE STRIKES BACK! ‘She Lied, The DNA Proves It!’ — Dr. Konig’s Lawyer Rips Apart ‘Plan A, B, and C,’ Claiming Arielle Held the Rock and the ‘Murder Bag’ Was a Set-Up
HONOLULU, HI — “A theory in search of facts.” With those biting words, defense attorney Thomas Otake launched a scorched-earth counter-attack on Tuesday, accusing the State of “spinning” a medical nightmare into a fake murder plot. In a dramatic closing argument, Otake claimed the prosecution’s “3 Plans of Death” is nothing more than a “ludicrous” work of fiction, asserting that the true “monster” on the Pali Puka trail wasn’t the doctor, but the lies of a cheating wife.
The DNA Bombshell: ‘The Rock Was in HER Hand’
Otake dropped a forensic grenade in the courtroom, claiming the State’s DNA evidence actually destroys Arielle Konig’s story. “The DNA shows she’s holding the rock,” Otake told the jury, arguing that Arielle wasn’t a defenseless victim, but the primary aggressor. He mocked the idea that she “flicked” a syringe out of a trained surgeon’s hand, calling her version of the struggle “physically impossible.”
‘Matter-of-Fact’ or Cold-Blooded?
The defense took a sharp aim at Arielle’s “robotic” demeanor on the stand. Otake pointed out the chilling contrast: Arielle remained stone-faced while describing a “bloody murder” attempt, yet only broke down when shown a birthday card written by her husband. “She knows it was genuine,” Otake argued. “He made a dinner reservation for that night. You don’t book a table for two if you’re planning a murder.”
The ‘Murder Bag’ Mystery Exposed
Otake accused Arielle of a calculated frame-up regarding the medical bag found with syringes. He claimed she knew the bag was there all along, only “discovering” it for the police after consulting with her attorney. “She lied about the bag, she lied about her affair, and she lied to her doctor,” Otake thundered, quoting Mark Twain to warn the jury: “Once caught lying, you can never again be in the eyes of the good and the pure what you were before.”

HONOLULU (Island News) – Closing arguments are underway in the attempted murder trial of Maui doctor Gerhardt Konig.
Jurors heard from prosecutors first thing Tuesday morning. They’re laying out what they call a ‘calculated attempt’ to kill his wife on the Pali Puka Trail.
Before noon on Tuesday, the state argued that this was not a spontaneous fight, but a ‘deliberate plan.’
Prosecutors walked jurors through what they described as multiple attempts; first allegedly trying to push Arielle Konig off a steep ridge, then allegedly attempting to use a syringe, and finally allegedly beating her with a rock.
Prosecutors also pointed to physical evidence including the rock shown in court, and said that Arielle’s testimony is backed up by injuries, DNA, and witness accounts. They told jurors the defendant’s version of events is ‘unbelievable,’ and argued that he even confessed in a phone call shortly after the incident.
The defense maintains that Dr. Konig acted in self-defense, saying his wife attacked him first. The defense continues to give their closing arguments.
This story will be updated once more information becomes available.
Check out Island News’ previous coverage on this case, below.
Jury deliberating in Hawaii trial of doctor accused of trying to kill wife during hike
Gerhardt Konig has pleaded not guilty and testified in his own defense.
The jury is deliberating in the trial of a Hawaii doctor accused of trying to kill his wife on a hiking trail.
Dr. Gerhardt Konig, 47, has pleaded not guilty to second-degree attempted murder. Prosecutors allege the anesthesiologist attacked his wife, Arielle Konig, near a cliff while on the Pali Puka Trail on Oahu on March 24, 2025, by pushing her near the edge and then beating her multiple times with a rock.
The defense, meanwhile, has alleged that Arielle Konig attacked her husband first, and that he hit her with the rock in self-defense.
Both Gerhardt Konig and his wife testified during the three-week trial in Honolulu, presenting these widely differing accounts of what happened on the hike.

Prosecutor Joel Garner told jurors in his closing argument that the evidence proves beyond a reasonable doubt that Gerhardt Konig intended to kill his wife that day on the challenging, narrow and steep Pali Puka Trail by pushing her off the cliff.
“One push is all it would take on this trail,” Garner said. “One push, and it’s a tragic accident.”
When that alleged plan didn’t work, Garner argued that the defendant then tried to inject her with a syringe before ultimately attacking her with a rock.
“The defendant swung this rock so hard that pieces of rock broke off into Arielle’s scalp,” Garner said.

The prosecutor alleged that Gerhardt Konig came up with the plan to avoid a costly divorce.
Garner said Arielle Konig’s “straightforward” and “coherent” testimony was corroborated by the bloody evidence at the scene, the “severity” of her injuries, digital evidence and the testimony of other witnesses — including two women who came upon the couple in the midst of the alleged attack.
“The only thing that got him to stop was being caught red-handed,” Garner said.
Garner argued that Gerhardt Konig’s testimony, meanwhile, was “unbelievable” and “filled with contradictions,” and that the defendant’s account of his wife attacking him with the rock “doesn’t make sense.”
The prosecutor juxtaposed photographs of Gerhardt Konig’s bruised face with Arielle Konig’s bloodied one that were taken in the wake of the incident.
“The idea that these injuries were caused by the same rock — completely unbelievable,” Garner said.
Garner also pushed back against Gerhardt Konig’s testimony that he only hit his wife two times, citing the extent of her injuries.
“He hit her again and again and again and again, and he only told you two times,” Garner said.
During his closing argument, defense attorney Thomas Otake said there is “reasonable doubt all over this case,” referring to it as “he said, she said.”
“They’re undeterred by the evidence,” Otake said of the prosecutors. “It doesn’t matter what it shows, they’re going to spin it in their favor. They came up with a theory and they went to search for facts to support it.”
He argued there was no plan for the defendant to kill his wife and reread the birthday card that Gerhardt Konig wrote to his wife for her birthday the day of the hike — in which he wrote in part, “You’re the heart of our family.”
“You don’t write a letter like this if you’re planning to kill somebody two hours later,” Otake said.
He disputed the alleged plan outlined by the prosecutor.
“Why in the world, if you bring a syringe to incapacitate someone to make it easier to throw them off the cliff, why would the syringe be Plan B? It would be Plan A,” Otake said.
He also questioned why Arielle Konig’s testimony was largely unemotional, save for when she read the birthday card from her husband, and argued that her testimony was “not reliable.”
“You cannot get emotional over a made-up story that didn’t happen when you started the fight,” Otake said.
If the jurors are unable to find Gerhardt Konig guilty of second-degree attempted murder, they will consider whether he is guilty of attempted manslaughter based upon extreme mental or emotional disturbance, first-degree attempted assault, second-degree assault or third-degree assault.

While on the stand during the trial, Arielle Konig testified that the two had traveled to Oahu from their home in Maui to celebrate her birthday. She said they had been working on repairing their marriage after her husband found what she characterized as “flirty” WhatsApp messages between her and a colleague in December 2024 in what she said was an “emotional affair.”
Arielle Konig testified that during the hike, her husband pushed her toward the edge of the cliff. As they wrestled on the ground with him on top, pinning her down, he produced a syringe and vial, she said.
She further testified that her husband proceeded to beat her with a rock as many as 10 times, and that she believed he was trying to knock her unconscious in order to drag her over the edge of the cliff.
Arielle Konig testified that she fought back by biting her husband’s forearm and pleaded with him, saying, “You can’t do it,” and that “our kids will be orphans — you’ll go to jail and I’ll be dead.”
“He’s saying, ‘You’re done. We’re done with you. We don’t need you anymore. You’re done. You’re done,'” she told the court.
Arielle Konig testified that she yelled, “He’s trying to kill me,” and screamed for help, and two female hikers happened upon them. One of the hikers told a 911 operator, “Someone’s currently being attacked on the top of Pali Puka. There’s a man trying to kill her,” according to audio of the call played in court.
Prosecutors showed photos of Arielle Konig’s bloodied face following the incident. She testified that she crawled away from her husband and was helped down the rest of the trail by the two women. She said she was treated at a hospital for “severe complex scalp lacerations” and showed the court scarring on her scalp.
Gerhardt Konig testified in his own defense over two days, maintaining that he never intended to hurt his wife and acted in self-defense when he struck her with the rock.
He told the court that his wife pushed him near the edge after they got into an argument about her affair, and that she hit him with a rock first while they struggled on the ground. He admitted to hitting her with the rock while on top of her, saying he struck her twice, though he denied having any syringes or trying to pull her toward the cliff’s edge.
Gerhardt Konig testified that he felt suicidal after the incident.
“I just felt hopeless at that point in terms of everything,” he said. “I felt horrified about what I did to her, that I had caused this to her, that I had resorted to violence against my wife, the person who I love the most in the world. And I just kind of felt hopeless in terms of our relationship, too.”
Shortly after the incident, Gerhardt Konig testified, he made a FaceTime call to his 20-year-old son from his prior marriage, Emile Konig, to say goodbye.
His son testified about the FaceTime call during the trial. Asked by the prosecutor to recount what his father said during the call, Emile Konig responded, “That he would not be making it back to Maui and to take good care of the younger kids, and that Ari, my stepmom, had been cheating on him, and that he tried to kill her.”
“During that call, the next plan that he said was to jump off the cliff,” Emile Konig testified, adding that his father said he was “at the end of his rope.”

Gerhardt Konig pushed back against his son’s testimony and denied making any confession. He told the court that what he said during the call was, “She said I tried to kill her.”
Gerhardt Konig was arrested following an hourslong manhunt, prosecutors said.
Arielle Konig filed for divorce in May 2025, seeking full custody of the couple’s two young children.
Gerhardt Konig, who worked as an anesthesiologist on Maui, has been in jail since his arrest. Following his arrest, Maui Health said his medical staff privileges at Maui Memorial Medical Center have been suspended pending investigation.
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