Michigan

Ex-โ€˜Predator' Host Turns Himself In, Resolves Video Issue

Chris Hansen says the matter has been resolved

Chris Hansen, former host of the television program "To Catch a Predator."
Stamford Police Department via AP, File

The former host of the โ€œTo Catch a Predatorโ€ TV series turned himself in Friday after a Michigan judge issued a warrant for his arrest for no-showing at a court hearing to explain why he had not given a defense lawyer more footage of a police sting operation.

Chris Hansen, 61, checked in at the Shiawassee County jail in Corunna โ€” 65 miles (104.61 kilometers) northwest of Detroit โ€” was released and has 14 days to produce the full video, prosecutor Scott Koerner said. Hansen later posted a photo of the county courthouse on Instagram and said all matters had been resolved.

โ€œJustice marches on!โ€ he wrote.

The October sting operation between the Shiawassee and Genesee county sheriff's offices occurred in nearby Owosso. Three men, including a state corrections officer, were charged with trying to meet underage girls for sex. Hansen and a film crew had been embedded with investigators.

The bench warrant was rescinded by Judge Matthew Stewart, said Hansen's lawyer Clint Perryman.

โ€œHe wasn't intending to not appear or to be somebody that was trying to circumvent the process. It was just an unfortunate set of circumstances that resulted in a failure to appear,โ€ he said, citing bad timing and confusion over a subpoena. Hansen, who hosts a YouTube show and a podcast, has a home in Michigan but primarily lives in New York, Perryman said.

Hansen and his team had provided an edited video, but a defendant wanted all of the footage in case there is any exculpatory information, he said.

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