Hawaii Anesthesiologist’s Wife Testifies He Tried to Kill Her on Oahu Cliff Hike
In a Hawaii courtroom on Tuesday, nuclear engineer Arielle Konig testified that her husband, anesthesiologist Gerhardt Konig, tried to kill her exactly one year earlier by forcing her toward a cliff edge on Oahu’s Pali Puka trail, attempting to stab her with a syringe, and then repeatedly striking her head with a rock. She told jurors he shouted, “You’re done…we don’t need you anymore” as he allegedly attacked during what was supposed to be a birthday hike, and a nurse hiker, Sarah Bucksbom, described finding Arielle with her face and head covered in blood before calling 911. Konig, a former University of Pittsburgh Medical Center anesthesiologist now working with Anesthesia Medical Group in Hawaii, is charged with second-degree attempted murder and faces up to life in prison if convicted. Prosecutors say a phone call he made afterward to his 19‑year‑old son — in which they argue he said, “I tried to kill Arielle, but she got away” — was a confession, while the defense claims Arielle was having an affair, struck him first with a rock, and that the call was a suicidal goodbye. The case has drawn attention both for its alleged premeditation in a remote, dangerous setting and for how sharply the spouses’ accounts diverge, underscoring the challenges jurors face in reconstructing domestic violence incidents that unfold out of public view.
📌 Key Facts
- Defendant: anesthesiologist Gerhardt Konig, charged with second-degree attempted murder in Hawaii
- Alleged incident: March 2025 hike on Oahu’s Pali Puka trail during a birthday trip, where wife says he tried to push her off a cliff, inject her with a syringe, and beat her with a rock
- Key evidence: wife Arielle’s detailed testimony; eyewitness nurse Sarah Bucksbom’s description of finding her covered in blood; disputed phone call to Konig’s 19‑year‑old son that prosecution calls a confession and defense calls a suicide goodbye
- Potential penalty: up to life in prison if Konig is convicted
📊 Relevant Data
In the US, over 1 in 3 women (35.6%) and 1 in 4 men (28.5%) have experienced rape, physical violence, and/or stalking by an intimate partner in their lifetime.
Domestic Violence Statistics — The Hotline
Nearly 75 percent of domestic violence victims in the US are female, based on reported incidents.
In a 2024 survey, over 1 in 10 healthcare professionals reported current domestic abuse, mainly perpetrated by male partners, with 11% of abusers being healthcare workers.
Healthcare professionals as domestic abuse survivors: workplace impact and support — Occupational Medicine (Oxford Academic)
In Hawaii, domestic violence programs served 579 victims in a single day in 2024, with 12 programs participating in the count.
DV Data — Hawai'i State Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Recent statistics indicate that 20% of married men and 13% of married women in the US admit to cheating, with emotional affairs reported as potentially more damaging than physical ones by 64% of couples.
Infidelity Statistics 2026: Cheating Rates, Affairs & Research Data — South Denver Therapy
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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