Husband's house searched Oakland police seek clues in woman's disappearance a year workin... Husband's house searched Oakla

Submitted by admin on Thu, 2006-09-14 11:00. ::

Reiser wrote that when her husband did come back, he began exposing their toddler son to violent video games and movies, which gave the boy nightmares. "I saw a rapid and alarming overall decline in his mental health," Nina Reiser wrote about her son.

Hans Reiser said in an interview published online that he dropped out of school in eighth grade because he disagreed with having to do homework. "... Homework I could only possess a theoretical understanding of the social purpose of," he said.

Reiser told the interviewer for kerneltrap.org that he applied to the University of California, Berkeley, and was accepted at age 15. He eventually received his bachelor's degree there.

The family court of Alameda County granted Nina Reiser a temporary restraining order against her husband in December 2004, barring him from coming in contact with her or their two children. The order eventually was dissolved after mediation, and friends said Reiser was allowing her estranged husband to see the kids.

Hans Reiser fired at least four attorneys during the divorce proceedings, and represented himself for a time. The divorce settlement still has not been finalized, and a settlement conference is scheduled for Dec. 15.

While police kept searching for clues, friends of Nina Reiser taped photographs of their smiling friend to a fence at Montclair Park. A candlelight vigil is planned at the park at 7 p.m. Friday.

Anthony Zografos, 46, and Ellen Doren talked to Reiser on Sept. 3 before her disappearance. They said she planned to drop her kids off at Hans Reiser's house at 2 p.m. that day.

Both friends are leading the effort to get pictures and information about their friend out. Zografos, who was dating Reiser at the time of her disappearance, said he will hand out fliers at farmers markets in Oakland throughout the weekend.

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