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Child killer has proclaimed innocence in cards, visits
San Diego Union Tribune ^ | 1/3/03 | Alex Roth

Posted on 01/03/2003 7:26:19 AM PST by Jaded

Early last month, Dave Laspisa, a Poway businessman, opened his mail and discovered a holiday card from his old friend David Westerfield.

"Greetings of the Seasons," the card announced, and inside was a handwritten note of thanks for Laspisa's support.

Van Dams file lawsuit against Westerfield

During the past year, Laspisa has been fairly vocal in his belief that Westerfield, his camping buddy, had nothing to do with the murder of 7-year-old Danielle van Dam.

"Please know that I was not involved in the death of this child," Westerfield wrote. "I'm saying this to you not to solicit more help but only to give you direct knowledge."

The card's imprinted message offered a wish that "the beauty of the season fill each heart with joy and cheer, and happiness fill every moment of the coming year."

In the past several months, friends and relatives have either received cards from Westerfield or visited him in the county jail as he awaits sentencing for abducting and killing the Sabre Springs second-grader, who lived two doors away. The sentencing is scheduled for this morning in San Diego Superior Court.

The former design engineer, who turns 51 next month, tells everyone essentially the same thing: He has been convicted of a crime he didn't commit.

He says he has no idea how the girl's blood got on his jacket or how her fingerprints got in his motor home. He says news reports of an aborted pretrial plea bargain are off base. He says he wanted to testify but stayed silent on his lawyers' advice.

Asked about the child pornography in his house, he told one friend, former business associate Carmen Genovese, that he was simply collecting the images so he could send them to Congress as examples of smut on the Internet.

Most of his friends aren't quite sure what to think at this point. At least one has come to the conclusion that Westerfield is probably guilty. Others, including Laspisa, still refuse to accept the prosecution's basic theory – that Westerfield is a pedophile who raped the child before killing her.

To a person, all of his friends continue to wrestle with the idea that a guy they thought they knew – a man who barbecued with them and shared holidays with them, a man who spent time with their children – could be capable of such a crime.

"I want to believe him because I feel like I know him," said Genovese's wife, D'Onn, who has been friends with Westerfield for 10 years. "And I don't want to believe him because that means there was funny business on the police side and there's someone still out there who does these things to children."

The sentencing is set for 8:30 a.m. today before Superior Court Judge William Mudd and will be carried live by several television stations, the final bit of drama in a case that has received more media attention than any other in San Diego County history.

In September, a jury recommended the death penalty for Westerfield, but Mudd has the authority to impose a sentence of life in prison without parole instead.

To some degree, today's proceeding represents one of the final loose ends in Westerfield's life. His house on Mountain Pass Road was sold months ago for $435,000, with the proceeds going to his lawyers. So were his sport utility vehicle and the dune buggies he took on camping trips to the desert. Many of his clothes have been given to charity.

Westerfield's 37-foot motor home – inside of which, prosecutors say, the girl was killed at some point during the first weekend of February 2002 – is in police custody and will be repossessed by a bank once he is sent to prison.

Westerfield, meanwhile, sits in the county jail in downtown San Diego, where he is isolated from other prisoners and where he has received a steady stream of visitors who speak to him through a closed-circuit television feed.

His college-age son and daughter have visited him about twice a month since his conviction. So have his sister and her husband.

During several visits with John Neal, the brother of Westerfield's second ex-wife, Westerfield talked about an appeal while recognizing that he's in for a long wait.

"He said he's getting claustrophobic being stuck in the jail and not having any hope of getting out soon," Neal said.

As for the girl's kidnapping and murder, Neal said, Westerfield has been consistent: "He has no idea what happened to Danielle. He had nothing to do with it."

Despite the enormous amount of physical evidence, despite the holes in Westerfield's alibi, despite the documented falsehoods in the stories he told to police and despite the collection of child porn, Neal said he's inclined to believe his former brother-in-law.

So, too, is Carmen Genovese, who has known Westerfield since the two men worked together 20 years ago at a company that manufactured orthopedic devices.

Until recently, Genovese, who lives in Encinitas, hadn't spoken to Westerfield since his conviction. Genovese's wife admits the couple had been troubled by his defense. In short, she said, they felt as if their friend behaved during the trial like a guilty man trying to avoid punishment.

If he had been wrongfully accused, D'Onn Genovese wondered, why hadn't he taken the witness stand to "shout it from the tallest mountain"?

Then in mid-December, a holiday card from Westerfield arrived. Like the card to Laspisa, it contained a handwritten note in which Westerfield denied any involvement in the crime.

Two days before Christmas, Genovese visited Westerfield in jail and they spoke for more than an hour, during which Genovese peppered his friend with question after question about the evidence.

How did Danielle's blood get on Westerfield's jacket, which he took to a dry cleaner at daybreak after returning from the meandering, 550-mile motor-home journey on the morning of Feb. 4?

"He says he has no clue how it got there," Genovese said.

Why didn't he testify or show emotion during the trial? It was all his lawyers' doing, Westerfield said.

"He was told – in fact, he was admonished a few times on the side – not to show any emotion," Genovese said.

What about the story in the Union-Tribune that Westerfield's lawyers tried to broker a plea bargain in February whereby he would reveal the location of the girl's body in exchange for a life sentence rather than the death penalty? Sources have confirmed those details in numerous conversations with the Union-Tribune, both before and after the article's publication.

In that matter, Westerfield didn't go into much detail with Genovese, other than to say it was the prosecution that approached the defense with the suggestion and that his lawyers simply listened to the offer. Westerfield's lawyers have declined to speak to the Union-Tribune.

Did Genovese find Westerfield's explanations persuasive?

"The guy is really a nice man," Genovese said. "I don't know whether he did it or not. I really don't. He tells me he didn't do it, and I have to believe him."

Not all of Westerfield's friends are as charitable. Wes Hill, the best man at Westerfield's second wedding, said the article about the aborted plea bargain convinced him that Westerfield committed the crime.

Hill, a former design drafter who lives in Utah, hasn't spoken to Westerfield since the trial and hopes his old friend "will go through some psychiatric counseling and get some help. He definitely went off the deep end."

"The only thing I can figure is that the pornography must have taken its toll," Hill said. "He got hooked into that and it warped his mind."

As for Laspisa, who has been outspoken in his support of Westerfield, he allows himself to say this much: "I do believe the real story has not been told."

In a recent interview, Laspisa acknowledged the possibility that Westerfield might have been involved in Danielle's death. But he refused to accept that Westerfield sneaked into the girl's bedroom with the intent of kidnapping, raping and killing her.

Laspisa speculated that perhaps the victim was sleepwalking in the neighborhood on the night of Feb. 1 and that Westerfield, driving home drunk from a bar in Poway, hit her, killed her and then panicked.

"In my mind, in my opinion, if it happened, it didn't happen the way it was presented in court," he said.

Laspisa is convinced of one thing, and on this point his views converge with those of virtually everyone else: No one except Westerfield will ever know exactly what he was thinking on that first weekend in February.


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: 180frank; convict; danielle; deathrow; dusek; feldman; fingermouthfetish; freak; guiltyguiltyguilty; mudd; pedophile; pervert; sandiego; vandam; westerfield
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To: CW_Conservative
Keyser/Ott sound like jackasses asking about the screen in the bathroom. Dave tells them the only thing he knows he can see from there is the street. Which means other people could see him.

So you buy the "some black guy" came by, knocked on the door and asked if DW wanted his windows washed and he's the one who bent the screen? Too bad DW says this anonymous window washer happened by two years ago and he didn't have a name to provide.

Also, the business about seeing the street--he wasn't talking about the bathroom window, he said the two front windows.

401 posted on 01/08/2003 3:43:37 PM PST by cyncooper
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To: cyncooper
Well, I hope the mantra that it was only a rumor that he failed a polygraph can finally be put to rest. I heard a portion of the tape last night and when the police were explaining to DW why they knew he had something to do with Danielle's disappearance, the polygraph was mentioned (as in, paraphrase, "your trip, the polygraph, ...").

You realize, of course, that the police can "lie" about such things in an interogation?

402 posted on 01/08/2003 7:02:25 PM PST by demsux
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To: cyncooper
So you buy the "some black guy" came by, knocked on the door and asked if DW wanted his windows washed and he's the one who bent the screen? Too bad DW says this anonymous window washer happened by two years ago and he didn't have a name to provide.

We use the "off duty firefighters" to do our windows, but I don't know any of their names.

403 posted on 01/08/2003 7:10:20 PM PST by demsux
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To: demsux
You realize, of course, that some of us have just heard the tape of the one, two, three, four polygraphs that DW took.
404 posted on 01/08/2003 7:11:03 PM PST by EllaMinnow (There's a fine line between open-minded and empty-headed.)
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To: redlipstick
I just heard a tape of a polygraph test being administered to DW. He ultimately takes four.

In addition, the prep for the test was played and the run-through before the first actual test.

DW clearly knows he is taking a polygraph test.

They break the knews to him later. As luck would have it, he failed, not once, not twice, not three, but he failed the test four times.

405 posted on 01/08/2003 7:14:43 PM PST by cyncooper
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To: demsux
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/danielle/20030108-1314-west.html

Listen for yourself.
406 posted on 01/09/2003 5:24:39 AM PST by EllaMinnow (There's a fine line between open-minded and empty-headed.)
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To: cyncooper
In addition to the polygraph they also had a tarot card reader, a clarivoyent, a palm reader and a magic eight ball -- all FOUR of whom pronounced Westerfield guilty with equal validity to the lie detetcor test. Eight for eight. Hang him!
407 posted on 01/09/2003 7:44:09 AM PST by bvw
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To: bvw
"In an interview yesterday, Redden said Westerfield was the only person who failed a polygraph test during the investigation into Danielle's disappearance. Both of the girl's parents, Brenda and Damon van Dam, passed the test, as did the four friends of the van Dams who partied with the couple on the night the girl vanished from her bedroom.

Westerfield's son, Neal, also passed the polygraph test."

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/danielle/20030109-9999_1m9david.html

408 posted on 01/09/2003 8:26:45 AM PST by EllaMinnow (There's a fine line between open-minded and empty-headed.)
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To: redlipstick
A polygraph is as reliable as a Newark (NJ) stripper. A series of them as reliable as her "extended family"
409 posted on 01/09/2003 10:15:59 AM PST by bvw
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To: bvw
Would you like all the threads that discussed the van dams and satanism?
410 posted on 01/09/2003 12:39:33 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (''To educate a man in mind & not in morals is to educate a menace to society.'')
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To: bvw
Well, I consider dealing in the occult satanism..you might not.
411 posted on 01/09/2003 12:40:10 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (''To educate a man in mind & not in morals is to educate a menace to society.'')
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
I love rationality. (But I still recognize that some numbers can not be expressed as the ratio of two rational numbers.)

Explain what makes a lie detector test less occultish than an ouija board. I can not.

412 posted on 01/09/2003 1:21:02 PM PST by bvw
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To: bvw
I think there is some credibility..if a persona is trying to be deceptive, their palms might get sweaty, their eyes might wonder a bit. I recall discussion about that on earlier threads. I wouldn't be surprised if the blood pressure shifted while someone lies. Just the fact that everyone else passed and not DW..makes one think there is definitely something going on there..

Regardless, I would not want polygraph results entered into trial evidence..
413 posted on 01/09/2003 1:28:47 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (''To educate a man in mind & not in morals is to educate a menace to society.'')
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
It is no different than a professional fortune teller. The gypsy woman reads facial, scent, movement, and verbal cues more adeptly than a lie-detector expert in a white smock.

And at the spirital level -- BOTH are subject to the occult.

Behaving rationally is a spiritual behaviour. It is good for the spirit.

The case *presented in court* against Westerfield is (1) based on a presumption of guilt and (2) due to the information withheld from the finders of fact (the jury) -- occultic. Remember "occult" means hidden. The jurors were cajouled to make a descision based on the hidden, for they surely did NOT make it on the revealed!

414 posted on 01/09/2003 1:44:15 PM PST by bvw
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To: bvw
I haven't viewed/heard it all yet, but my observations to date:

He is definitely guilty of possessing child porn. Even he admits that he thought those images were of 13 - 14 year olds.

He definitely should have consulted an attorney prior to 48+ hours of interogation, for that, he is plain STUPID.

He did deny being involved in the girl's disappearance, that's the first time I have heard it from him.

He mentioned the "oriental woman" in the neighborhood in the morning, but he also mentioned two "mexican" guys in a truck...Avila?

Will listen to the rest, however is definitely guilty of being, at the minimum, "naive".

415 posted on 01/09/2003 6:14:39 PM PST by demsux
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To: bvw
May 1, 2002, defense motion to admit 'lifestyle' evidence.

PDF document

I wonder why that link doesn't work?

416 posted on 01/09/2003 8:06:57 PM PST by demsux
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To: demsux
Got it to work:

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/danielle/documents/SCN_20030109150433_001.pdf

417 posted on 01/09/2003 8:48:02 PM PST by demsux
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To: TheSpottedOwl
"Btw, I addressed Fatima immediately on the appropriate post last night. She knows I remember her. "
You never posted to me.I have no idea who you are.
418 posted on 01/09/2003 9:05:00 PM PST by fatima (Put the hat on grandmom said,3 year old said,I can't it is to small,it is for an adult.)
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To: TheSpottedOwl
Don't know.Please verify were you posted to me .
419 posted on 01/09/2003 11:43:41 PM PST by fatima (Put the hat on grandmom said,3 year old said,I can't it is to small,it is for an adult.)
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To: demsux
Documents detail police suspicions Westerfield was 'Peeping Tom'


http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/danielle/20030109-9999-westerfield_documents.html


By Steve Perez
SIGNONSANDIEGO

January 9, 2003



One of some 1,200 pages of court documents relating to the murder and kidnapping case against David Westerfield that were released Thursday.

Police suspected David Westerfield was a 'Peeping Tom' who spied on neighbors using binoculors, videotaped them from afar, and secretly recorded himself and a woman having sex, according to court records unsealed in his murder trial on Thursday.

The allegations were included in volumes of motions made public by Superior Court Judge Mudd.

The suspicions were contained in a prosecution effort to present the evidence to the jury, stating it was relevant to the case.

Last Friday, Mudd sentenced Westerfield to death for kidnapping and murdering 7-year-old Danielle van Dam, his neighbor in Sabre Springs.



View April 29, 2002, prosecution motion detailing 'Peeping Tom' allegation against Westerfield
PDF document
View April 22, 2002, prosecution motion detailing rape allegation, information on "Jenny N." allegation.
PDF document



Other documents released January 9, 2003



From the U-T: Westerfield failed polygraph test badly



(The FREE Adobe Acrobat plug-in is necessary to view the above documents.)




The unsealed prosecution papers shed some light on a puzzling question in the case, how Westerfield was able to sneak into the van Dam's home and take the girl while her family slept.

"The first question that comes to mind is how did he know where to go," prosecutors stated in the filing. "The answer is that he is a 'Peeping Tom' and very likely scouted out the van Dam residence prior to entering."


420 posted on 01/10/2003 5:26:02 AM PST by EllaMinnow (There's a fine line between open-minded and empty-headed.)
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