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Judge Mudd Refuses Sequester Plea: Westerfield Jury Verdict In Sep? (Aug. 16th Verdict Watch)
Union Trib ^
| August 15, 2002
| Jeff Dillion/Steve Perez
Posted on 08/16/2002 6:39:20 AM PDT by FresnoDA
August 15, 2002
Arguing that media coverage was creating a "lynch mob mentality" that could pressure jurors to return a guilty verdict, the defense attorney for David Westerfield today asked the judge yet again to sequester the jury.
While the jury completed its first week of deliberations without a verdict, Superior Court Judge William Mudd denied the request and a related motion to "pull the plug" on television and radio coverage of the courtroom proceedings, but agreed to set aside a private room for jurors to take breaks. Defense attorney Steven Feldman had argued that reports suggested jurors felt like they were under siege, unable to leave their deliberating room, go to lunch or walk home without being watched or followed.
"We have no assurance that they are not be intimidated ... by the presence of the media," Feldman told Mudd during a morning hearing. "We can think of only one fair resolution to that: Get the jury out of harm's way."
'Broccoli heads'
He cited an incident earlier in the week in which radio talk show hosts from KFI-AM 640 in Los Angeles broadcast from outside the courthouse, waving stalks of broccoli around and reportedly calling jurors "broccoli heads" for being unable to return a quick guilty verdict. Westerfield, 50, could face the death penalty if convicted of kidnapping 7-year-old Danielle van Dam from her family's Sabre Springs home on Feb. 2 and killing her. Jurors are in their sixth day of deliberations.
Lead prosecutor Jeff Dusek disagreed with Feldman's interpretations of the jury's complaints.
"Whether or not any guilty verdict in this case would be based on a siege mentality or the meida I think is pure speculation and utterly false in this case," Dusek said.
What the jurors had complained about was being watched all the time, he said.
"That hardly equates to being under siege," he said.
Trust in the jury
Mudd dismissed most of Feldman's concerns, saying that the jurors had only asked a bailiff to keep reporters a little bit farther away, though an alternate juror reported that he or she had been followed to his car. Media coverage has diminished since the jurors began deliberating, the judge said.
"The synopsis programs on the two local TV networks are not in place," he said. "The talking heads are doing nothing but speculating about what the jury may or may not be thinking."
Mudd said there were no signs that jurors were being harassed by the public, especially since their names and faces haven't been publicized.
"We've all sat here and picked this jury, know their makeup and know their dedication to this cause," Mudd said. "I would prefer to think that any verdict they make in this case would be based upon the evidence."
Sequestering the jury also wouldn't protect them from any public reaction to the verdict, Mudd said.
'The activities of a few'
"The tragedy is, the majority of the people in this courtroom are abiding by the court's orders and working very hard to insure they, meaning the media, do not cause something to occur that is going to cause a mistrial," Mudd said. "Not all of them feel that way as is very apparent with the activities of a few." Mudd took aim at two radio program hosts from Los Angeles who he previously described as "idiots."
"I suppose it's entertainment out of LA. I hope it stays in LA," he said. "The shows those two gentlemen put on made the court incredulous as to what they were attempting to do."
Mudd also announced:
- The jury asked to review the recall testimony of prosecution witness Jennifer Shen, a criminalist with the San Diego Police Department.
On July 9, Shen's testimony interrupted presentation of defense witnesses. Shen, a San Diego police criminalist, testified about re-examining a group of fibers she had collected from Westerfield's 4Runner in February.
The orange acrylic fibers, found in various places inside the SUV, were the same color and fabric as a fiber tangled in a plastic necklace that Danielle was wearing when authorities found her body in a hollow off Dehesa Road, Shen testified at the time.
All the fibers looked identical under a microscope and appeared to have the same chemical makeup when tested using infrared technology, she said.
Shen said the fibers seem "most likely to have come from something that was very loosely knit," such as a sweater or blanket.
- Reporters will no longer be allowed to ask questions of the court's bailiff and clerk.
"You folks are going to deal with my PR person. You're going to leave my bailiff and my clerk alone," Mudd told reporters in the courtroom. "One statement leads to 60 questions that they're not going to answer and neither am I."
Mudd decided to turn the daily updates over to the court's public information officer after deciding that an informal system set up to have a bailiff or court clerk provide updates had failed.
"There was a simple note that they started at 9, they left at 4 left you chomping on bit to get copies," He said. "You're welcome to them, they'll be available as soon as we gett the minute order."
Reporters and members of the public will not be informed immediately about notes passed by the jury, Mudd said. The judge said he had procedure to follow, that includes notifying the attorneys involved in the case about the note and determining the appropriate response.
"This is a capital case and you go by steps," Mudd said.
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To: JudyB1938
WHile looking for the significance of the left foot last night (ALa two girls in Texax and Chandra Levi missing or cover left foot) Found an article where the sacrafice WAS allowed to bleed to death. Blood was the intent of the sacrafice.
To: KnutCase
LOL! Your #224 is a classic!
662
posted on
08/16/2002 6:18:24 PM PDT
by
wonders
To: wonders
Ref the left foot: The ME testified there was no evidence at all that the foot had been cut off. (Think about all the bones and tendons and cartilage in the ankle: the ME would have found cut marks if the foot had been cut off.) The most reasonable explanation is that an animal carried it off. (The one I happen to believe.) The second most reasonable explanation is that the body was moved after it had decayed considerably and the foot simply fell off and was lost at the old location or in transit.
198 posted on 8/16/02 10:29 AM Pacific by wonders I knew I'd read that, but didn't realize it was you who posted it. I know I'm wrong, but I fall back on how bitter I've become about "forensic scientists" during this trial. I've gotten to where I don't believe a word any of them say. I'll stick with the bugs and dogs. Like somebody else said, bugs and dogs don't lie.
However, I will admit that knife marks will show up on butchered bodies. Just like the Anasazi bodies that show signs of canibalism. The next time I cut up a chicken, I think I'll check for nicks on the bones and see if it's possible to leave them scathe free.
As far as a clean cut through skin and flesh at the ankle, that would certainly be noticeable - unless too much deterioration had set in. But if it was mummified, the area may have been preserved "as is". Do you know which it was?
I guess the reason I am so curious about this is because of the earlier discussion about missing left feet and socks being left on left feet and my puzzlement over the lack of bodily fluids.
To: hoosiermama
Check out post #224.
To: JudyB1938
maybe it was some kind of "vampire" thing
Yes. Those deranged people that think that you can be a vampire.
On another note, if you search Google under "Matamoros" and murder, there's a story about a group of Mexicans who had seen a film called "The Believers" (scary film, so I've heard, but I'm not going to watch it!).
The head guy (in real life) decided that if he and his group performed human sacrifices, their shipments of drugs heading into the US would go without a hitch. The leader mixed in a lot of Santeria religion, along with his own twisted ideas that he had gleaned from the film.
I'm not saying that this has any relevance to this case. It's just to show what happens when people start following the wrong train of thought and get "caught up" in things that are better avoided.
To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
I have no idea how you found the stamina to wade through this BORING bug testimony. I'm bout ready give up. :)Yep, I know that feeling! I got it lots of times when picking through the BORING fibre evidence. But ya gotta do it if ya wanna find the truth. Sad, but true. :(
666
posted on
08/16/2002 6:20:05 PM PDT
by
wonders
To: Dave_in_Upland
Another thing that has bothered me. I wonder if all the DNA that is attributed as belonging to someone related to BVD is actually BVD's because she and DW were having a daytime secret affair? He couldn't say anything because for him to testify would open a whole can of worms, and she surely would not confess to such a thing and ruin her reputation. Such an affair would account for a whole lot of the evidence against DW.I've wondered that also. It would explain a heck of a lot,and it might go a ways towards providing a motive for a frame-up.
 |
The insect expert prosecutors hoped would destroy David Westerfield's chances for acquittal stumbled badly during his turn on the witness stand Tuesday, capping confusing, overly technical testimony with the admission he made basic math errors in his findings.
Madison Lee Goff, one of the most experienced scientists in the small field of forensic entomology, blushed a deep red as a defense lawyer for the man accused of killing Danielle van Dam repeatedly confronted him with five separate errors in data he used to analyze bugs collected at the 7-year-old's autopsy.
Court TV Article |
To: hoosiermama
WHile looking for the significance of the left foot last night (ALa two girls in Texax and Chandra Levi missing or cover left foot) Found an article where the sacrafice WAS allowed to bleed to death. Blood was the intent of the sacrafice. YEAH, SEE! That's what I keep thinking and what may be the reason why they can't find a cause of death and why there was a lack of body fluids. If the blood had been drained, that would also account for quick mummification of the body. I have believed this from the very beginning, but I was a little off track in thinking maybe the blood had come from the vaginal area (that was missing on her body, IIRC).
To: sawsalimb
Especially if Damon got jealous and insisted on framing DW.
he could hold the boys ransom, making her follow through on this plan....
It costs nothing to speculate. :-)
To: JudyB1938
If the blood had been drained, that would also account for quick mummification of the body.
Wow!!!
To: small_l_libertarian; JudyB1938
I think they accounted for that by not finding the fluid in the ground..
To: JudyB1938
How does DW (a suspected child porn enthusiast) fit into a group of stanic cultists?? Doesn't make sense. He doesn't seem like the type ...as if I knew what "type" would be involved. Not my area of interest or expertise.
To: JudyB1938
I sorry, Judy I didn't mean to say you were wrong. Forensic experts aren't so bad, it's the way questions are framed in court... with Dusek demanding the experts to explain how such-and-such could be expected according to Dusek's own hypothetical theory. If you look at the plain testimony (minus any of Dusek's crazy self-contradictory hypothetical theories), the experts don't look so bad, at least Haskell and Faulkner sure don't.
674
posted on
08/16/2002 6:30:21 PM PDT
by
wonders
To: small_l_libertarian; JudyB1938; wonders
Found one of my old quotes.. :)
"the defense is trying to make the time of death equal to the weight of the blood, hair, fiber and child porn found on and in the property of DW....will it work?"
To: KnutCase
I'll keep that in mind.
So I take it fighting off all the younguns keeps you in shape? You might not have time for me. But good for you anyway.
676
posted on
08/16/2002 6:32:36 PM PDT
by
Jaded
To: NatureGirl
About 30 years ago, there was a guy who believed he was a vampire here in Vegas. They found two drained bodies out in his back shed. It was on the 4 o'clock news. Then they blocked it. Don't want to disturb the tourists, doncha know. A friend of mine lived a few houses down. It was funny. Everybody put out garlic and crosses. They figured if he really believed he was a vampire that the garlic and crosses would work.
Then there's that recent case in England where the couple killed to drink the blood so that they could become immortal.
Crazy crazy people in this world! And to think they are organized into INTERNATIONAL porn rings with people in the highest positions! To railroad a person like Westerfield would be NOTHING to them! Just a convenient hot body to take the heat off their own selves.
To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Well since the blood, hair, and fiber are questionable at best, a joke in reality; and given that 4 bug witnesses agree I would say the bugs got it.
To: small_l_libertarian; JudyB1938
If the blood had been drained, that would also account for quick mummification of the body.Who, besides Dusek, says it was quick?
679
posted on
08/16/2002 6:33:43 PM PDT
by
wonders
To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
When using the scale of justice.....one should not use a "butcher's thumb".
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