Posted on 07/28/2002 8:56:21 PM PDT by FresnoDA
By Alex Roth
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
July 28, 2002
Expect to hear more evidence about insects as the David Westerfield trial enters what could be the final week of testimony before jury deliberations.
On Tuesday, prosecutors are scheduled to call Dr. M. Lee Goff of the University of Hawaii as their final rebuttal witness in a trial that has lasted 23 court days. Goff is a forensic entomologist and the author of "A Fly for the Prosecution: How Insect Evidence Helps Solve Crimes."
Whether Goff will be the final insect expert in the case jurors have already heard from three witnesses with expert opinions about the behavior of insects on human remains is unclear. Westerfield's lawyers have said they will take at least a day to present evidence to rebut the prosecution's rebuttal.
The trial will not be in session tomorrow because the lawyers and judge are scheduled to hash out the legal instructions that will be read to the jury after the close of testimony. The instructions guide jurors on the law to be applied in the case.
Given the time estimates of the lawyers, it seems likely that closing statements won't come until Thursday, or the following Monday at the earliest. So far there haven't been any Friday sessions in which the jury was present to hear testimony. The judge said the jury will deliberate Mondays through Fridays.
As the case winds down, the battle of the insect experts has emerged as perhaps the final arena in the murder trial. Westerfield's lawyers say the insects found on 7-year-old Danielle van Dam's body prove that it couldn't have been dumped until after Westerfield was under 24-hour police surveillance.
Danielle was reported missing from her home Feb. 2, and her body was found by volunteer searchers Feb. 27 in a remote area off Dehesa Road near the Singing Hills Golf Course in El Cajon.
The defense called two entomologists who testified about blowflies on the girl's body. Westerfield's lawyers say the experts' testimony proves that the remains couldn't have been dumped until mid-February. Westerfield was under constant police surveillance beginning Feb. 5.
The prosecution countered with a forensic anthropologist who said the body's extreme mummification might help explain why blowflies weren't able to access the remains immediately.
Westerfield, a self-employed design engineer who lived two doors from the van Dams in Sabre Springs, is accused of kidnapping and killing Danielle. He is also accused of possession of child pornography, which the prosecution claims shows that he had a sexual interest in girls.
Prosecutors said the pornography some of it depicting violent sexual attacks against young girls was found on Westerfield's computers and on computer disks stored on his office bookshelf.
In a trial of numerous shifts in momentum, legal experts say prosecutors scored a significant blow last week by calling Westerfield's son as a witness. Neal Westerfield, now 19, testified that the computer child pornography in the house was his father's, not his.
Earlier in the trial, the defense presented a computer expert who testified that Neal Westerfield might have been the person who downloaded some of the pornography.
"This is a young man who clearly cares about his dad and has a good relationship with him, so he has no reason to say anything bad," said Peter Liss, a Vista criminal defense lawyer. "He was just truthful."
In this respect, the defense's strategy of trying to blame the son for the child pornography in the house appears to have backfired. Criminal defense lawyer Robert Grimes said the jury is likely to view Neal Westerfield as "basically a nice young college kid" who testified honestly.
Westerfield's lawyers chose not to cross-examine his son. They will indicate this week whether they will call any witnesses to try to refute his testimony.
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(06-26-2002) - Death Penalty Would Mean Loss of Second Son
By David Gotfredson, LOCAL 8 News
It may be impossible to imagine the range of emotions a mother goes through following the death of a son. But at the age of 69, Laura Nan Westerfield is facing the possibility of going through that painful experience a second time.
Laura Westerfields youngest son, Earl Edson Westerfield, died of AIDS at the age of 36. Now her first born, 50-year-old David Westerfield, is facing the possibility of a death sentence in one of the most heinous crimes in San Diego County history: the kidnapping and murder of 7-year-old Danielle van Dam.
Laura Westerfield lives alone in a one-bedroom apartment behind the walls of a gated, senior complex in Clairemont. An avid reader of novels, Ms. Westerfield fancies herself an amateur sleuth.
I love to read mystery novels. It used to take me until the final two chapters to guess who did it. Now, I can guess before Im halfway through. Theres always something that gives you a clue, she recently commented.
But, when it comes to the real-life mystery of her sons murder case, Laura Westerfield has no clues. Asked about possible psychological events in David Westerfields childhood that could lead him to cold-blooded murder, Ms. Westerfield responded, Theres nothing.
"He didnt cut off puppy dog tails. He never hurt anybody in all his life, she said.
Confronted with the pile of evidence in the murder of Danielle van Dam, Ms. Westerfield alternates between defending her son and disbelief.
I am predisposed to the fact that he did not do this. (David) wouldnt do something like that.
What happened? Can somebody tell me what happened? How could he have possibly done it? I did the best I could. Hes a great person. I have no idea how the hell it happened. Something happened to him.
Of the van Dam family, Ms. Westerfield says she understands their pain.
I should know how awful it is to lose a child, she said. When Danielle first went missing, I cried for the mother. Poor little girl, I would have loved to hug her.
David Alan Westerfield is the oldest of three children. His sister, Tania Pecina, lives in Clairemont in the same house where she and her siblings were raised from the time they were teenagers. Pecina has three children: one from a previous marriage and two by her present husband. Westerfields brother Earl, the middle child in the family, was openly gay and died of AIDS in 1990.
The family was aware of Earl Westerfields sexual preference from the time he was a young boy, according to his mother. I started noticing there was something different about Earl about the time he was five years old, she said.
Earl Westerfields infection with HIV, which he contracted from a longtime companion, eventually led to his hospitalization. The Westerfield family supported him financially through a series of costly treatments until his death at an Oceanside hospice called Fraternity House.
I hugged Earl the day before he died. I wrapped my arms around him and he was just bones. I told him he could die. He asked me if it would be okay and I said yes, recalled Ms. Westerfield. It was a hard time for the family.
David Westerfield was not overly distraught by his brothers passing, according to Ms. Westerfield. Alan was close to his brother, but he dealt with it, she said. (In conversation, Laura Westerfield refers to her son by his middle name, Alan, because his father was also named David).
Ms. Westerfields late husband, David Horatio Westerfield -- who died in 1993 of colon cancer -- served as a lawmaker in the Maine House of Representatives in 1961. He and Laura Westerfield divorced when Alan was 26.
David H. Westerfield graduated in 1949 from Point Loma High School and attended San Diego State University for three and a half years. He studied archeology but never received a degree.
He never did quite make it. He didnt think it was important, Ms. Westerfield said of her late husband.
Preferring artistic endeavors, David H. Westerfield held a variety of jobs during his time in San Diego, including landscape architect, still photographer, portrait artist and magazine layout editor. Laura Westerfield herself also worked for a number of years doing layout and editing for Dicta, a San Diego law magazine.
Ms. Westerfield describes her sons relationship with his father as normal, although she admits her late husband was authoritative, if not strict. Well, I wouldnt say strict, but he wouldnt give you more than two or three chances to do what he said, she remembered.
David H. Westerfield filed for divorce in 1978, although it was Laura Westerfield who first left home. I finally got out of that situation after 25 years of being subjugated, she said.
We grew apart. In fact, I was bored empty nest syndrome. It wasnt very difficult, just one of those things that had to happen.
I ran away from home. I left him the house. I left him his daughter. Both the boys were gone. They moved out of the house when they were 18. That was the rule of the house. When youre 18, you move out. Youre old enough to look after yourself. And Alan was. He was old enough at 14.
We supported (the children) as best we could when they moved out. Set them up in apartments. I had been saving some money for them. All the things moms do.
Regardless of the problems in her marriage, Ms. Westerfield insists there was never any physical or sexual abuse within the family, and certainly none involving her son Alan. She describes the family unit as close during David Westerfields childhood.
We talked about everything under the sun at the dinner table. It was a rule. You had to be there at six oclock every day.
David Alan Westerfield spent most of his life in San Diego County. Born in National Citys Paradise Hospital in 1952, he lived with his parents and siblings in Point Loma and Clairemont until he was five. Thats when the family moved to Maine, where they stayed for 11 years, according to Ms. Westerfield.
At the age of 15, David Westerfield returned with his family to Clairemont his mother is a San Diego native and attended Madison High School where he graduated with the Class of 1970.
Laura Westerfield says her son tried out for football at Madison High but left the team after playing just one game. She says Alan became upset with the coaches and players for what he perceived as poor sportsmanship.
The coaches wanted the players to (hit) the opposing players with known injuries. Alan was disgusted by this and told me he didnt want to play football anymore, she said.
On another occasion, Ms. Westerfield remembers her son getting into a fight with one of the other football players and punching him in the face.
Ms. Westerfield says her son was not exceedingly popular at school. He was the biggest square youve ever seen, she recalled, using her fingers to outline the shape of a box. Asked whether her son ever smoked marijuana, Ms. Westerfield said, Not that I know of. Alan was just too square.
A neighbor who lived across the street from the Westerfields for three decades described David Westerfield during his teenage years as a loner. He was a very quiet, private person. You couldnt get two words out of him, the neighbor said. I dont think he had any friends at school ever.
Classmates describe David Westerfield as being involved in math and engineering clubs, though his high school senior yearbook does not list him as a member of any social, athletic or academic group.
After graduating high school, Westerfield attended Mesa College for three years, and worked at Saskas restaurant in Mission Beach during the early 1970s, his mother said.
Madison High School was also the place where David Westerfield met his first wife, Deborah Kyle. They were high school sweethearts. The two married in 1973, when Westerfield was 21 and Kyle was 19. They were married for six years and had no children before divorcing in 1979. Kyle now lives in Rancho Penasquitos.
Eight months after his divorce, Westerfield married Jackie Neal in December of 1979. He was 27; she was 21. Eventually, the couple had two children, Lisa and Neal Westerfield. (Neals first name also is David but he goes by his middle name.)
Alan was a good father to his children, according to Ms. Westerfield. He hugged his son. Something I could never get his father to do.
During his 17-year marriage to Jackie Neal, David Westerfields career as a design engineer developed. He worked for several North County companies before creating his own business in 1995, Spectrum Design.
Westerfield currently holds three U.S. patents: one for a surgically implanted knuckle prosthesis, another for a continuous passive motion device used in knee surgery rehabilitation, and a third for a metal pulley. Friends say he also designed the mechanism for a popular line of electric garage door openers.
Sources close to the family described Westerfield as a demanding husband who enjoyed a party lifestyle, often returning home in the early hours of the morning. He and his wife Jackie Neal separated in July of 1995. She filed for divorce three months later and the dissolution became final in June of 1996. The couple received joint custody of their two children, now ages 21 and 18. Lisa and Neal Westerfield live with their mother in Poway and attend college.
In recent years, David Westerfields drinking and womanizing became more prevalent, according to his mother. These traits he apparently had in common with his father.
Alans a horn dog. Thats what my daughter calls him. She called her father that, too, said Ms. Westerfield. I think Alan taught his father a few things about (womanizing). They would go out together after the divorce.
On March 2, 1996, San Diego Police arrested David Westerfield for the first time. An officer noticed Westerfield weaving from side to side on Northbound Interstate 15 near Highway 52. Westerfield did poorly on a field sobriety test and was booked into jail with a blood alcohol level almost twice the legal limit.
The DUI appears to be David Westerfields only criminal conviction and it came as a complete surprise to his mother.
Alan never drank. Never. Thats why this whole last year is so out of character. He had a DUI. Ick!
Court records show that Laura Westerfield has two drunken driving convictions of her own, one from 1983 and one from 1990. In 1991, Ms. Westerfield also was convicted of driving on a suspended drivers license, according to court records.
David Westerfield purchased his home on Mountain Pass Road in Sabre Springs in June of 1996, according to property records. (The van Dams moved into the neighborhood two years later.)
In October of 1998, a woman Westerfield had been dating for about two months moved into his Sabre Springs home with her two children from a previous marriage, a boy and a girl ages 14 and 11 respectively. Tamera Weibrecht apparently was engaged to Westerfield for a short time but the relationship did not last long. Weibrecht and her two children moved out nine months later because of Westerfields party lifestyle, according Weibrechts present husband Jim Graves.
He liked to party, but at some point that gets pretty old. At some point you have to give that up and settle down, said Graves. Thats what Tamera wanted to do. She also had an interest in religion and (Westerfield) didnt want anything to do with religion.
Weibrecht had no comment regarding her domestic relationship with Westerfield, which ended in 1999. Graves says police officers have spoken with both of the children and there is no evidence of any sexual abuse involving Westerfield and Weibrechts kids.
In 2000, Westerfield found himself living with another woman in virtually the same scenario.
Susan Lelek said she met Westerfield at the Big Stone Lodge in Poway and dated him about three months before moving into Westerfield's Sabre Springs home. At the time, Lelek had a teenage daughter and an adolescent son by her second marriage, as well as two adult children from her first marriage. Lelek said her teenage daughter would stay at Westerfield's house every other weekend while Lelek was living there.
Lelek's relationship with Westerfield lasted on and off a couple years until the two "grew apart," said Lelek. She later testified that Westerfield's drinking led, in part, to their separation. Lelek told the jury that Westerfield would change when he was drinking. He would become quiet, upset and depressed, she said. She also testified that Westerfield would occasionally become "forceful" while under the influence of alcohol.
Lelek recently defended Westerfield during an interview at her family's home in Mira Mesa. Lelek says photographs taken by Westerfield in his backyard of her teenage daughter lounging in a bikini poolside were not sexual in nature.
Police officers found the photos on a computer disk in Westerfields office. Prosecutors entered the images into evidence at the preliminary hearing, as well as Westerfields criminal trial.
Lelek insists the photographs were blown way out of proportion by the prosecution. Those were just a few of hundreds of photographs David took by the pool during barbeques with his children and their friends, Lelek said.
Yes, the towel was over her face. Yes, her legs were spread, and the angle was sort of looking up, and her hand was in a strange position, but thats just the way teenagers act sometimes. It was totally innocent.
Laura Westerfield was unaware that her son had lived with either Lelek or Weibrecht. David Westerfield apparently maintained a distant relationship with his mother. Ms. Westerfield recalled that her son had sent her a Christmas card each year.
I did not see Alan a lot over the past year, said Ms. Westerfield. I saw him at Tanias house. But I didnt ask about his lifestyle in any way, shape or form. It was none of my business. When your kids get older, you dont ask a lot.
Westerfield never visited his mothers apartment either. I knew where he was. He knew where I was, Ms. Westerfield said. We spoke on the telephone.
Ms. Westerfield first discovered her son had been arrested as a suspect in the van Dam kidnapping from television news reports, though she claims she had a premonition something was happening with her son the night Danielle went missing.
Alan and I have a connection, she said.
The news was devastating.
You cant imagine how much it hurts. Ive cried until my eyeballs are poking out, Ms. Westerfield said.
How would you feel? I turn on the television every day and theres my son, the murderer.
Ms. Westerfield had no contact with her son following his arrest until the first day of his preliminary hearing on March 11, 2002. She attended the hearing in person after taking three buses to the downtown courthouse making eye-to-eye contact with her son in open court.
During a break in the hearing, a member of the defense team approached Ms. Westerfield and whispered something to her.
The attorneys apparently wanted Ms. Westerfield to understand that jailhouse deputies read mail before it is delivered to inmates. They did not want Ms. Westerfield writing anything confidential in correspondence to her son.
Laura Westerfield since has written one letter to her son in jail. He did not reply. They have not spoken on the telephone and Ms. Westerfield has no plans to visit him behind bars. Im waiting for him to contact me, she said.
If it turns out David Westerfield is found guilty of the special circumstance of murder during the course of a kidnapping, relatives likely will be called to testify on his behalf during the penalty phase of the trial. Ms. Westerfield says she will not be in attendance.
Instead, she will watch the decision come down on television in her apartment, just as she did on the final day of her sons preliminary hearing.
When the judge announced his decision at the end of the hearing, she said, Alan was crying. He was crying. A mother can tell.
David Gotfredson: (858) 495-7555; dgotfredson@kfmb.com
Okay, except for the hair line. It's a combo deal.
Hey, Kimmie, there are RV pics on the Stealth Ninja Dave page under Evidence. A poster from another forum kindly let me post her pics from a Dophin RV, which is the equivalent to a Southwind, which is what David owned. The storage bays on the Southwind were smaller than on the Dolphin. I'll update tonight, the poster's questions that she asked a group of kids and parents. Interesting. Reinforces what a number of people thought about Danielle getting into the RV.
A composite sketch of a potential witness has been developed in the search to find 19-year-old Michael William Negrete, last seen early Dec. 10 in his Dykstra Hall dorm on campus, authorities said Tuesday.
Artist's Sketch |
Police are searching for this man in connection with the disappearance of Michael Negrete. |
"The person depicted in that sketch was seen in the dorm that night," said Los Angeles County sheriff's Detective Sgt. Joe Purcell. "We just really need to identify this man and talk to him. That's the best thing we have going."
It isn't known what the man was doing in the dorm that night, Purcell said. He said information about the potential witness was developed by sheriff's detectives, who got the case about mid-May from the UCLA campus police.
The man being sought is described as white, about 35 years old and 5 feet 8 inches tall with a heavy build. Purcell said he wore a shiny gray jacket with a turquoise design.
Negrete was 18 when he logged off his computer in the dorm shortly before 4 a.m. Dec. 10. He had been playing a computer game with a friend, Purcell said. He said when Negrete's roommate awakened the next morning, the teen was gone.
"We think finally something might happen (to help find him)," said Mary Negrete, the missing student's mother.
Tips from the reward offer haven't led anywhere, she said, but the family has to take all calls, "because you never know which one will be the one you want."
"The hardest thing is Michael's lost to us one way or another, because he's not here," she said. "Just the fact that he's lost is the hardest thing, compounded by the fact that we don't know why he's lost to us or where to go with this feeling."
Anyone with information about the potential witness can call Purcell at (323) 890-5500.
Contact Jo Moreland at (760) 901-4085 or e-mail moreland@nctimes.com.
Posted by jameson on Jul-29-02 at 09:51 AM (EST)
Horn-dog statement. He has been divorced since 1996, apparently separated longer than that. Sooooo....his fond parent never said he cheated on his wives, just that he was a horn-dog. Could that perhaps be her definition of his "dating habits" while single? Trolling the bars, that's just what some folks do. Me thinks too much is being read in to a statement by a woman with whom he appears to have somewhat estranged relationship with. IMO.
John Jamieson and Valpal1's comments
Combining your excellent posts...along w/some extra comments
Here's what I think the prosecution has proven "beyond a reasonable doubt":
1. What.. Homicide and kidnapping
2. Who - deceased victim Danielle Van Dam
3. When - Sometime between 2/1 and 2/17 (Exact date and time of death and date and time of dumping both unknown)
4. Where removed from her home-, and killed somewhere within the area between her home and body location on Dahesa Rd.
5. How - Exact cause of death unknown. More than likely suffocation, determined by elimination method Danielle van Dam is dead, her pajamas were removed and her nude body was illegally dumped off of Dehesa Road Person(s) who dumped her is also unknown, But a suspect was arrested and charged. Manner of death is also unknown, posion, drugs, stabbing, strangulation and bullet have been elminated. ME could not elimate suffocation. Young girls don't just die, she's seven, not seventy-seven. Accidental suffocation of seven year olds generally involve appliances like refridgerators or accidental asphyxation by caught clothing. Course, it's highly unusual for children to disrobe for hide-n-seek or for corpses to shed clothing that strangled them, so nudity in an accidental suffocation is a red flag to investigators and most manuals will tell you in such cases to look for pornoghaphy and autoerotic paraphanalia. Although that would also be highly unusual behavior in a seven year old as well.
There is ample proof that she had no organic desease or defect (natural causes). Claims that she could have died by her own acts of misadventure do not explain the location of the body. Claims that her nude body was placed there to cover up an accidental death that no one caused lack basic logic.
Either the minimal forensic evidence in DW's home and RV was left there through prior casual contact (cookie sale) and transference or it didn't. But it most certainly did not get there by Danielle wandering over and accidently suffocating in the nude while no one was around
6. Why - Criminal intent or to prevent discovery of other crime (felony murder).
7. Defendant --David Westerfield, neighbor of Danielle.
8. Known previous contact--Danielle van Dam was once in David Westerfield's home to sell him girl scout cookies. Brenda and DW had spoken in a bar and grill called "Dads" on 2 separate occasions.. Stipulated by both sides.
9.Known evidence --Danielle's dog hair, her prints, her hair and blood found in motorhome. Blood from both Danielle and David Westerfield on DW's jacket. DW had scratches on his arm and possibly legs. Fibers with common source.. found on or near Danielle's body and David Westerfields home. Child pornography, both legal and illegal found in DW's home office. Danielle was found nude, with her necklace on. Various fibers, hairs vegetative growth located on and around her body.
Thomas K. Arnold
Talk show host Rick Roberts made headlines with his KFMB-AM radio show about Damon and Brenda van Dams allegedly swinging lifestyle. But he wasnt the only radio personalityor media outletto cast a critical eye on the backstory of the Danielle van Dam kidnapping case.
John Kobylt and Ken Chiampou, whose John and Ken Show airs weekdays from 3 to 7 p.m. on Los Angeles station KFI-AM, devoted three shows to the case, even traveling to San Diego to broadcast from the van Dams Sabre Springs neighborhood. The week before that, they were the first to cast aspersions on the van Dams, a full day before the Roberts broadcast.
The Millennium Childrens Fund had just announced a $10,000 reward for information leading to the safe return of Danielle. Fund administrator Douglas Pierce had visited with the van Dams, and the next day he called a press conference in Los Angeles at which he voiced suspicions about the couples behavior. For an hour, Pierce blasted the van Dams for their apparent lack of emotion and general rudeness to him.
I dont know how much was true and how much was hysterical, but thats what made it fascinating. We tried to unravel it on the air, Kobylt says. In retrospect, I think he did peg their personalities very wellthe lack of emotion, the detachment, the obsession with the media messageand perhaps he got the vibe that they live a different life than most people.
As soon as Pierce finished on-air, John and Ken introduced their next guests: an angry Damon and Brenda van Dam, who lambasted Pierce as a nut case. We had scheduled them in advance, but when they heard Doug was on the show, they canceled, only to change their minds right before show time, Kobylt says.
After the interview, John and Ken picked apart the conversation and spoke critically about the van Dams lack of emotion and their defensiveness about questions pertaining to their own behavior and actions the last night Danielle was seen. The next day, the swinger story broke in The San Diego Union-Tribunefurthered that evening on San Diego radio by Rick Roberts.
Its a very dramatic story, says Kobylt. Everybody got obsessed with it pretty quickly... We have a pretty fair audience in San Diegoweve even made it into the top 10 on occasionand we started getting calls from people who live in the neighborhood and know the van Dams. As a result, it might as well have been in L.A. I tend to look at the whole [Southern California] area as the same, anyway.
(By press deadline, the van Dams could not be reached for comment by San Diego Magazine.)
Westerfield, 50, is charged with murder, kidnapping and special circumstance allegations that could lead to the death penalty if he's convicted of killing 7-year-old Danielle van Dam. He is also charged with misdemeanor possession of child pornography.
Prosecutors are expected to wrap up their rebuttal case Tuesday with testimony from M. Lee Goff, a professor of forensic sciences from Hawaii.
After that, Westerfield's attorneys will have a chance to rebut the prosecution's rebuttal evidence. Then, closing arguments will begin.
In testimony Thursday, Dr. William Rodriguez (pictured, right), a forensic anthropologist, told the jury that the victim had been dead between four and six weeks when her body was discovered Feb. 27.
The prosecution expert's estimate caused some consternation in the courtroom because the time period would go back before Feb. 2, the day the second-grader was discovered missing.
However, Rodriguez earlier said it was impossible to set a precise "post-mortem interval," or the time between when a person dies and when the body is found, because there are too many variables.
The body was mummified and in an advanced state of decomposition when it was found alongside a road in the East County community of Dehesa.
"The conditions were ideal for mummification," Rodriguez said. "It was apparent it was a rapid mummification."
Rodriguez explained that mummification would inhibit insect activity. Insect activity was used by defense expert Neal Haskell to determine the body had been at the Dehesa site from Feb. 14 on.
Haskell testified three days earlier that he based his conclusion on the blow flies found in the body.
The defense contends Westerfield could not have dropped the body where it was discovered because he was under intense surveillance by the police beginning Feb. 5.
Rodriguez said Haskell left out an important factor in warm and dry climates: ants.
"They (ants) will literally carry away blow-fly eggs and larvae and feed on them," Rodriguez told the jurors. "You might look at that body and say there's no blow-fly larvae, no eggs, this body was not here a long time."
But Rodriguez testified that the quick mummification of the young girl's body would be a barrier to blow flies because tissue would be too hard. However, with mummification creating a "hard case" around her body, internal organs would retain moisture, he said.
Judge agrees that parents did not give anyone permission to remove danielle from her home.
Kind of boring routine stuff over little details...such as what to put on the caption of the jury instructions if anything. Judge agreed to go back to that again later after the evidence is finished being presented to the jury.
The prosecutor didn't want to risk the answer that 'forceful' meant just yelling and the defense decided to leave this largely undefined comment slip by lest it be something serious. No matter what it was, it only happened ONCE. Hardly the bahavior of a guy who is out of control.
I don't think you can compare a video outtake pic with a posed pic. Better to look at Danielle's school pic. She looks like a normal child and was according to all around her. Kids when twirling for a videocam ham it up and pose and make faces.
Having said that, I don't perceive what you do in the video outtake pic you are referencing---different perceptions, same image.
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