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Frustrated Prosecutor Dusek Swats At Final Bug Expert: Westerfield's Soon Will BUG The Jury....
Court TV ^ | August 2, 2002 | Harriet Ryan

Posted on 08/01/2002 10:25:00 PM PDT by FresnoDA

Frustrated prosecutor swats at final bug expert

Photo
David Westerfield, seated in court Thursday, faces the death penalty if convicted in the slaying of 7-year-old Danielle van Dam.

SAN DIEGO — David Westerfield was sitting in the defendant's chair, but forensic entomology was on trial Thursday.

Prosecutor Jeff Dusek, whose seemingly unshakeable case against Westerfield for the murder of Danielle van Dam has been jostled by this tiny, somewhat obscure scientific field, poured out his frustration on the last of three insect experts to testify for the defense.

Like his colleagues before him, forensic entomologist Robert Hall of the University of Missouri told jurors that the age of bugs decomposing Danielle's remains suggests Westerfield could not have dumped the 7-year-old's body along a roadside last February.

Dusek, with sighs, long stares at the ceiling and a tone that often mixed disgust with disbelief, railed against Hall's methods and the inexact nature of the field, in which experts given the same bug samples and weather data can differ in their conclusions by days and even weeks.

In one exchange, Dusek asked bitterly, "If you give an X-ray of a suspected broken arm to four qualified experts, would you expect them all to read it the same?"

"I don't know. I'm not a radiologist," replied Hall, whose mild-manner and stammering answers contrasted sharply with the prosecutor's intensity.

Three of the nine certified forensic entomologists in North America have testified in the case, as well as a local expert who is well-respected but not certified. They each offered slightly different ranges for the first arrival of insects at the death scene. Most placed them in mid-February.

"How can everyone come to different numbers in your field?" Dusek demanded.

Hall said "biological variation" in the insects led to some differences in results, but he claimed there was an overwhelming and unusual "concordance" among the experts that Danielle's body was first infested in mid-February, when Westerfield has an air-tight alibi.

"My conclusion would be the estimates are more consistent than inconsistent," said Hall.

"Are you saying close enough for a murder case?" Dusek shot back

"No — ," Hall uttered before Judge William Mudd ordered him not to answer the question further.

Some of the jurors, who have heard days of testimony about maggots, blowflies and puparia, seemed bored by the exchange while others continued taking detailed notes. One male juror seemed to sympathize with Dusek and shook him head in agreement as the prosecutor became impatient with Hall's long-winded answers.

Hall may be the final witness the panel hears. Westerfield's lead attorney, Steven Feldman, said the defense will decide this weekend whether to call one more witness, a forensic anthropologist to testify briefly about the time of death issue. If the defense does not call that expert, lawyers will deliver closing arguments Tuesday. If they do, he will testify Tuesday and arguments will begin Wednesday morning.

Westerfield, a 50-year-old engineer who lived two doors from the van Dam family in the upper middle class suburb of Sabre Springs, faces the death penalty if convicted. Someone snatched Danielle from her canopy bed during the night of Feb. 1. Searchers found her body Feb. 27 on the trash-strewn roadway about 25 miles from her house. Her body was too badly decomposed to determine when or how she died, but prosecutors theorize Westerfield raped and suffocated her and then dumped her body during a meandering 560-mile road trip in his recreational vehicle the weekend after her disappearance.

The trial initially focused on significant trace evidence implicating Westerfield, including Danielle's blood, fingerprints and hair inside his RV, and on child pornography on his computers. But the insect testimony has dominated the later part of the trial. Dusek called his own bug expert Tuesday, but that entomologist made basic math errors in his calculations and ultimately gave findings that did not neatly fit the prosecution's theory.

Hall estimated that the first flies colonized Danielle's body, a process that can happen within minutes or hours of death, occurred between Feb. 12 and Feb. 23. Police began round-the-clock surveillance of Westerfield Feb. 5.

Hall also dismissed the prosecutor's suggestion hot, dry weather in February quickly mummified the exterior of Danielle's body, making it initially inhospitable to bugs. A forensic anthropologist testified for the prosecution last week that the flies and maggots may only have arrived after scavenger animals opened her body, skewing the insect evidence found at the scene.

Hall, however, said such a scenario was unheard of in forensic entomology.

"I'd expect fly activity to occur almost as soon as the body presented itself," said Hall, whose father, also an entomologist, wrote the textbook "Blowflies of North America. "

"Partial mummification has little or no effect on blowfly colonization," he added.

During his cross-examination, Dusek alternated between dismissing the field outright and delving into the most minute details of forensic entomologist's work. He quizzed Hall about each of the different formulas the scientist had merged to determine the growth rate of maggots and pointed out that one approach, when taken alone, indicated Danielle's body could have been dumped in early February when Westerfield's whereabouts are unaccounted.

Hall acknowledged Dusek was right, but said taking into account the other data sets yielded the most accurate result.

Dusek also grilled Hall about the lack of insect activity in the head area. Hall and the other entomologists said bugs are usually drawn first to the ears, eyes, and mouth, but Danielle's remains showed infestation primarily in the chest cavity. The prosecution contends this supports their mummification theory, and Hall admitted he could not explain why the insects stayed clear of the head.

Westerfield seemed to follow the testimony intently, leaning close as his defense lawyers conferred on questions for Hall. Brenda and Damon van Dam, Danielle's parents, sat in what have become their usual seats in the last row of the small courtroom.



TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: bugguys; daniellevandam; davidwesterfield
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To: connectthedots
No. If there is another witness, he will be called tomorrow.
741 posted on 08/05/2002 9:05:59 AM PDT by Krodg
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To: VRWC_minion
The drive time according to online Maps is about 21 minutes. Westerfield took twice as long to get back. He easily could have stopped somewhere.

The drive time according to online MAPS is about 21 minutes, IN A CAR !

Try the same thing in a large motorhome.

The above statement of yours is just another example of the kind of flawed logic you continue to use. The kind where you have determined already that a person is guilty, and go about trying only to find things that justify your position, even if the flaw in the argument is AS HUGE AS A MOTORHOME !

742 posted on 08/05/2002 10:00:16 AM PDT by UCANSEE2
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To: VRWC_minion
P.S. Not trying to get you upset, it is just that you used to come up with decent information to back up your position.
Your statement that he COULD have stopped somewhere is not INVALID, even with what I said. But you should consider that the MH would probably take longer to make the trip than a car.
743 posted on 08/05/2002 10:03:06 AM PDT by UCANSEE2
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To: UCANSEE2; cyncooper
The drive time according to online MAPS is about 21 minutes, IN A CAR !

First, I came in the middle of this conversation and was just adding info that I personally checked and thought I used appropriate qualifiers in my language. That said, I did in fact assume that he drove from the RV to his home after he led the police there in his car because I thought he went there in his car with them following. Your right, I don't know which vehicle he used on either trip.

However, I would disagree that the the drive time in the RV would be be double the time in the car. Having driven one numerous times, drive times are about the same (even going straight through New York City Washington DC from personal experience ). Its the parking time that is extra.

I would however agree that it would take some extra time to close the doors and batten down things before leaving but not an additional 20 minutes, unless he had hookups or something to the house which doesn't seem likely. It could also take longer to back out but based on the testimony that he was able to leave so quickly when the property owner attempted to catch up to him I have the impression he leaves it in a posistion that he can readily leave.

So, I stand by my statement so far that he COULD have easily had time to stop on the way.

One last thing. It was my impression that most of that line of questioning (like was the driveway blocked etc) went to establishing whether Westerfield would have felt as if he was being detained by the police and if he did feel that way there might be a violation of his rights. I didn't think the questioning was designed to lay a foundation for a possible side trip so its use for determining such a conclusion may not be appropriate.

744 posted on 08/05/2002 10:46:06 AM PDT by VRWC_minion
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To: VRWC_minion
First off, I apologize because I made the same dumb mistake I accuse others of doing. In a hurry to catch up, I glossed over several hundred replies, and then jumped to the end. I went back and read the last couple of posts. There yours was and I jumped in and reacted to what you said.

Now I feel like an idiot. I went back to read the posts you responded to and the one that was to, etc.

Apparently Cyncooper was talking about him driving to the MH in his SUV with the police following him. Then he drove back in the SUV but took a different route. Seems like this is when he was taking the police to show them the MH ? Or when he took them on the famous 'tour of the desert'.

Anyway, I was off base for overreacting and not even knowing the details of what was being discussed.

Please accept my apology.

745 posted on 08/05/2002 12:16:21 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
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