Posted on 08/06/2002 8:53:49 PM PDT by FresnoDA
Prosecutor: Westerfield guilty 'beyond possible doubt' |
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SAN DIEGO Calling the murder of Danielle van Dam an "evil, evil crime" that shattered notions of suburban safety, a prosecutor urged jurors Tuesday to convict her neighbor, David Westerfield, of capital charges. Before a courtroom filled to capacity for closing arguments, prosecutor Jeff Dusek said the 50-year-old engineer snuck into the second-grader's bedroom last February, snatched her from her canopy bed, killed her and then "dumped this 7-year-old child naked in the dirt like trash for animals to devour." "He's guilty of these crimes. He's guilty of the ultimate evil. He's guilty to the core," Dusek told jurors at the end of a closing studded with drama despite its three-and-a-half-hour length. Dusek shouted and jabbed his finger at the defense table when he discussed Westerfield and the child pornography the prosecution says reveals a motive in the killing. But when he mentioned Danielle's death, his voice dropped to a whisper, forcing jurors to lean forward when he said, for example, of the moments before her killing, "This was not an easy time. This was not fast."
At one point, he slammed his hand again and again on the jury box rail to simulate, he said, Danielle's head striking Westerfield's headboard as he raped her. The image was too much for Brenda van Dam, Danielle's mother. She leapt up from her seat at the back of the courtroom and ran to the door in tears. Westerfield's lawyer, Steven Feldman, began his closing late Tuesday afternoon. He is to conclude Wednesday morning and then Dusek will have one final opportunity to convince the panel to convict Westerfield of felony murder, kidnapping and child pornography charges. The six women and six men who have heard evidence in the two-month long trial appeared to pay close attention to Dusek's summation, which focused on the forensic evidence connecting Westerfield to Danielle's disappearance and problems with his alibi for the weekend she vanished. A spot of her blood on a jacket Westerfield took to the dry cleaners, Dusek said, "in itself tells you he's guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. That alone. But it doesn't stop there." He also listed fiber, fingerprint and hair evidence linking Westerfield to Danielle and said, "all of it comes back to his lap." Of two blond strands found in the defendant's recreational vehicle and genetically matched to Danielle, he said, "Proof beyond a reasonable doubt? Proof beyond a possible doubt." Dusek pointed to an autopsy photo showing Danielle's badly decomposed remains and ticked off the fiber and hair evidence technicians gleaned from her body. "From Danielle herself, she helps to solve this case," he said. Westerfield gazed straight ahead, and in the back row of the courtroom, Brenda and Damon van Dam held hands and stared at the floor. A row in front of them and three seats to their right, Westerfield's sister, who was attending the trial for the first time and was in the company of her husband and son, stared at the image. Dusek also attacked Westerfield's claim that he spent the weekend Danielle vanished on a 560-mile solo road trip in his recreational vehicle. "He gives us a bogus story that just doesn't wash," said Dusek, referring to his account of driving from his home to the beach then to the desert then to another part of the desert before returning to the beach. He said Westerfield spent that weekend sexually assaulting Danielle and then after killing her, searching for a place to dump her body. The prosecutor listed other potential suspects, including the van Dams, their friends, Westerfield's teenage son and even "the bogeyman," but said each was investigated and cleared. He criticized what he said were defense attempts to implicate Westerfield's son, Neal, in the crime and said testimony about the van Dam's risque sex life, which included swinging, was irrelevant. "All the sex, the alcohol, who's doing this, who's doing that. That's got nothing to do with her kidnapping," Dusek said. With Westerfield's mug shot projected on the courtroom wall next to a passport photo of Danielle taken the day she vanished, Dusek said, "I think at times we've lost track of the other person. We've lost track of Danielle, what happened to her, what he did to her." The prosecutor downplayed bug evidence presented by the defense suggesting Westerfield was under surveillance when Danielle's body was dumped and therefore couldn't have been responsible. "Everyone's different, has a different estimation, approximation, some might even say guess," said Dusek. He added, "This is not an exact science. This is not DNA." The prosecutor told jurors repeatedly that he did not have to prove to them why Westerfield killed Danielle, only that he did, but he said he was certain jurors wanted to know, "Why would a regular, normal 50-year-old guy kidnap and kill a 7-year-old child?" There was no answer, he said, just another question. Pointing to print outs of some 85 images of child pornography found on computers and discs in Westerfield's home, Dusek said, "Why would a normal 50-year-old guy have pictures of young naked girls?" With some of the images of elementary-school aged girls, naked and exposing their genitals, flashing on the courtroom wall behind him, Dusek pointed at Westerfield and said, "These are his fantasies." Westerfield stared toward the empty witness stand, never looking at the photos. Dusek acknowledged that "if (Westerfield) is the guy, that destroys all our senses of protection." "That's the scariest part he was a normal guy down the street," said Dusek. Defense lawyer Feldman promised jurors the heart of his argument Wednesday, but in a little more than an hour before the panel, he seemed to be hoping for a hung jury. He presented jurors with a list of "Jury Responsibilities," several of which seemed aimed at encouraging any panelist for acquittal not to cave to pressure from other jurors. One "responsibility" read "All of you have the right to have your feelings respected." Just before court broke for the day, Feldman held up a blank piece of posterboard and said, "This is the only evidence they have of David Westerfield in the van Dam residence." He suggested the van Dam's swinging lifestyle endangered their children. "You don't know what pervert is coming in the door when you're in the bar, drunk, making invites," he said.
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I am very upset with myself, cause I got all caught up on the Smart case, and kept this on in the background. I wish I had stayed with this. But I always from the beginning, had the feeling she was being abused. This prooves it to me.
I am OFFFENDED that NOTHING was done about this !!!That poor little girl !!
Every time I saw that video played over and over of her clutching her chest, it gave me the chills ! I believe this girl has been repetidly sexually abused by her Father, if not more. I believe that.
I have 5 children, and I couldn't imagine any one of them writing this in a jornal, much less be 7 when they write it.
WHY DIDN'T THE PD GO AFTER THE DAD????? Oh how I wish I had been with all of you throughout this whole thing.
Thanks for letting me interrupt the closing, by saying this.
Me too! When he talked about taking DVD accross the street, "he walked, skipped, ran?"
No, I was yelling, "he clicked his ruby red heels together and said theres no place like the RV there's no place..." ROTFLMAO!
Elizabeth Smart (AP) "The Smart case has really struck a chord with people, it's something that could happen to them. It's a fear that all parents feel." Tina Schwartz The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children From left: Polly Klaas, Adam Walsh, Jimmy Ryce (CBS)
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He's going to have to address the DNA evidence, soon. I hope he does as good a job on it as he has on everything he's talked about this AM.
SEE PRIOR POST. I think he already started addressing it.
Just like the police asking a DID YOU SEE BLUE MH?
Since DW's was white, the person said no. Police use that to say person said they didn't see DW's MH.
Keeps sounding more and more and more and more and more and more and more and more like POLICE FABRICATING TESTIMONY (just like they admitted to doing on the search warrant) and EVIDENCE.
Feldman's doing a great job!!!
Go Feldi Go
February 18, 1996
Web posted at: 11:50 p.m. EST
From Correspondent Susan Candiotti
MIAMI, Florida (CNN) -- The murder 15 years ago of 6-year-old Adam Walsh was in the headlines again this weekend, when more than a dozen news organizations began publishing details of the evidence compiled by police in the case.
The files were released late last week -- against the strident wishes of Walsh's family.
The boy's father, John Walsh -- now host of television's "America's Most Wanted" -- is livid over the court-release, afraid it will compromise a case against prime suspect Ottis Toole, now 48 and a convicted serial killer.
"We will never successfully be able to prosecute Ottis Toole, if that's the person who killed Adam," said Walsh, adding "I believe he killed Adam."
Ten thousand pages of leads, witnesses, and acknowledged mistakes in the still-unsolved 1981 murder show that police, too, had reason to believe Toole committed the grisly murder. Currently serving five consecutive life sentences on unrelated charges, Toole has twice confessed to killing Adam and twice recanted those confessions.
Adam disappeared from a shopping mall across from a Hollywood, Florida police station on July 27, 1981. Two weeks later, his severed head was found in a canal 120 miles away - - the boy's body was never recovered.
Toole, awaiting trial for an arson murder in 1983, told police he wanted to talk about the murder of a child in the Fort Lauderdale area.
But according to police, making a case against Toole may be extremely difficult. The newly released files reveal that key pieces of evidence -- including bloody carpet scraps from Toole's car and dried blood found on a machete -- have disappeared. Today, DNA testing could be conducted to see if such evidence matched the victim's DNA. At the time of the murder, such technology did not exist.
"Had we had that technology at the time, we probably wouldn't be here today," said Hollywood police chief Richard Witt.
But besides Toole, the files reveal that since last fall, police have another possible suspect they're still looking for, and a witness who possibly saw the abduction.
The newly released files reveal that a 17-year-old security guard ordered four boys to leave the store -- Adam is believed to have been one of them.
The case led to a made-for-TV movie, and prompted new legislation to help find missing children.
And that's not all -- Adam's disappearance brought national attention to the problem of missing children, and created a network to help find them.
"Without him, I'm not sure I'd be sitting here today," said Nancy McBride of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
Out of the tragedy of Adam Walsh's murder came new techniques to help with the cases of missing children -- computerization, age enhancement of photos, and distribution of millions of fliers.
While Adam Walsh's family opposed release of the files, fearing it would inhibit the investigation, some -- among them reporter Steve Bousquet, who covered the story 15 years ago -- aren't sure it will make a difference.
"I keep thinking that with every year and month that passes, I don't think they'll ever catch who did it," he says.
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