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New evidence implicates Westerfield: (Dusek Fires Final Shot?) Trial Thread, July 10, 2002
Union Trib ^ | July 10, 2002 | Steve Perez/Greg Magnus

Posted on 07/09/2002 8:35:39 PM PDT by FresnoDA

New evidence implicates Westerfield

By Steve Perez
and
Greg Magnus
SIGNONSANDIEGO

July 9, 2002

A police specialist says she linked 46 fibers from four locations in David Westerfield's motor home, in every way she could measure, to 19 blue fibers found in the sheet that was used to wrap the body of Danielle van Dam, recovered in East County.

The witness, Tanya DuLaney, criminalist with the San Diego Police Department, was called Tuesday as the defense presented its case because she offered new prosecution evidence.

DuLaney testified she recovered 46 fibers from four locations in the motor home that Westerfield took on a weekend trip the same weekend that the 7-year-old victim disappeared.

"I was specifically looking for types of fibers we had seen in the case; primarily I was looking for orange acrylic fibers and blue nylon fibers," DuLaney said. "And I found a number of blue nylon fibers on tape lifts from the various areas of the upholstery fabric in the motor home."

They match 19 blue fibers found in the sheet that was used to wrap the victim's body recovered in East County.

"In all the ways I measured and compared the fibers, the fibers from the motor home were the same as the fibers found on the sheet," DuLaney said.

DuLaney testified on June 24 that hairs found in the shower drain in Westerfield's motor home could be Danielle's. Other hairs were found in a lint ball in his trash, among his laundry, on pillow cases and in the motor home sink.

Under cross-examination, DuLaney said she did not use all the tests at her disposal on all the fibers. She said time constraints reduced the number of fibers she was able to examine using an infrared spectrometer.

She said her laboratory does not use a melting-point test on the fibers because it would destroy the evidence and thus not allow a retest at a later date.

Dulaney testified she examined and inspected all the 46 of the fibers, but only 14 of them under infrared light.

Feldman repeatedly sought to ask DuLaney about her "testing" of the fibers, only to be interrupted by prosecution objections to his "vague" questions.

DuLaney said the fibers ultimately may have shared a common source, but conceded there was a possibility they did not.

Jennifer Shen, another SDPD criminalist, went on to describe how she found orange acrylic fibers on a towel in Westerfield's SUV and the interior of the SUV that were similar to a fiber found on the victim's necklace.

Shen said she found 12 fibers in the SUV's interior: one on the front passenger seat; four on the rear passenger arm rest and seven on the back seat area.

She said two of the fibers were excluded as having a common source, but that a representative sample of the 12 was similar to fibers found in Westerfield's home and on the victim's body.

Defense witnesses

The testimony aboput fibers followed a morning in which defense witnesses testified that Westerfield may not have been the man who argued with a Silver Strand beach volunteer over payment of money.

Officer Mark Tallman, a San Diego police officer, was sent to the Silver Strand around 9:25 a.m. on Feb. 5 to see if anyone there had seen David Westerfield or Danielle van Dam.

Westerfield is a 50-year-old twice-divorced design engineer who is accused of abducting the 7-year-old girl from her house, killing her and dumping her nude body off Dehesa Road east of El Cajon. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against Westerfield, who they believe is sexually attracted to young girls

Tallman was one of a number of witnesses called by the defense in an effort to contradict testimony of prosecution witnesses call in the case.

The officer's testimony could call into question the testimony of Donald Raymond, a volunteer at Silver Strand State Beach. Raymond testified June 13 that he saw Westerfield pull out his wallet on Feb. 2 during a dispute over whether he paid too much money to camp there. (Westerfield had told police he left the beach that afternoon after realizing he'd left his wallet back in Poway.)

The officer, the first to contact Raymond, testified that the man was initially unsure it was Westerfield.

Cross-examined by prosecutor Jeff Dusek, the officer (whose face was not shown on television for security reasons) said Raymond did provide information that led officers to witnesses who testified about seeing Westerfield's motor home parked at the Strand with the curtains drawn.

The officer also testified that he was told of only one camper overpaying that weekend for staying at the park.

Tallman was the first witness called to testify at the resumption of the trial, now in its 19th day.

The trial had been scheduled to resume with cross-examination today of a security guard who said she saw David Westerfield drive into Coronado Cays a day after Danielle disappeared.

On Monday, Heather Mack said Westerfield drove his motor home into the exclusive neighborhood in the afternoon or evening hours of Feb. 3.

Mack's testimony was delayed because she was late arriving

More testimony

Westerfield smiled and waved at her as he drove past her security kiosk, but she never saw him again, Mack testified.

Such a recollection would provide Westerfield with corroboration of his statement to police that he spent the evening there, after being unable to arrive at Silver Strand State Park before its gates closed for the evening.

Mack, under cross-examination yesterday by Dusek, testified that she originally told a police officer that she ``vaguely remembered'' seeing Westerfield's RV.

Dusek began his session today by resuming his attack on Mack's credibilty, She testified that security guards need only pass a written test to qualify for employment. Mack passed such a test four years ago.

She was unable to provide Dusek with a precise time that Westerfield drove through. She also testified that, though it was the job of security guards to patrol the Cays and call authorities if motor homes parked illegally, she rarely contacted them.

"It depends if my supervisor tells me," she said.

Her account also conflicted with Westerfield's own statement to investigators. Mack testified yesterday she saw Westerfield drive up to the Cays entrance from the south, as if he were coming from Imperial Beach. Westerfield told police he entered the development while heading east from the Strand.

Other delays

Mack's tardiness was not the only cause of a delay in trial proceedings on Tuesday.

The testimony of a San Diego police detective who took the witness stand was halted after a dispute arose over taped witness interviews.

Detective Frank Gerbac had just taken the stand when defense attorney Robert Boyce asked about an interview of Denise Kemal – a friend of Brenda van Dam – conducted the evening after Danielle van Dam was discovered missing.

Dusek objected, leading to a lengthy sidebar huddle between the attorneys and Superior Court Judge William Mudd.

After the jury was excused, Mudd said prosecution and defense copies of transcripts of four taped police interviews may or may not have inconsistencies. Attorneys were ordered to resolve them and call Gerbac to the stand later.

Police witnesses

Another police officer, Michael Fisher Sr., testified briefly about a lengthy interview he did with Kemal, one of the visitors to the van Dam residence during the early morning hours before the victim was reported missing Feb. 2.

Defense attorneys appeared to call him primarily to show that Kemal wasn't initially truthful to investigators, telling them at first that she was certain that Damon van Dam did not come downstairs during her visit.

During her testimony, Kemal recalled Mr. van Dam did come downstairs.

On cross-examination by Dusek, the officer said Kemal appeared "unsure" about whether or not that occurred.

Another police employee was recalled by the defense. Jeffrey Graham Jr., the latent print examiner who confirmed for authorities that a palm print found inside Westerfield's motor home was the victim's, testified about a prints found in and arond the van Dam residence.

He told defense attorneys that he could find no prints matching the defendant's, including one found on drywall Danielle van Dam's bedroom door.

Motor home left near park

A woman who lived briefly with David Westerfield testified she saw the defendant's motor home left unlocked and parked by a neighborhood park, down the street from his home.

Christina Gonzales is the daughter of the defendant's ex-girlfriend who moved in around the fall of 2000, in an effort to escape an abusive relationship.

The work, the precise nature of which the witness was unable to recall, was performed on the motor home about two years ago, Gonzales testified. During the work, she and her mother would walk back and forth from Westerfield's residence, she testified under questioning by defense attorney Robert Boyce.

At least one child was playing in the park with a parent, she recalled.

Though the inference was that neighborhood children had access to the unlocked vehicle, Gonzales told Dusek under cross-examination that she never saw strange children inside the motor home.

She also did not dispute, under Dusek's questioning, that Westerfield's pattern for using the motor home consisted of leaving it parked in front of his home for a period of time before and after trips, in order to load and clean the vehicle.

"I don't know how long the whole process took," she said. "I would just take my belongings out, help clean up the refrigerator, that kind of thing."

Westerfield was not seen loading or unloading the vehicle outside his residence the night before Danielle van Dam disappeared.

She also testified, under more questioning by Dusek, that he normally took his trailer carrying assorted "sand toys," when embarking on desert trips. Westerfield did not take the vehicles during his rambling trip to Glamis on the weekend the victim disappeared.

She also testified that the only dog seen in his residence was a "little curly haired black dog," and that the defendant's son, Neal, was only a part-time residence of the household.

No witnesses Thursday.

Judge Mudd told jurors that they may begin an expected week-long trial break as early as the conclusion of testimony on Wednesday.

Mudd that all available witnesses could be called by then.

"I'm completely confident that you'll be able to go to work on Thursday," he said.

The trial will not be held during the week of July 15 because of a previously planned vacation by the judge.

Mudd also urged the members of the panel to avoid any media coverage of the trial."

"Continue to avoid at all costs, synopsis shows, call-in programs, reading the articles," he said. "It's the only way we're going to be able to get a verdict from 12 individuals that hear and see the evidence in this coutroom."

Among defense witnesses yet to testify is insect expert David Faulkner.

Faulkner is expected to testify about how long the 7-year-old's body may have been left alongside Dehesa Road before a volunteer searcher found the remains among some trash Feb. 27. Defense attorney Steven Feldman has said Westerfield would have had no opportunity to dispose of the body because he was under constant police surveillance from Feb. 4 until his arrest Feb. 22.

alt
Defendant David Westerfield(L) consults defense attorney Steven Feldman during Westerfield's murder trial in San Diego July 9, 2002. Dozens of fibers taken from Westerfield's motorhome match those found on a sheet used to wrap the body of 7-year-old Danielle van Dam according to testimony by a San Diego police forensic scientist. Westerfield faces the death penalty if convicted of kidnapping van Dam from her Sabre Springs, California home and then murdering her last February. (Dan Trevan/Reuters)


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: 180frank; vandam; westerfield
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To: Henrietta
I think the jist is that beetles may show up later than flies and that beetles have a longer life-cycle or maturation period long enough so that there would have been beetle larva present on/in the body if DW had disposed of the body during a time-frame in which he had an opportunity. The life-cyle of the flies are such that they could have gone through an entire life-cyle in 10-12 days which is why Faulkner could establish a 'no later than date' since there would be overlapping life-cylcles. Since there is proof that there was no completed beetle life-cycle, an no earlier than date can be established. That 'no earlier than date' excludes DW, based on Faulkner's testimony up to this time.
981 posted on 07/10/2002 3:27:39 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: connectthedots
come on over to new thread!
982 posted on 07/10/2002 3:28:28 PM PDT by Henrietta
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To: alexandria
Too bad we can't look up registration transfers of vechicles. I'd almost bet someone got a really good deal on a van around that time.

If the van were traded in at a BMW Dealership in/near San Diego for the new BMW, it might not be as hard as yoou think ;) If anyone has a picture of the car's front or back, there's probably a dealer ad plate affixed.

Fres, you up for a little under cover work?? hee hee

983 posted on 07/10/2002 3:30:43 PM PDT by Dasaji
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To: cyncooper; pyx
I think a fair summation is that the body was exposed to insect on or before 2/16 and AFTER the SDPD started tracking DW.
984 posted on 07/10/2002 3:31:17 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: John Jamieson
That's what I was thinking, JJ. Faulkner said that when the "skin is broken, (let's say something took a "bite" out of it), even a crow...then the bugs immediately go to the broken skin and start laying their eggs...NOW, why was it just in the abdominal caviety?

I don't know how much of the body was left, tho...But it's apparent enough was left to say she was mummified.

Sorry guys, I know it's dinner time.

sw

985 posted on 07/10/2002 3:31:37 PM PDT by spectre
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To: Henrietta
Pyx, can you explain the "absence of beetle eggs" thing?

My error. I meant to type beetle larva. Beetles lay eggs within the body. The eggs hatch, and one of the growth stages is called a "larva". The time it take for a beetle to lay eggs and then for them to hatch and the offspring to reach larval stage has been very well documented and the times are quite precise. The absence of beetle lava would give the EARLIEST possible time Danielle Van Dam's body was exposed in the first place.

Incidentally, in my opinion, the lack of insects inside the brain is VERY troubling and leads me to suspect that Danielle may have been alive as late as February 12, 2002 or perhaps later. The body was not moved according to this witness who visited Danielle's body in situ. That phone call that's been mentioned earlier on February 16, 2002 really needs to be followed up on, in my opinion.
986 posted on 07/10/2002 3:31:46 PM PDT by pyx
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Back in session. Dusek still on cross:

Do you inspect chicken ranches? YES.

No complaints about flies hanging around chicken ranches. No.

How long have you been doing bug/fly testing. 5 years.

blah.blah.blah.

You went to Dehesa Recovery site.

Ininitiallyth 28th, then later.

WHy? Spread out search area to see if I missed anything.

Referring to charts, areas b,c,e.

talking about moisture that accumulates under the body.

Moisture would allow other animals to reside there.

IF DRY? you get a lot of rotting. There wasn't a lot of rotting of the body.

Any odor? .....

talking about how that would attract flies.

Not much odor.

What about a mummified body? Less odor.

Poison Oak. How much did you get in?

Ended up with sores on your arms. Did you play in the dirt? YES, about 2 hours. Are you allergic to poison oak. YES. Are some people not, YES.

Area E. green vegetation around body. Poison Oak.

Trying to tie growth of poison oak with time body there.

987 posted on 07/10/2002 3:31:58 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
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To: connectthedots
Feldman on cross needs to focus on the cheese flies(sp)? These flies are only attracted to lay eggs at a certain stage of decomposition.
988 posted on 07/10/2002 3:32:06 PM PDT by alexandria
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To: All
HA! The recovery guys said they smelled the ODOR from the body & Faulkner says he didn't smell any and even got down on the ground where the body had laid. NO ODOR.
989 posted on 07/10/2002 3:33:38 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: UCANSEE2
Oops, I started posting on the new thread...do you want to post your transcipts over there...we can lurk
990 posted on 07/10/2002 3:33:55 PM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: the Deejay
Therew as less odor than normal because there was less rot.
991 posted on 07/10/2002 3:35:07 PM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: UCANSEE2
Not much odor.

What about a mummified body? Less odor

That answers some speculation from some that her body would have had a heavy odor.

992 posted on 07/10/2002 3:36:09 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: UCANSEE2
Still talking about head area, lack of large number insects in head area.

Aside from body, did you find other food sources for the flies? NO

Was vegetation dry? Not a whole lot of annual vegetation was growing green.

Wounldn't SD county be green in FEB, normally. YES. but it wasn't this year? YES.

SORRY, my finjers iz tirred.

993 posted on 07/10/2002 3:36:54 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
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To: Rheo
Hi Rheo,

I'm on vacation and really don't have time to follow the "blow by blow" trial action, but I would REALLY appreciate your take on today's action (and yesterday's, etc, if you're willing). I'm entertaining my wife and kids and father, brother, etc.

I value your opinion and appreciate the fact that you've been keeping everyone posted as the trial proceeds, so if you have the time, could you update me. If uncomfortable posting publicly, please feel free to freepmail me.

Again, thanks

994 posted on 07/10/2002 3:39:00 PM PDT by demsux
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To: spectre
Thanks SW for the ping!
995 posted on 07/10/2002 3:39:30 PM PDT by Lanza
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To: cyncooper
"That answers some speculation from some that her body would have had a heavy odor."

The recovery guys said they "smelled the odor" and that led them to the body. (I don't believe them either.)


996 posted on 07/10/2002 3:39:50 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: UCANSEE2
Do you want to go to the new thread..we can take turns.
997 posted on 07/10/2002 3:40:44 PM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: UCANSEE2
New 850,000 home? When did they move? I take it they had life insurance?
998 posted on 07/10/2002 3:42:56 PM PDT by Lanza
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To: the Deejay
The testimony is not that there was *NO* odor, just not heavy. Others have speculated that it would reek from quite a distance. The searchers smelled it when they came within feet, I believe.
999 posted on 07/10/2002 3:43:12 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: UCANSEE2
DId you find any adult flies? YES 1.

What is life cycle? 23-24 days.

Area where body found N side of E-W valley.

BEETLES, 4 or 5 different species collected.,p.

Body there 2-3 weeks, or longer. YES, Could have been.

So 2-3 weeks in addition to 16th. YEs, could be.

Not having exact weather info affects accuracy of estimates given.

Insects don't function in cold weather. too warm will kill them.

1,000 posted on 07/10/2002 3:45:52 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
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