Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Bugs: The Best Witnesses? (Westerfield's Son Neal Forced To Testify By Desperate D.A. Dusek!!)
Court TV ^ | July 25, 2002 | Harriet Ryan

Posted on 07/24/2002 10:44:59 PM PDT by FresnoDA

Bugs: The best witnesses?

Photo
A forensic entomologist, who studies the maggots and insects found at a crime scene or autopsy, provided the strongest evidence yet for David Westerfield.

On one side there are Danielle van Dam's fingerprints, her blood drops, strands of the 7-year-old's blond locks, hair from a dog like her weimaraner and carpet fibers that seem to be from her room. There is child pornography and a convoluted alibi even the defendant calls "weird."

On the other side, the side for David Westerfield's acquittal, there are bugs.

The pile of evidence painstakingly assembled by prosecutors in Westerfield's capital murder case got a jolt last week from an entomologist who suggested that insect evidence from the 7-year-old's body may exonerate the defendant, who is accused of abducting Danielle from her bedroom, killing her and then dumping her body.

 

Westerfield
Now prosecutors have hired their own expert and it appears the seven-week-old trial, which is currently recessed for the judge's vacation, may turn on the tiny, somewhat obscure field of forensic entomology.

Its practitioners say forensic entomology, which stretches back to 13th century China and has gradually gained acceptance in American courtrooms over the past two decades, is both art and science. There are only nine certified forensic entomologists in North America and about 30 more who offer their expertise in criminal cases without certification.

When done correctly, a study of flies, maggots and beetles at a crime scene can yield crucial evidence about a victim's death, including the time and location, whether the victim had drugs in his system, and in some cases even the DNA of the perpetrator.

But more than other forensic sciences like DNA analysis, forensic entomology eschews straightforward analysis. For analysis concerning time of death — by far the most common task for entomologists in criminal cases — there are no mathematical formulas, no easy calculations. Accuracy depends on the scientist's ability to determine how a host of variables at the crime scene, including temperature, precipitation, time of day, humidity and geography, affected insect life.

"If you are not a very imaginative person as a scientist, you won't go far," said K.C. Kim, a Penn State professor and certified forensic entomologist.

The subjectivity of the field makes for what another forensic entomologist, Jason Byrd of Virginia Commonwealth University, calls "showdowns" — professional disputes over results. According to Byrd, haggling over conclusions has become increasingly common in the last three or four years as lawyers have become more familiar with the evidence and how to attack its credibility.

"A court case with a single entomologist is a thing of the past," said Byrd, a certified entomologist who consults on about 100 criminal cases a year.

A "showdown" seems likely in the Westerfield case. Just two days after damaging testimony from the defense entomologist, the San Diego district attorney's office hired M. Lee Goff, an entomologist from Chaminade University in Hawaii, to consult on the case.

 

Faulkner

The defense expert, David Faulkner, is particularly difficult to attack because he was initially hired by the prosecution. Faulkner, a research associate at the San Diego Natural History Museum, attended Danielle's autopsy and collected insects from her remains.

Searchers found the second-grader in a trash-strewn lot three and a half weeks after she vanished. Her body was badly decomposed and the medical examiner could only offer prosecutors a wide range — 10 days to six weeks — for her time of death.

Investigators hoped Faulkner could narrow that window to Feb. 2, 3 or 4, the days immediately following Danielle's abduction when Westerfield's activities seemed suspect. Faulkner examined maggots from her body and told authorities the insects began growing 10 to 12 days prior, putting the first infestation between Feb. 16 and Feb. 18. Infestation can start as soon as 20 minutes after a dead body is dumped outdoors.

Faulkner's conclusion did not fit prosecutors' theory. Westerfield was under constant police surveillance from Feb. 5 until his arrest, offering him no opportunity to dump her body in the window of time the entomologist's testimony indicated. Faulkner quickly became a witness for the defense.

The lives of insects

If prosecutors get Goff or another expert to rebut Faulkner's findings, he or she will likely attack the defense expert on how he calculated the post-mortem interval (PMI), entomologist-speak for the first infestation.

Insect life arrives at a dead body in stages. Immediately, flies land on a body. In as little as 20 minutes, they lay eggs. Those eggs hatch into maggots in a day, and those maggots feed on the body. The maggots molt repeatedly, and each stage of larvae is slightly larger, indicating to entomologists how long the insects have lived in the body. Beetles also are attracted to decaying flesh, and the size of their larvae also indicate the time they have been at the body.

But just recognizing the size of the larvae is not enough. Entomologists must also determine the growth rate of the insects. There are two ways to do this. Experts can simply match the size to textbook tables showing the rapidity of growth in a climate-controlled laboratory or they can try to determine the growth rate by themselves. The latter is considered the most accurate, but also the most difficult.

"It has a lot to do with the investigator's experience and intelligence and that has a lot more to do with art than science," said Kim of calculating the PMI.

Among the crucial factors is weather. Hot temperatures mean quick growth, cold temperatures mean slow or no growth. Wind affects the rate as does access to water and other forms of food, like trash cans. Rain and humidity play a role, as well as exposure to sunlight.

In the Westerfield case, prosecutor Jeff Dusek grilled Faulkner about how February's hot, dry weather might have affected his PMI conclusion. Faulkner acknowledged there were fewer flies last winter in San Diego than ever before, but refused to budge off his estimate.

Entomologists also consider unnatural factors, like whether a blanket or sheet around the victim may have retarded insect life. Goff once worked on a case in Hawaii involving a woman missing 13 days. She was discovered murdered and wrapped in blankets. The life stages of the insects indicated a PMI 10 and a half days prior. To determine how the blankets affected the PMI, Goff wrapped a pig carcass in blankets and left it in his backyard. He found it took two and a half days for the flies to penetrate the blanket.

Dusek quizzed Faulkner about the impact of some sort of shroud in the Westerfield case. There is no evidence Danielle's body was wrapped in a blanket, but the prosecutor got Faulkner to admit that a covering, perhaps later dragged away by animals, might have skewed his results.

Will the jury care?

But even when there are disagreements between entomologists on results, they rarely involve as wide a gap as in the Westerfield case.

"A lot of the disagreements involve a variation in one day, two days," said Richard Merritt, a certified forensic entomologist and professor at Michigan State University. "Not over a week and a half. If it's that big a time, someone screwed up."

If the prosecution cannot find an expert who substantially disagrees with Faulkner, the bug evidence would appear to be the defense's chief argument to jurors at closings.

The defense has tried to chip away at the other forensic evidence. Defense lawyer Steven Feldman has suggested Danielle secretly played in Westerfield's motor home and left hair, blood and fingerprints on that occasion. Evidence in his home, the lawyer has hinted, might have been deposited when the girl and her mother sold him Girl Scout cookies. And fiber evidence could have been transferred when Danielle's mother was dancing with Westerfield the night of the abduction.

None of those explanations carry the certainty of Faulker's testimony. But just how persuasive Faulkner's testimony will ultimately be is a subject of hot debate in San Diego, where the case dominates the media.

Former prosecutor Colin Murray said the mountain of other physical evidence pointing toward Westerfield's guilt made the insect evidence little more than a footnote.

"You're asking a lot of this jury to acquit this guy on capital charges based on the presence of bugs," he said. Even without a rebutting witness, Murray said, prosecutor Dusek could undermine the entomological evidence in closings by harping on the subjectivity of the field and asking the panel to instead rely on common sense.

"Common sense tells you, if you're just looking at her body, that it's been out there a long time. It's severely decomposed," said Murray.

But Curt Owen, a retired public defender, disagreed, saying that depending on how the prosecution rebuts the evidence, the case could end in a hung jury or even acquittal.

"It may not be enough to say he's innocent," Owen said, "but it certainly is enough to introduce reasonable doubt."



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: 180frank; bugguys; daniellevandam; davidwesterfield
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 1,061-1,0801,081-1,1001,101-1,120 ... 1,481-1,500 next last
To: VRWC_minion
If I remember correctly the spot was around 1/8" wide and 1 1/4" long. Not small, but certainly not a 1 1/4" circle.
1,081 posted on 07/25/2002 8:23:36 PM PDT by clearvision
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1077 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion
Not if one were wiping a small cut on the nearest fabric available.

Danielle had pj's and a shirt on her floor with blood on the cuffs.

1,082 posted on 07/25/2002 8:24:10 PM PDT by Rheo
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1077 | View Replies]

To: clearvision
If I remember correctly the spot was around 1/8" wide and 1 1/4" long

Thanks, I assumed diameter consistant with a drop.

1,083 posted on 07/25/2002 8:26:02 PM PDT by VRWC_minion
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1081 | View Replies]

To: Rheo
Danielle had pj's and a shirt on her floor with blood on the cuffs.

That is interesting. Did she get nose bleeds regularly ? Our kids get them in the winter when its dry.

Did the parents have explanation ? A sudden nose bleed could explain blood on a visit but its also not likely an adult didn't know becuase they don't stop that fast and cause lots of blood all over the place.

1,084 posted on 07/25/2002 8:29:52 PM PDT by VRWC_minion
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1082 | View Replies]

To: redlipstick
What's the next court day?

Tuesday. The judge explained to the jurors that the prosecution has an expert they are calling who is not available until Tues. He further told them that there were a few other witnesses who were expected to have very short testimony and rather than make the jurors come in Monday for just an hour and a half or so, they thought it would be more convenient to just reconvene Tuesday.

1,085 posted on 07/25/2002 8:31:43 PM PDT by cyncooper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1066 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion; Rheo
Guess what I just did? I tiptoed upstairs and measured my sleeping 7-year-old son's back at the shoulders, his widest point, and it was 12.5 inches. And he's a broad-shouldered, muscular little guy, too. (Checked on all three boys while I was up there. In their beds, sleeping soundly--all is well.)
1,086 posted on 07/25/2002 8:33:28 PM PDT by shezza
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1079 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion
Keep in mind that the jacket had gone through the drycleaning process. Would that have inhibited signs of smearing, dripping, etc?

Also the drycleaning person who didn't see the spot on the jacket was the clerk who greets and assists the customers---not the actual drycleaner. Neither side called the person who would actually perform the drycleaning.

1,087 posted on 07/25/2002 8:38:20 PM PDT by cyncooper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1077 | View Replies]

To: shezza
And while I had my trusty wooden ruler out, I drew a mark 1/8" by 1-1/4". About the size of a trail left behind when wiping off a finger after a stealth nose-pickin' (Danielle had frequent nosebleeds--that could very well have been one of the reasons).

The point I'm trying to make is that there VERY WELL could be an innocent explanation for a thin smear of blood on his jacket...just because there is a tiny trail of blood with her DNA does not mean unequivocally that he killed her.

If that had been a bloody palm print on the cabinet, or tiny splatters of blood all over the motorhome or his clothes, that would be another matter entirely. As it is, the blood evidence is too tiny and too scarce to indicate a murder. JMHO.

1,088 posted on 07/25/2002 8:40:34 PM PDT by shezza
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1086 | View Replies]

To: cyncooper
From my vast experience, the person who checks in the clothes should inspect them and question you if there are any special spots or instructions. They do this to immediately mark the clothing for the cleaner, who also visibly inspects the clothes.
1,089 posted on 07/25/2002 8:41:51 PM PDT by rolling_stone
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1087 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion
Guilty or innocent the same way.

Not sure I quite understand your either or answer.

1,090 posted on 07/25/2002 9:00:20 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1041 | View Replies]

To: rolling_stone
you said 'vast experience'... I have some questions for a dry cleaning person... do you have 'experience' in this field?
1,091 posted on 07/25/2002 9:01:06 PM PDT by kayti
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1089 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion
Why does body gain weight after death? I thought dead weight was just a term used to say that one is carrying someone who isn't holding on. I didn't think it meant real extra pounds. ,P>Are you getting after his interpretation to cross it, or are you really asking? Just wondering if you really want just anyone to explain, or if you know and are seeing what'sup!
1,092 posted on 07/25/2002 9:04:06 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1044 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion
So are we back to its possible the body could have been carried in from nearby road about 12 paces or was it stil from the north but it just wasn't dragged ?

It matters not to me which direction the body was carried in from North off of some bike path or 12 paces from the road. It is just that there is no evidence that the body had ever been drug to the spot it was found in.(Like some people think happened)

1,093 posted on 07/25/2002 9:05:42 PM PDT by Spunky
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1051 | View Replies]

To: kayti
No, I don't but know a dry cleaners and discussed their & their employees procedures with them. Plenty of info on the web about what they are supposed to do, spotting, filters etc.

http://www.howstuffworks.com/dry-cleaning1.htm
1,094 posted on 07/25/2002 9:07:26 PM PDT by rolling_stone
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1091 | View Replies]

To: the Deejay
Well, someone said the body had been drug from the main roadside. And now, I guess I'm lost for today. LOL

I think you will find that you aren't the only one.

Those who read a little here, a little there get jumped sometimes for not knowing the correct answer to something.

That is really unfortunate,because those who study and study, and research, and dig on this case, don't always get the correct answer either.

This case is so full of lies/half-truths, things the police should have investigated and made clear, but ignored, and trying to follow the prosec. or defense lawyers, and the testimony, and come up with a conclusion is almost impossible. If you listen to the PROSEC question a witness, you have 1 view, if you listen to DEFENSE, you have totally different view, if you listen to both, and have a way to compare each statement made to statements that refer to it, well, you either have a photographic type memory, with the analytical speed and storage capabilities of a CRAY computer, or you get this distorted, they said this, he said that and you missed some, and WHO KNOWS WHAT THE HELL THE TRUTH IS?

That is what a court trial is all about.

1,095 posted on 07/25/2002 9:10:36 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1048 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion
Her blood is either from possible RV visit, cookie sale or abduction.

Statements like that, mister, will get you into the "GEE, I AM A REASONABLE PERSON WITH AN OPEN MIND TRYING TO EVALUATE FACTS FAIRLY" CLUB.

Gonna have to come up with a shorter name for it, though.

I already have a short name for the other club.

1,096 posted on 07/25/2002 9:13:56 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1055 | View Replies]

To: Rheo
I think the foot wide drag marks are what Feldman was arguing. First testimony made it sound like the body was dragged and the latest testimony (can't remember the guy's name, but I think that's when the new Pitches argument came up)said that the greasy drag marks were more in line with organs being dragged. As I said, this is what I think was being said.
1,097 posted on 07/25/2002 9:14:04 PM PDT by Krodg
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1067 | View Replies]

To: John Jamieson
GOTIT.
1,098 posted on 07/25/2002 9:14:58 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1059 | View Replies]

To: Rheo
Sure would be nice if the photographer who took the shots of the bugs on Fres' open, had done the shots of the blood.
1,099 posted on 07/25/2002 9:19:30 PM PDT by Krodg
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1073 | View Replies]

To: VRWC_minion
Did she get nose bleeds regularly ?

That was what the VD's told police.

1,100 posted on 07/25/2002 9:20:48 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1084 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 1,061-1,0801,081-1,1001,101-1,120 ... 1,481-1,500 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson