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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
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To: basscleff
I think Feldman is being limited to what he can actually present in court, so he is handicapped.

A dynamite CLOSING argument just might win the case. Other than that, it's a toss-up right now.

The jury will convict DW of having Porn, that has been proven.

sw

81 posted on 07/25/2002 8:56:39 AM PDT by spectre
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To: Jaded
I'm not sure what you mean.

Neal is lying or Watkins is incorrect. Either way, it doesn't help DAW. If Watkins was Dusek's witness I could understand it, but he was Feldman's witness wasn't he?

longjack

82 posted on 07/25/2002 8:59:10 AM PDT by longjack
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To: cynicalman
I can't imagine either..but if he can legally hold it back until the last moment...what does that mean? I wish Amore was still here cuz she could help answer that question.
83 posted on 07/25/2002 8:59:21 AM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: Greg Weston
Greg, one of DW's rv'ing friends testified that it was normal in that rving community to take "meandering" paths when going somewhere in one's MH. Did you hear this testimony, or are you ignoring it because you've already decided that he is guilty, and are just spreading misinformation hoping that others will be persuaded by it?
84 posted on 07/25/2002 9:00:50 AM PDT by Henrietta
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To: longjack
Watkins IS Dusek's witness.
85 posted on 07/25/2002 9:03:57 AM PDT by Southflanknorthpawsis
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To: CyberAnt
Danielle's blood is on Westerfield's jacket!

Actually, I believe the criminologist who testified as to the spots on the jacket said that it could've been blood, but also could've been saliva. She was in his house selling cookies, and she and her brothers were running around the house while DW and Brenda talked. If the jacket were in hte house, she could've easily deposited a drop of blood, a booger, or saliva on the jacket. Even sneezes deposit saliva.

86 posted on 07/25/2002 9:05:19 AM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Henrietta
Have you ever heard feldman say that dw is innocent or not guilty? One has to wonder if DW confessed to him..
87 posted on 07/25/2002 9:05:45 AM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Will the explosive as a confession card help him do this?

as a juror i would be sitting on the edge of my seat waiting for this.....it seems too late for it to happen now. If he doesn't show that "card"...That is a BIG negative for the defense. Maybe Feldman thinks Neil did it and DW stopped him from pursuing it.....I know he has an alibi but.......It makes no sense to say that in openings and then not bring it out. Could be something the judge wouldn't let them bring in......Who's the gal everyone wants to hear from?????

88 posted on 07/25/2002 9:07:36 AM PDT by is_is
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To: Henrietta; CyberAnt
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/703322/posts?page=1,100

"Earlier, Sean Soriano, a bloodstain expert with the San Diego Police Department crime laboratory, explained how he identified three bloodstains on Westerfield's jacket and cut them out for testing at a DNA lab in Virginia. Peer testified that only one of the stains matched Danielle. Another stain was Westerfield's blood, and the third sample could not be identified. "

89 posted on 07/25/2002 9:08:12 AM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: FresnoDA

Murder mysteries captivate
this Sherlock Holmes
of insects

Bullet "A Fly For the Prosecution: How
Insect Evidence Helps Solve Crimes"

By M. Lee Goff (Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-00220-2, $22.95).

By Burl Burlingame
Star-Bulletin

Tapa

OF ALL THE MYSTERIES surrounding death -- biological, philosophical, epistemological, spiritual -- here's one that's purely entomological: How do flies know when you die?

"No one knows," marvels M. Lee Goff, entomology professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Book"Flies will travel great distances within minutes of death. How do they sense it? It's a mystery. Some species of blowfly even seem to anticipate death, and will gather and wait."

The flies aren't spectators to death; they're enablers. Within minutes, flies will gather at the oozing openings on a corpse -- mouth, eyes, wounds -- to feast on the liquids and to lay microscopic eggs. Within a day, the eggs hatch and maggots begin to consume the corpse. These in turn attract other insects.

With allowances for variables such as coverings, temperature and humidity, this is a predictable, tiered outcome, and experts -- such as Goff -- can deduce from a carrion insect's age how long a body has been dead.

In cases of murder, this is a good thing to know. Goff is one of a handful of "forensic entomologists" in the world, a Sherlock Holmes of insects, and is likely to become better known soon, thanks to his engaging study of a horrific process, "A Fly for the Prosecution: How Insect Evidence Helps Solve Crimes."

Working as a pathologist in the Army, Goff learned not to be spooked by the dead, and later, as an entomologist at Bishop Museum, he became a specialist in acarology, the study of mites and ticks.

In the early '80s, at a convention for the Entomological Society of America, Goff was staying across an eight-lane freeway from the event. "The museum's $18-a-day per diem couldn't cover hotel rooms at the actual hotel where the conference was," he said. So he hiked in early, and trudged out late, and as a result, wound up seeing lectures he would have normally skipped.

One talk, by pioneer forensic entomologist Lamar Meek, examined the life cycles of insects as played out against the mystery of murder. As ghastly slide after ghastly slide played on the screen, and half the audience stampeded for the door, Goff was transfixed.

On his return to Honolulu, Goff began pestering then-medical examiner Charles Odom for a chance to work on a local murder case. It took awhile, partly because Hawaii's unsolved murder rate is low and partly because Odom's secretary thought he was nuts. Eventually, Goff "looked at a couple of cases and got close on the dates, and they started pulling me in on a regular basis."

The educated guess

Goff estimates that 98 percent of his goal in forensic entomology is figuring out the time that has elapsed since a person's death. Insects multiply on a strict timetable, that part is fairly cut and dried. But variables such as temperature, humidity and whether the insects can get to the corpse come into play, and that's where educated guesstimation comes in.

Raw data is collected from the corpses of 50-pound pigs, which replicate best the head and trunk of the average human. The animals are placed around Oahu in various climates and monitored.

For example, in a late '80s case involving a dead woman tightly wrapped in rugs and dumped in the open, Goff estimated the insects on the corpse were 10 days old. "But that's 10 days from the time the insects actually reached her, and they were impeded by the wrapping. So I wrapped a pig exactly the same way and dumped it in my back yard -- my dog thought it was great! -- and observed it to see how long the insects took. They are surprisingly determined when they know food is in there."

It took the insects 2-1/2 days, leading to a time-of-death estimate of 12-1/2 days -- exactly matching a missing period in her estranged husband's alibi. He was convicted.

Under straightforward conditions, the estimated time of death can be very precise. In a California case, Goff studied the data and estimated that death had occurred between 10 p.m. and midnight on April 14, a couple weeks before. When he called the homicide division with this estimation, the line went silent, and Goff thought they were laughing at him.


Courtesy M. Lee Goff
M. Lee Goff supervises an FBI field agent in Virginia
as she examines the body of a decomposing
pig during a training exercise.



They were actually shocked. A suspect had just confessed to committing the murder at 10:30 p.m. April 14.

Such accuracy is thanks to data collected from the test animals, and a thorough understanding of how insects contribute to the process of decomposition.

"A corpse is like an island in the sea, different from the surrounding environment," explained Goff. "It is an instant source of nutrients, an expendable resource, and what happens to it affects the site it's located in as well."

First to arrive are the flies, who go for the easy meal of body fluids. Their larvae, which hatch 12 to 18 hours later, are called maggots, and the maggots have three size cycles called instars before they leave the corpse, create a cuticle shell called pupae and begin to metamorphose into flies.

Maggots feed on rotting flesh by using tiny mouth hooks and spewing digestive enzymes before them, turning the shredded flesh into a kind of soup. (Maggots are useful on the living as well, cleaning bed sores and gangrenous wounds with surgical precision.)

Decomposition produces bodily fluids with a high ammonia content. It leaks from the corpse, attracting other insects and also soaking the soil with alkalinity. "You can usually tell where a body has been in the wild," said Goff. "The site looks different; different plants, different insects, different smell and feel. The traces remain for years."

The maggots become targets for insects such as wasps, ants and beetles. As the corpse dries out, other insects move in, such as hide beetles that like nothing better than mummified skin.

The process isn't pleasant, but it's highly efficient. In Hawaii, a body can become a skeleton within a couple of weeks. Even after the insects are finished, they can leave behind evidence such as tiny pupae cuticles that contain trace amounts of any drugs the victim was using.

Aggressors before death, too

Even though blowflies can sense death, they also can become determined aggressors after the living, in certain circumstances. For example, the infant abandoned on the shores of Lake Wilson a few years ago became exhausted and stopped moving, and the fecal matter in the baby's diapers attracted flies. When she was found, maggots swarmed in her diaper, and a time of abandonment could be determined.

"That case got bumped up to the state Supreme Court because the defense team believed the fact that the baby was already being attacked by maggots before death didn't look real good for their client," said Goff.

Bodies don't decompose on a laboratory schedule. It's also a mystery why dogs seem to love the scent of rotting corpses. "FBI people have told me a surprising number of missing bodies are found when Rover drops something on the front step that he shouldn't have," said Goff, who helps train FBI agents in insect-evidence collection.

If a pet is locked in with a deceased owner with no access to food, cats will invariably eat the face first, dogs the genitals and entrails. But if a dog finds a skeleton, they seem to believe the skull is a chew toy. "We often find little triangular holes from dog teeth" in the superorbital ridges and nasal shield of a skull, said Goff.

As for Goff himself, does he plan to become worm food?

"Not me! Cremate me and dump the ashes out at Kaisers, my favorite surf spot," laughed Goff. "To heck with the bugs."


90 posted on 07/25/2002 9:09:38 AM PDT by VRWC_minion
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To: longjack
No Watkins was Dusek's witness, as was Neal.
91 posted on 07/25/2002 9:11:06 AM PDT by Jaded
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To: cynicalman
Add to that the fact that DW did not take the witness stand. If he is innocent this was a BIG BIG mistake.

I don't agree. If I were his attorney, I wouldn't want him to take the stand either. I guy fighting for his life can't be calm enough to be a good witness. I'm sure his attorney is the best judge of what the best trial strategery is.

92 posted on 07/25/2002 9:11:43 AM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Henrietta; CyberAnt
click

"Can you tell how it got to whatever location it came from," Feldman asked Lewis Maddox, a laboratory directory at the private Orchid Cellmark forensic lab who supervised a second test of the jacket stain which confirmed Peer’s results. "No, I cannot," said Maddox.

93 posted on 07/25/2002 9:12:34 AM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Repeatedly sending harassing emails to people because of what they post IS trying to control what is on the threads.

Apparently you are unaware of how many people are actually SCARED of you.
94 posted on 07/25/2002 9:14:20 AM PDT by Politicalmom
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To: FresnoDA
This is turning into a flea circus.
95 posted on 07/25/2002 9:14:41 AM PDT by Consort
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To: pyx
I think you must mean "ironic" and inspite of the Disneyfication of insects like crickets, maggots don't actually take the stand and testify.

True, though they frequently offer opening and closing arguments to juries.

-archy-/-

96 posted on 07/25/2002 9:14:43 AM PDT by archy
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To: is_is
You think it's barbara?? But it's not been proven she was needed or rejected. We simply don't know enough about that either. Well, obviously she was rejected...but why?
97 posted on 07/25/2002 9:15:39 AM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: Politicalmom
I'll just forward you the copies then...cuz that's a lie.
98 posted on 07/25/2002 9:16:38 AM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: crystalk
What about the knocking out of the teeth? You think DW did that? It wasn't a coyote, let me tell you.

The medical examiner remarked that her teeth had unusually short roots, and also said that teeth tend to fall out during the normal decomposition process.

99 posted on 07/25/2002 9:17:33 AM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Travis McGee
Folks that can believe that also believe that OJ is innocent and we never went to the moon.

I do not believe that OJ is innocent of complicity in the murders of his ex-wife and Ron Goldman. But neither do I believe that the murders took lace in the manner theorized by the prosecution, and that accordingly, the jury rendered the correct verdict.

As did the ones in the civil trial, and the denial of custody of Nicole's children to one who probably had a hand in the murder of their mother.

-archy-/-

100 posted on 07/25/2002 9:20:43 AM PDT by archy
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