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Barb Easton next witness in the Van Dam Murder Case!!
Union Trib ^ | June 11, 2002 | Kristen Green

Posted on 06/10/2002 10:17:56 PM PDT by FresnoDA

STILL 'ENORMOUS AMOUNT TO LEARN'

By Kristen Green 
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

June 9, 2002

New physical evidence about Danielle van Dam's disappearance and salacious details about her parents' sex life came out during the first week of David Westerfield's capital murder trial.

Legal experts say it's too early to determine the significance those facts will have on the outcome of the case.

The trial moved along fairly quickly, as both Brenda and Damon van Dam took the stand to testify about the events leading up to their 7-year-old daughter's disappearance. Attorneys have said the trial could last as long as 11 more weeks.

"I think there's an enormous amount to learn in this case, and we're not going to know it all until the end," said San Diego criminal defense attorney Knut Johnson, who is not involved in the trial.

The San Diego Superior Court testimony hinted at, but didn't fully explain, the prosecution's theory of how Westerfield, 50, might have entered the van Dam home and kidnapped Danielle.

Westerfield's lead attorney, meanwhile, told the jury that scientific evidence would prove his client's innocence.

In his opening statements, Steven Feldman suggested Danielle could have been kidnapped by any number of people her parents invited into their home to engage in "risque behavior." His strategy, experts say, is to raise questions in jurors' minds about whether someone other than Westerfield could have kidnapped the girl.

But Deputy District Attorney Jeff Dusek told the jury he has physical evidence that connects Westerfield to Danielle's death. He said the second-grader's blood, hair and fingerprints were found in Westerfield's motor home, which he occasionally parked in front of his Sabre Springs residence. When Danielle was taken from her bed, Westerfield lived two houses from the van Dams.

Dusek told the jury that Danielle's hair was also found in the trash in Westerfield's garage and that fibers similar to those in her bedroom were discovered in the motor home. The prosecutor said fibers found inside the bag in which authorities placed Danielle's body before the autopsy matched fibers in Westerfield's laundry room. Dusek didn't elaborate on what kind of fibers were found.

Danielle's nude body was discovered Feb. 27 under a tree on Dehesa Road, 25 days after her mother went to wake her for breakfast and realized she wasn't in her bed. Westerfield was arrested Feb. 22.

Throughout the first week of the trial, the attorneys showcased two completely different styles, which experts say were indicative of their personalities. Feldman is an animated performer, gesturing wildly during his opening statement and questioning of witnesses. Dusek, meanwhile, projects an image of somber dignity with his deep voice, subdued delivery and chiseled looks.

But it's hard to say whether the men's styles will have much impact on the jury deliberations.

"They're both very competent, very able in the courtroom, and they both know their case," said San Diego criminal defense lawyer Michael Pancer. "One might be more interesting to listen to than the other, but in the end, I don't think that's what matters."

Legal experts said the prosecution put Damon and Brenda van Dam on the witness stand early on to establish the sequence of events the night before Danielle disappeared.

"That's the most compelling emotional testimony in the case," Johnson said.

Damon van Dam testified that he stayed home Feb. 1 to baby-sit the couple's three children while Brenda went out to a Poway bar with two friends.

She testified that David Westerfield was at the bar when she and her friends got there, and that he bought them drinks. She said she doesn't know what time he left the bar.

Damon van Dam testified that he put the kids to bed at 10 p.m. and fell asleep before 11 p.m. He awoke at 1:45 a.m. because his dog, Layla, a Weimaraner, was whimpering. The dog doesn't bark because she grew up on a farm where the dogs had been rendered mute.

He said he let Layla into the back yard to relieve herself and then brought the dog back inside a few minutes later.

When Brenda van Dam returned about 2 a.m. with two girlfriends and two male friends who were also partying at the bar, she noticed a red light flashing on the home security system.

She searched for an open door or window and found a side garage door open. The door had been opened earlier in the evening when she and her friends were smoking marijuana in the garage.

When the couple's friends left about 2:30 p.m., after snacking on cookies and reheated pizza, Damon and Brenda van Dam went to bed.

About 3:15 or 3:30 a.m., Damon van Dam awoke and noticed a red light flashing on the security system. He went downstairs and found a sliding glass door leading to the back yard open 6 to 10 inches. He closed it and went to bed.

Experts said those details will be vital for the jury to understand how and when someone might have slipped in and out of the house.

After testifying about the sequence of events leading up to Danielle's kidnapping, the couple also answered Feldman's questions about their sex lives. Television viewers across the nation learned about Damon and Brenda van Dam's extramarital activities, as Court TV broadcast the trial live.

Brenda van Dam admitted to having sex with her two girlfriends and their partners, and Damon van Dam admitted he had sex with both of Brenda's girlfriends. He also said he didn't tell police that he smoked marijuana the night before Danielle disappeared because he didn't want to get into trouble.

Damon van Dam completed his testimony Wednesday; his wife completed hers Thursday.

It will be the jury's responsibility to decide whether any of the details of their personal life are relevant to the issue of who killed Danielle.

The couple's appearance on the witness stand drew dozens of curious San Diegans to the courthouse to vie for a seat in a courtroom filled with spectators each day.

The van Dams' testimony also was broadcast live by most local television stations, which pre-empted normal programming.

This week could be less interesting for onlookers, as experts believe the prosecution will begin presenting scientific evidence about DNA.

A gag order in the case prevents the attorneys from commenting on the case or releasing a list of the 75 witnesses they plan to call.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: vandam; westerfield
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To: Valpal1
Except that "rather strange note" is not actually known to exist by any one other than Douglas Peirce and it has not been produced in evidence or discovery.

Not questioning what you say here, but don't you think the note would not be relevant or admissible as evidence at this point anyway since Damon is not considered a suspect?

601 posted on 06/11/2002 7:02:02 PM PDT by mafree
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Yes, I think.

that addressed the issue that he left..rather than help search..

So, according to the PH testimony, you are incorrect.

602 posted on 06/11/2002 7:09:05 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
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To: UCANSEE2
Actually, I didn't take a stance, but your reply is noted..Thank you for your research. I just thought people might want to read some other view points about that issue.
603 posted on 06/11/2002 7:11:57 PM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Bump!
604 posted on 06/11/2002 9:46:33 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: cyncooper, valpal1, ucansee2
Thanks for the bump cyncooper!
605 posted on 06/11/2002 9:53:07 PM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: cyncooper

Detective: Westerfield appeared nervous when asked about his whereabouts

 
Photo
San Diego Police Sgt. Johnny Keene, left, testifies about the focus on David Westerfield early in the investigation of Danielle van Dam's disappearance.

SAN DIEGO — An errant garden hose, heavy sweating and a convoluted weekend itinerary.

Police officers investigating Danielle van Dam's abduction initially zeroed in on her neighbor for those reasons, two detectives testified Tuesday.

"I noticed that he was sweating profusely from under his arms," said San Diego Police Detective Johnny Keene of his first encounter with David Westerfield, an engineer who lived two doors from the 7-year-old.

 

David Westerfield at his trial Tuesday

Keene and his partner, Maura Parga, told jurors weighing capital murder charges against Westerfield that he struck them as overly cooperative and suspicious when they questioned him two days after Danielle was snatched from her bed.

Danielle's parents, Brenda and Damon van Dam, were in the courtroom gallery for the first time Tuesday. Both testified last week, but Judge William Mudd said they could not sit in the courtroom as spectators if the testimony related to things the parents said or did. They are expected to remain in court for police and forensic witnesses.

The van Dams were present as the jury heard Westerfield's voice for the first time Tuesday afternoon. Prosecutors played a videotape of a brief interview he gave to a local television station after police began questioning him, but before he was officially a suspect.

"Why were they coming to your house?" the reporter, Mark Matthews, asked Westerfield as he stood on his front lawn.

"You'd have to ask them. I was gone all weekend and I offered to let them look through everything," Westerfield replied.

As a defendant, Westerfield wears a dour, intense expression, but on the tape he laughed and joked with the cameramen.

"This isn't going to be on TV is it? At least let me put my hat on," the balding Westerfield teased.

Brenda van Dam, seated in the back row of the court, grasped her husband's hand with both hands and stared at the tape. Damon van Dam flushed a deep red as the interview played.

Most of Tuesday's testimony concerned the detective work of Keene and Parga, veteran officers assigned to the department's robbery and kidnapping unit. They recounted canvassing the van Dams' immediate neighbors for clues the day after Danielle disappeared.

No one was home at the house where Westerfield, a divorced father of two college students, lived. Parga said she immediately became suspicious as she approached the two-story stucco home, which she described as tidy and well-manicured, and saw a garden hose strewn across the lawn.

"It told me whoever left that hose was in a hurry," said Parga. After the defense objected, Judge Mudd ordered jurors to disregard Parga's hunch, but she later said, "Because the yard was so neat, it just didn't seem right."

When Westerfield returned home the next morning, Keene and Parga questioned him on his sidewalk. Both officers said the winter morning was cold. Keene estimated it was 50 degrees and Parga said she was shaking under her coat and jeans.

But Westerfield perspired heavily, both said, although he was wearing only a cotton shirt.

When Keene asked Westerfield his whereabouts that weekend, he testified, Westerfield said he spent the weekend in his RV driving from the beach to the desert to the mountains and then back to the beach. The account, which included a dozen different stops and one trip back to his home, did not make sense, Keene suggested under questioning by prosecutor Jeff Dusek.

Westerfield told Keene, for example, that he drove a twisty back route in the dark from Glamis, a desert outpost east of San Diego, to Coronado on the ocean in one hour and ten minutes. The trip is 90 miles and according to the mapping Web site Mapquest, takes about three hours to drive.

"Did he say how fast he was going?" asked prosecutor Dusek.

"No, he didn't," said Keene.

Westerfield was known in the neighborhood as a desert sports enthusiast and owned dune buggies and other "sand toys," but Keene said Westerfield did not take them on this trip.

The detective also said that Westerfield mentioned talking to Brenda van Dam Friday night, when Danielle was last seen, at a local bar.

"I could've sworn she had a babysitter. I didn't know her husband was home with the kids," Keene quoted Westerfield as saying out of the blue. Keene said Westerfield claimed Brenda told him that night that Damon van Dam was worried about "his little girl growing up" too fast.

On the stand last week, Brenda van Dam said she never spoke to Westerfield about her children.

Both detectives said Westerfield appeared overly cooperative. He signed papers allowing them to search his home and RV and then led officers through the home, pointing out closets and cabinets if they overlooked them.

His home was "immaculate," said Keene. "Nothing was out of place."

Parga repeatedly described the home as "beautiful." Ê

"Everything was very neat. Very clean. White leather sofa. Just very nice," said Parga.

Three areas of the home stood out to the officers. Parga smelled a strong odor of bleach in the garage and noted a dirty blanket on the dryer and both officers said the comforter was missing from Westerfield's bed.

On cross-examination, defense lawyer Steven Feldman suggested there was nothing odd about Westerfield's behavior. He implied that his client was only trying to help the investigation by aiding officers and that anyone would have been nervous with six officers in his home.

"Do you know whether or not Mr. Westerfield has any blood pressure issues that may or may not effect the way he sweats?" asked Feldman.

"No," acknowledged Keene.

After jurors were excused for the day, the judge showed lawyers an e-mail he had received about the case. He did not specify the content of the e-mail, but Feldman then indicated that he and his client had each received what he called "nastyograms" written in "bright red ink."

The case has spawned "certain outrage on both sides at a level I've never seen before," Feldman said.

On Wednesday morning, the testimony of San Diego police official Paul Redden, who tape recorded an interview with Westerfield at a police station, will continue.


606 posted on 06/11/2002 10:08:11 PM PDT by FresnoDA
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To: let freedom sing, Jaded, Rheo,
The thread is back....
607 posted on 06/11/2002 10:09:39 PM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: MizSterious;spectre

Westerfield described as 'nervous,' 'overly cooperative' with policeSweatin To The Oldies "2"

SIGNONSANDIEGO

June 11, 2002

David Westerfield appeared nervous when he was interviewed by police two days after the disappearance of Danielle van Dam, the lead investigator in the case testified Tuesday.

Westerfield was "sweating profusely" though he was standing in the shade with detectives on a 50 to 55-degree day and he was "overly cooperative" while they searched his house and motorhome, San Diego police Detective Johnny Keene said.

"As we were searching his residence, he was pointing out areas that we might walk past and miss and he felt we should look at," Keene said.

But during his cross-examination of Keene, Westerfield lead defense attorney Steven Feldman:


608 posted on 06/11/2002 10:12:22 PM PDT by FresnoDA
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To: MizSterious;spectre;Amore;Travis McGee;BunnySlippers;Doughtyone;Hillary's Lovely Legs;Snow Bunny...
PING..) ) The Phoenix Rises Again!! LOL
609 posted on 06/11/2002 10:13:17 PM PDT by FresnoDA
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To: FresnoDA
Lead prosecutor Jeff Dusek had said in his opening statement that the disorderly way Westerfield had prepared his motorhome for the weekend trip on Saturday morning – including filling up his water tanks and not rolling up the hose – showed he was in a rush to get away with Danielle's body

This is one of the numerous problems I have had with this case since the beginning.

Westerfield had to have more nerve than just about anyone I've ever heard about (excepting nuts that wanted to be caught).

Not only did he do the deed that was fraught with incredible risk of detection.........he also kept the body right there in the neighborhood with absolutely no idea when the VDs would find their child gone. That's insanity !!!

What if Danielle's absence had been discovered at 5:30 am when someone got up to the restroom or something? There is no way Dave Westerfield could count on getting out of there before the street was blocked off and LE was swarming everywhere. I can't buy it.

610 posted on 06/11/2002 10:22:50 PM PDT by Southflanknorthpawsis
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To: Southflanknorthpawsis
alt
Defendant David Westerfield, center, stands between defense attorneys Robert Boyce, left, and Steven Feldman as they watch jurors enter the courtroom, Tuesday, June 11, 2002, for Westerfield's murder trial in San Diego. Westerfield is accused of the kidnapping and murder of 7-year old Danielle van Dam. (AP Photo/Dan Trevan, Pool)

611 posted on 06/11/2002 10:29:18 PM PDT by FresnoDA
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To: FresnoDA
When did you first discover the missing thread?
612 posted on 06/11/2002 10:30:24 PM PDT by John Jamieson
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To: Karson
Thread is up again.
613 posted on 06/11/2002 10:35:49 PM PDT by Rheo
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To: Karson
Thanks for the link, Karson. Would you happen to know why the June 4 transcripts are missing?
614 posted on 06/11/2002 10:40:50 PM PDT by nycgal
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To: Southflanknorthpawsis
I still want to know how they will contend he got her away from the house....he would have had to go streetside, to a waiting vehicle or he walked down the street with her..yeah right.

No trace of her in his SUV or it wouldn't have been released to him..MH wasn't there..maybe he used his 4 wheeler and didn't wake anyone up?

615 posted on 06/11/2002 10:47:35 PM PDT by Rheo
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To: Southflanknorthpawsis
Do you know if there was any evidence found in the Forerunner? If not, the theory has to be that he left her in his home while he went after the MH. Then he moved her into the MH in broad daylight!
616 posted on 06/11/2002 10:52:55 PM PDT by Jrabbit
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To: Jrabbit
Do you know if there was any evidence found in the Forerunner? If not, the theory has to be that he left her in his home while he went after the MH. Then he moved her into the MH in broad daylight!

Supposedly, there was NO evidence of her in the SUV. Rheo brings up a big point I had never thought about. I had only wondered how he got her out of the VD house. I hadn't thought how he got her to HIS house.

How would he have gotten her from the VD house down the street to his house? With every theory, he gets bolder and bolder. As Southflanknorthpawsis said, DW has incredible nerve. After getting a sleeping/unconscious child out of a house full of people, with an alarm & a dog, he makes it outside, walking two doors down in hopes that no car drives by or anyone is up looking out the window. It'd be even bolder to pull his SUV up to the VD house to put her in it. Which theory would you buy into?
617 posted on 06/11/2002 11:07:46 PM PDT by sbnsd
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To: Jrabbit
They released it to him so must not have been evidence in it.....what's your theory on how he got her away from the house.
618 posted on 06/11/2002 11:08:06 PM PDT by Rheo
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To: sbnsd
It makes no sense does it?
619 posted on 06/11/2002 11:08:56 PM PDT by Rheo
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
I think Jim just doesn't understand the "special love" we all share on these threads....NO, not THAT sort of love!!

I don't know how long it will take to reclaim my mind from the gutter when this is over.....

620 posted on 06/11/2002 11:12:39 PM PDT by Politicalmom
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