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

Skip to comments.

Expert: Body dumped after defendant fell under suspicion (SO WHO DUMPED DANIELLE VAN DAM'S BODY??)
Union Trib ^ | July 11, 2002 | Steve Perez/Greg Magnus

Posted on 07/11/2002 6:47:45 AM PDT by FresnoDA

Expert: Body dumped after defendant fell under suspicion

by Steve Perez
and
Greg Magnus
SIGNONSANDIEGO

July 10, 2002


Union-Tribune
Susan L. describes her relationship to David Westerfield.
An expert witness called by the defense Wednesday afternoon said he is "very confident" the nude body of Danielle van Dam was probably dumped off Dehesa Road near El Cajon more than a week after murder defendant David Westerfield came under police surveillance.

Insect expert David Faulkner testified he based his conclusion upon studies he conducted on larvae and insects recovered from the victim's body, discovered by volunteer searchers on Feb. 27.

Westerfield is accused of kidnapping 7-year-old Danielle van Dam from the child's bed and killing her five months ago. He could face the death penalty if convicted. This was the final day of defense testimony.

Based on Faulkner's studies, which use the life cycles of insects, the earliest the body could have been left there was Feb. 16 to Feb. 18, he said under questioning from Westerfield's defense attorney.

Earlier Wednesday, San Diego police detective Sgt. Bill Holmes testified that investigators placed a tracking device on Westerfield's car during the first days of the investigation. They tracked his movements until his arrest on Feb. 22.

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.

A medical examiner relies on three factors to make an assessment, Faulkner has said: the amount and distribution of rigor mortis, the change in body temperature and the degree of decomposition. But after several days, rigor mortis dissipates and the corpse assumes the temperature of its environment.

Insects can give more specific information because they have a definitive development period that can be meticulously measured, said Faulkner, who collected insects during Danielle's autopsy. Faulkner said the presence of specific fly larva and adults and the absence of beetle larva on the body helped him determine an approximate "post-mortem interval."

Faulkner said during normal daylight conditions flies can land upon a body and deposit eggs within 20 minutes of its death. He believed the body had been at its Dehesa location approximately 10-12 days before its discovery.

He admitted under cross-examination by prosecutor Jeff Dusek that weather conditions for February were "extremely abnormal" and could have affected the amount of insects available to find the body.

"There was very warm temperatures in February and no significant rainfall for most of the winter," Faulkner said. "The insect population in general was much lower."

Change of character

A woman who once lived with David Westerfield told prosecutors the defendant's character would change after drinking and he would become "forceful."

"Susan L." mother of "Danielle L.," and Christine Gonzales, both of whom testified earlier, lived with the defendant for nearly a year, beginning about 3 1/2 years ago. The woman's last name was not read into the court record because her daughter, a minor, testified Tuesday.

Before he was charged in February, Westerfield's criminal record consisted of a 1996 drunken-driving conviction.

The woman was called initially as a witness for the defense, during which she testified that the defendant had a problem with sweating, left his motor home unlocked on occasions, left a garden hose out in front of his home and became stuck in the sand in his motor home during trips to Glamis.

Prosecutor Jeff Dusek's line of questioning eventually led to the defendant's behavior after he began drinking.

"He would become very quiet," she said.

"What else," Dusek said.

"Sometimes he would become a little upset."

"Depressed?"

"Yes."

"Basically, you would see a change in character when he would drink."

"Yes."

After agreeing with Dusek that the defendant was much different while drinking than when sober, the prosecutor asked if it was one of the reasons she eventually left Westerfield.

"Because of the drinking? Yes," she answered quietly.

Dusek later provided Susan L. with a transcript of a statement to investigators in which she reportedly said that Westerfield would become "forceful," when he drank.

"I remember that occasionally," she said.

Westerfield told investigators he had been drinking the night he visited Dad's in Poway, the same night he encountered the victim's mother, Brenda van Dam, and her friends.

Earlier during Dusek's cross-examination, "Susan L." began crying on the witness stand, admitting that she still cares for the defendant.

"Susan L." testified that she had just broken up with the defendant when she saw on television that he was a suspect in the second-grader's disappearance Feb. 2.

Dusek asked her about the last time she had seen Westerfield.

"You still like him, don't you?"Dusek asked her.

"I care about him,"she said, sobbing.

The witness said she spoke with Westerfield the day after she had been out with a male friend.

Dusek showed "Susan L." a transcript of her Feb. 5 interview with police. The prosecutor asked the witness if she saw the defendant the night she went out with the other male friend.

"Did you tell law enforcement that you saw (the defendant) sitting outside?"' the prosecutor asked. The witness later testified under questioning from defense attorney Robert Boyce, that it was something Westerfield had told her.

Dusek attempted to turn that statement against the defense, asking if Westerfield had contacted her the next day.

"Yes, he called me."

"After discussing what was discussed, you didn't feel comfortable with the defendant at that time, correct," Dusek said.

"At the time, yes."

Initial testimony

The woman, under direction examination by Boyce, testified that she met Westerfield through Glennie Nasland, another defense witness, at Big Stone Lodge in Poway "three-and-a-half, four years ago."

They started dating and she moved in with him about two weeks later, she said.

They camped often in the motor home, sometimes accompanied by her daughters, her daughter's fiance and Westerfield's son.

Their journeys woud take them to the Silver Strand, Anza-Borrego and Glamis. Sometimes, when the weather was bad, they would leave the Silver Strand and travel to Borrego intead, she said.

It wasn't unusual for them to arrive at night, or search for friends and not find them, she said.

Before the trips, she would help load the motor home, she said, leaving it parked either across the street or in the home's driveway and leaving its front door open.. The motor home would often sit there for up to two days before the trips, she said.

It wasn't unusual for a hose to be left out in the front yard or for Westerfield to walk around with cash in his pocket, she said.

The motor home also would become stuck in the sand during their desert trips, "Susan L." said. "He would try to dig out the sand from the out from under the wheels and fit a board underneath," she said.

She testified he would leave the wood behind.

Later, she testified that Westerfield's son, Neal, was familiar with computers and would often help his father with them.

She also said the defendant had a problem with sweating, often under his arm pits head and face, even during cold weather.

Prosecution witnesses have testified that they thought it was unusual for Westerfield to be sweating profusely when they first contacted him in February.

Routes not uncommon

Meandering journeys in a motor home -- such as the one described by Westerfield -- are not so uncommon, according to one enthusiast who testified today.

Eugene Yale, an East County attorney and motor home enthusiast, came to the attention of defense lawyers when he wrote a letter to the defense to point the meandering nature of motor home trips. He did so because he had read a newspaper article about testimony in the case and "didn't think it was accurate."

"I'm here because I think the truth should be out," Yale told Westerfield attorney Steven Feldman, at the end of his testimony today.

Yale described several meandering routes to Glamis, including one similar to the route Westerfield told investigators he took on the same weekend that Danielle van Dam disappeared from her bedroom in the middle of the night.

"One of the joys of having a motor home is you don't have to rely on rest stops, restaurants or Jack in the Box, though I seldom pass one by," Yale said. "You can take the back roads, look at scenic areas. My wife and I have a motor home because we like to see things, and not to get stuck by clinging to one standard route."

Prosecutors have made much of a roaming route that Westerfield took through San Diego and Imperial counties in his motor home the weekend of Feb. 2. Westerfield told investigators the solo trip took him to Silver Strand State Beach; then east across the desert to Glamis where he got stuck in the sand; then moving on to Superstition Mountain, Borrego Springs and back to Silver Strand, where he parked on a street overnight before returning home to Sabre Springs in Poway on Monday morning.

"The scenery on (Interstate) 8 and toward Jacumba and the desert is not the most appealing," Yale said. "An alternative route is go up through Ramona, San Ysabel -- that way."

Generally, Yale added, he would take one way heading toward Glamis and return by a different route "just for a change of scene."

Avoiding crowds

Yale further testified that when he traveled to Glamis, he avoids crowds. "I set up away from people," he said on direct examination.

It was also not unusual to keep windows closed at times, Yale said. "A windshield on a motor home is pretty big -- and I've logged over 100,000 miles in them -- people have a natural tendency to look in, see what's going on."

Sunlight also tends to damage interior furniture, he said. In addition, shades drawn on windshields and sides reduce glare for his wife and children who enjoy watching videos.

Motion denied

Before court adjourned on Tuesday, Superior Court Judge William Mudd denied a defense motion to acquit Westerfield on the charges, that possession of child pornography.

Mudd noted that the defense motion ``brings to the court the question of whether or not, in the best light possible given to the prosecution's evidence, is there sufficient evidence to go to the jury from the question of the guilt or innocence of Mr. Westerfield on charges he is facing?

``The answer to that question is yes,'' Mudd said, answering his own rhetorical question. ``The motion is denied.''

Police criminalist Tanya DuLaney testified yesterday that blue fibers found in Westerfield's motorhome match fibers found around the body of the victim and on clothes in his washing machine.

DuLaney said she found a total of 46 blue fibers while examining the 1997 Southwind motorhome Feb. 6, four days after the second-grader was discovered missing from her Sabre Springs home.

Eleven blue nylon fibers were found on the headboard of the bed at the back of the vehicle, DuLaney said, with 31 discovered on bench seats, one on a front passenger seat and the rest on a couch.

Father wants back in court

Damon van Dam has filed a motion to be readmitted into the trial of his daughter's accused killer, Judge William Mudd said today.

The judge barred the father from the courtroom and third floor of the San Diego County Courthouse on June 25 because he said Damon van Dam was stalking and trying to stare down Westerfield.

At the time, Mudd said he had reached the limit with the father and told him to leave.

Mudd said he will consider Damon van Dam's motion tomorrow.

Baseball's 'sorry state'

The 7-7 tie in the Major League Baseball All-Star game Tuesday night prompted the judge to comment today on what he called the "sorry state of professional baseball."

Mudd was unhappy that Commissioner Bud Selig decided to call the game after 11 innings because the National and American league managers had told him that they had run out of players.

"It sure lets you know where the fans fit in," Mudd told jurors before testimony began.

The judge also reminded the jury that they would be off next week because Mudd had a prepaid and long-standing vacation planned by his wife of 30 years.

Mudd said the break would be good for jurors since the end of the case would be "intense."

"The pundits are telling me you're all a bunch of idiots," the judge said, referring to some criticism that the week-long break is going to leave jurors with an impression that the last witnesses who testify would be the best witnesses.

Mudd said the break would actually work to jurors' benefits.

"This actually is going to work out to your benefit."

"Get back to know your boss, your co-workers, spend time with your families," Mudd said. "Take a vacation. This is going to work to your benefit. It allows you a bit of a break before the end of the trial. The end of the trial will be intense."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: 180frank; damonvandam; westerfield
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 1,241-1,2601,261-1,2801,281-1,3001,301-1,318 next last
To: UCANSEE2
I know nothing about Bill Libby. After Feldman 'gets to' him, like he promised earlier, we'll know more.

Your scenario is along the lines of what I'm thinking matches with what the ME and bugman testified about the state of Danielle's body when they found it.

Keep thinking! :-)
1,281 posted on 07/12/2002 8:53:32 AM PDT by pinz-n-needlez
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 978 | View Replies]

To: redlipstick
but they were ordered released by the Supreme Court.

You mean it wasn't a last minute desperation ploy by Dusek because his case was sinking, and fast?? /sarcasm

(Nevermind it was the court that released the info, not Dusek)

1,282 posted on 07/12/2002 8:56:05 AM PDT by cyncooper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1230 | View Replies]

To: John Jamieson
Glad to hear everyone's okay. I guess bugs respond differently to deer does than they do to every other creature on earth. LOL
1,283 posted on 07/12/2002 9:05:10 AM PDT by pinz-n-needlez
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1020 | View Replies]

To: Southflanknorthpawsis
We have now heard that perhaps Brenda van Dam told DW about it. So how could police have decided that the ONLY way he knew it was from the child herself.

This is a good point, South. I am trying to recall----did Brenda state she told him this info?

I remember a few weeks ago this was being discussed and some wondered how or why she would have brought it up and I said I could imagine a neighborly conversation along the lines of "Danielle's going to her first dance, it's a father/daughter dance. Damon thinks she's growing up too fast."

It is possible that in early interviews the police, too assumed Brenda wouldn't have brought up the subject and made the above conclusion.

My question is, does someone have the transcripts handy that show Brenda gave him this info? If not, I'll try to dig through later. Thanks.

1,284 posted on 07/12/2002 9:09:43 AM PDT by cyncooper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1257 | View Replies]

To: Karson
"I want to hear from Bill Libby and Barbara Easton!"

Me too, Karson. I don't believe Feldman mentioned calling Barb to the stand, in his opening, but he did make a point, that he would be getting to Bill Libby.

Feldman's delivered on most everything he said he would, so far anyway, IMO, so I'm anxiously looking forward to seeing Bill Libby - if not Barb, as well - soon after trial resumes.

1,285 posted on 07/12/2002 9:27:33 AM PDT by theirjustdue
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1144 | View Replies]

To: Greg Weston
"Westerfield is guilty"---Bill O'Reilly"

Oh right, why bother with a jury, Greg, when O'Reilly can simply pass his divining rod of justice over a suspect. /sarcasm

1,286 posted on 07/12/2002 9:42:14 AM PDT by theirjustdue
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1182 | View Replies]

To: Jaded
Then again they discounted the rumors of the Beemer, said viscious people were just rumor mongering....

Did they really discount rumors about their beemer?
They are really sick.

Well well well... I wonder when the "rumors" about the $850,000 house will be proven true?

1,287 posted on 07/12/2002 10:09:31 AM PDT by It's me
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1254 | View Replies]

To: Jaded
Ya thinkin' that out o' neighborly concern she drove home to make sure David got there okay, in once piece? How sweet. She's in the same league as Rich for sharing his weed. Put a gold star by Brenda's name. Really, I'm moved, beyond words.

Well, that wasn't exactly what I was thinking but I bet you know that. ;-)

1,288 posted on 07/12/2002 10:11:37 AM PDT by Karson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1262 | View Replies]

To: theirjustdue
Feldman's delivered on most everything he said he would, so far anyway, IMO, so I'm anxiously looking forward to seeing Bill Libby - if not Barb, as well - soon after trial resumes.

I agree. And Judge Mudd did tell the jury they might need this break because the rest of the trial would be "intense". Sounds interesting.

1,289 posted on 07/12/2002 10:15:04 AM PDT by Karson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1285 | View Replies]

To: Southflanknorthpawsis
Today's edition of the North County Times is not yet on their website, but I am a subscriber. SNIP...

This is a good example of their wish to pin everything on him.

This is another example of customizing interpretations to fit the suspect they want it to fit. It's very disturbing, IMO.

Did you catch yesterday's NCTimes front page headline concerning the case?

Westerfield's ex-girlfriend takes the stand

Nothing about the "bug man" until the end of the article on the following pages.

How about another good example of their wish to pin everything on him.

1,290 posted on 07/12/2002 10:15:21 AM PDT by It's me
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1257 | View Replies]

To: RnMomof7
IMHO This guy is being protected for a reason..perhaps a politician that would not want his swinging lifestyle outed??

Well, I'm not sure about the politician angle, but the cops surely knew that 'political correctness' covered the VD's 'rights' to engage in their 'lifestyle of choice' whereas, (at least currently) the liberals' political correctness does not extend to pedophilia. So, it was easier to hang this on a random pedophile than on two scumbags 'exploring' their 'enlightened sexuality', particularly when an investigation of the parents would have necessarily explored the relationship between marriage perversion and parenting perversion. Obviously, in view of the liberal enamorment with 'queer parenting', drawing such an obvious relationship is a no-no. Can't you imagine the liberals waxing eloquent on every talking head show that "this doesn't necessarily mean there is anything wrong with the parents' lifestyle choices ... yada yada yada."

In James Q. Wilson's latest book (and current best-seller), The Marriage Problem, he mentions obliquely this effect in the context of cohabitation prior to marriage (aka "shacking up"). He cites a late 90's poll which showed that about half the American people had no objection to people living together prior to marriage, but when the same poll asked respondents about their own daughter almost none found it acceptable. Wilson concludes that "tolerance is a virtue with fuzzy edges" and, in liberal America, being 'judgmental' is not a good thing unless it involves something (or somebody) we care about.

1,291 posted on 07/12/2002 10:37:22 AM PDT by winstonchurchill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 377 | View Replies]

To: Karson
I agree. And Judge Mudd did tell the jury they might need this break because the rest of the trial would be "intense". Sounds interesting.

I don't think that is what e said. I think his words were to the effect that things would be moving along pretty quickly, implying that there wil not be much more testimony in this case. I suspect he was simply trying to indirectly let the jury know that they will begin deliberating soon after the trial restarts.

I suspect that Feldman is going to call Barbara as the last witness and she is either going to admit to some very important facts that will tend to clear DW or she will assert her 5th amendment right against self-incrimination. If she does the latter, DW will be found 'not-guilty' for sure.

1,292 posted on 07/12/2002 10:52:15 AM PDT by connectthedots
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1289 | View Replies]

To: It's me
Well well well... I wonder when the "rumors" about the $850,000 house will be proven true?

Can you point to some documentation of the BMW? I've heard it but have never seen an article or anything to support it. (Or if it was a used car and that type of thing)

Also, I heard the radio station that first broadcast the house info retracted this morning. Anything new on that?

Thanks!

1,293 posted on 07/12/2002 11:07:59 AM PDT by cyncooper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1287 | View Replies]

To: winstonchurchill
You points are well taken..I agree with all you have written (some holiness roots here) But I do think they shifted attention away from the parents too quickly for a reason , just look at the intense investigation of the Mormon family that prays at night..(Smarts)

On the other hand as soon as posible the investigation went away from the swingers..no court order to keep the house unchanged till after the trial..

I suspect that some well placed people belong to the same circles as the VD and want this over quickly (remember Bob Dole had a swinger on his campaign staff and it came out)

1,294 posted on 07/12/2002 11:15:01 AM PDT by RnMomof7
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1291 | View Replies]

To: connectthedots
I did read (somewhere) that Judge Mudd told the jury they might need this break because the rest of the trial would be "intense". However, you could be right that he didn't say that. It might have been a media article that stated it and we know how inaccurate the media has been.

I've moved over to the new thread ... just checked back here to re-read a post and caught your response.

1,295 posted on 07/12/2002 11:26:13 AM PDT by Karson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1292 | View Replies]

To: Jaded
Court TV is the first to post them. Here are the first two:
http://www.courttv.com/trials/Westerfield/docs/cell1.html

http://www.courttv.com/trials/Westerfield/docs/computer1.html
1,296 posted on 07/12/2002 11:51:02 AM PDT by EllaMinnow
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1275 | View Replies]

To: winstonchurchill
That's very interesting. Susan L., erstwhile girlfriend of Old Westie, shacked up with him two weeks after she met him for the first time.
And dragged her young daughter with her.

As she testified.
1,297 posted on 07/12/2002 11:54:02 AM PDT by EllaMinnow
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1291 | View Replies]

To: longjack
I am interested in listening to other interpretations of that motion.

I laid out points which involve alcohol, which the jury will consider.

Upon reflection of Susan L.--the said when he drank he became "forceful."

Could "forceful" be her way of describing aggressive sexual behavior? She DID say she left him because of his drinking.

Unlike most of the regulars here, I haven't yet decided if DAW is guilty. I am certain that alcohol has caused problems in his life, for it is frequently mentioned.

Alcoholism is a progressive disease (or condition, use your own term). That means it gets worse over time.

I am leaning toward the belief he had a blackout for a period that night.

1,298 posted on 07/12/2002 11:56:18 AM PDT by truth_seeker
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1183 | View Replies]

To: John Jamieson
I must be perverted because of my technical background. Makes people lose their common sense and substitute logic.

Did I read somewhere that you believe O.J. Simpson to be innocent of the double murder, a few years ago?

If you give a straight answer, we can better evaluate your "logic," which you obtained by losing your "common sense," as a result of your technical background.

1,299 posted on 07/12/2002 12:06:30 PM PDT by truth_seeker
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1204 | View Replies]

To: John Jamieson
There's a rumor that he visited a neighborhood lady.

Better hurry and get it into evidence, for otherwise it just becomes another of your "logic" rumors.

1,300 posted on 07/12/2002 12:14:35 PM PDT by truth_seeker
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1215 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 1,241-1,2601,261-1,2801,281-1,3001,301-1,318 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