Friday, January 23, 2015

DAY 23 “RAINDROP IN A HURRICANE” Written by: Paul A. Sanders, Jr. The 13th Juror @The13thJurorMD (Twitter)

DAY 23
“RAINDROP IN A HURRICANE”
“Justice is whatever is left over after the filtration of truth in a Court of Law.”
This quote appears in my first book, “Brain Damage: A Juror’s Tale” (available on Amazon.com). It captures my sentiments after being a Juror for almost six months in the matter of the first degree premeditated murder of Dale Harrell by Marissa DeVault. I have noted many times that there are amazing similarities to the Arias death penalty retrial and the cruel and heinous killing of Travis Alexander. The biggest similarity in both Juries is that both Juries know that there is an incredible amount of information that they are not being told. They can feel it in every sidebar and know it with every argument that exposes statements that are stricken from the record.
The Jury does not know why the media and public was not present the day and a half that Arias testified last October. They do not know that her transcripts were finally released to the public this week. They are unaware that at the completion of the testimony of John Smith, the data scientist, that Judge Stevens would render a decision that the death penalty may or may not be taken off the table.
This Jury can feel the tension between the attorneys handling both sides of the case. The Jury does not know that the purpose of these arguments are more for the Judge than for them.
Kirk Nurmi began with John Smith on the stand concluding the incomplete testimony of a couple of days prior. Kirk Nurmi wore a black suit with white shirt accented by a blue tie. He had a bar graph posted on the projection screens for the Jury and court to see. He was pursuing a block of time on this graph that signified when the defense team had been looking at this laptop. The date was June 19, 2009.
The web activity that could be seen was for a period of two hours in the afternoon. This was the same day that Juan Martinez and Esteban Flores were present. John Smith said that a USB port was used and twelve files were accessed in the afternoon. These were noted on the graphs as hours number fifteen and sixteen.
“I want to discover a little more on what happened with this computer on June 19, 2009,” he said to John Smith who was on the stand. Mr. Nurmi pointed toward another set of blocked colors on the graph. “In this regard, then, with this file, can you tell the Court what happened at 11:00 PM?”
John Smith was wearing a light purple shirt complimented with a purple tie and a black suit. His trademark beard, like that of a Red Sox ball player, stood out. He was calm on the stand throughout all of his testimony. However, the same issues stood with him as they did before. He was a self-proclaimed data scientist with no formal education. This is a big problem with the Jury and would be the one issue that prohibits them from taking him seriously. Just the same, he held his ground speaking calmly and knowledgeably on his subject.
“We ran a scan on this computer, a Compaq Presario and we could see the activity in the afternoon around three o’clock. If you were to look after that, there is no activity on the computer for about six hours and then we see activity at eleven o-clock at night,” John Smith stated.
Kirk Nurmi paced in front of his witness, his head leaning forward. “What does this activity mean to you as a data scientist?”
“I can see that images were Googled. There is an image we found called, Siamese Twins. It’s doubtful that the computer generated this search on its own,” he said.
“Can you tell the, or let me back up, if I can ask it this way,” Kirk Nurmi began. One could go have lunch and come back before he finished half of a question. “Can you tell us specifically what the path was of this activity at eleven o’clock at night?”
“It is apparent from this report that through a default page, someone accessed ‘my computer’ and then accessed a file called Siamese Twins. It shows over twenty results. They are mostly images from folders that contain pictures and documents. These files are about a minute apart,” John Smith explained.
“I see,” Kirk Nurmi said as if he was contemplating the answer. “These files were accessed, loaded into the browser and someone searched within the computer?”
“It appears so,” John Smith admitted.
“I’m finished with this witness,” Kirk Nurmi said as he gathered his papers from the podium that he did not use.
“Very good,” Judge Stevens said. She looked toward the witness and then toward the Jury. “Does the Jury have any questions for this witness before we dismiss him?” she asked.
I was proud of the Jury when they jumped to life submitting a basket full of questions. Arizona is one of few states that allow questions to be asked by the Jury. The questions can only be submitted at the conclusion of testimony of a witness. These questions are asked anonymously and done via an official Jury Question form featuring the seal of the State of Arizona. They are a great tool for Justice and, as a former Juror, I can say that critical information was pulled from witnesses that we not otherwise would have been a party to. We used many of those answers during our three phases of deliberation.
Randy strutted over to the front of the Jury box and removed the handful of papers. He handed them to Judge Stevens and the attorneys were called forward to approve the questions. There are times that questions are submitted but not approved by the Court to be answered. All three parties confer on each question. Finally, the attorneys went back to their seats while Judge Stevens turned toward the Jury and looked at John Smith while she read each question word for word. Being that these questions were handwritten, some questions were harder for her to decipher making her struggle to read the words at times.
“In 2009, you said the computer files showed modifications and a search. What was searched and who did it?” she asked John Smith.
He looked toward the Judge. “I do not think they were done via the internet, I know that. There were local file searches within the computer. I do not know who searched the computer,” he answered.
Judge Stevens separated that question sheet and moved to the next question. “Were all computer modified files modified by cleaners or were they done physically by someone?”
John Smith appeared to think before he spoke. “There is a “Spy Block” cleaning program which can modify files. For the most part, it looks like files were cleaned directly.”
“Can files be specifically cleaned?” Judge Stevens asked, holding a new question in front of her.
“Yes.”
“Can cleaning programs work or change files when computer is off?”
“Absolutely not,” John Smith answered confidently.
“In reference to start up lists, are they automatically modified?” she asked him.
“It is really operating system dependent,” he answered.
Judge Stevens shuffled her papers to the next question. She peered over her glasses at John Smith occasionally as she read the question to him. “Please explain over written files and how to get them back.”
“It is harder to get files back when they have been cleaned by a program. If the files are deleted, it is a lot easier to get them back because they are not really deleted. The file just moves to unallocated space on a computer,” he explained.
“On a search bar, how do you know if someone searched an actual topic?” the Judge asked as she read the Juror question.
“There is a registry history. In that registry, terms are searched by a human and they are not automated searches.”
“Do things attach to other files from spam and viruses?” the question asked.
“Yes,” he answered. “We call it ‘hooking’ and they can modify files. It is usually for advertising reasons.”
“Is there evidence of a virus that had to be removed?”
“Yes, there were a variety of them including “Z-Lob” and a handful of others.”
“Can malware hijack a system to get pornography?”
“Yes,” he answered without explanation.
The Judge stacked the questions and put them somewhere on her desk and looked toward the defense table. Arias was chatting quietly with Jennifer Willmott in her ear. She was wearing a tan sweater top with loose fitting black pants. Kirk Nurmi gathered his things and walked up to question his witness who was waiting patiently on the stand.
Kirk Nurmi’s questions were directed at the computer. He was wanted attention toward June 1, 2008, the day he alleged Travis Alexander was searching for pornography. “So, if we look at the browser history, we can assume that a virus did not use the browser?” he asked.
“The browser is separate from a virus,” John Smith answered.
Kirk Nurmi stood in his Sherlock Holmes pose acting as if he was framing a question very carefully. “So,” he said with a pause, “we can see a list of sites in the browser. Let’s take “Babies Pornography Magazine”. It’s in the browser. Did a virus look for that?”
“No, definitely not,” John Smith said. “These were searched for by a human and could not have come from a virus even if the virus had hijacked pornography.”
“What about these cleaner programs?” Nurmi asked. “Could they put this in the browser?”
“Spy Block or any program like that cannot put things or items in a browser. These search terms were undoubtedly from human interaction,” John Smith stated.
Kirk Nurmi nodded that he was finished and went back to the defense table.
Juan Martinez stood up and walked toward John Smith while the court and Jury waited silently. One never knew what was going to come out of his mouth and that elevated the tension. Juan stopped about five feet from the witness.
He looked toward his feet and then at John Smith. “One of the things you referred to,” Juan started, “is that you are a ‘Data Scientist’. You used a tool in your research called “Autopsy”, did you not?”
“Objection!” Kirk Nurmi jumped up yelling.
“Please approach,” Judge Stevens said.
The attorneys had their thousandth sidebar while the Court and Jury waited with white noise over our heads. Moments later, the attorneys returned to their seats while Juan Martinez stopped at the center of the room in front of John Smith and began a tirade of rapid fire questions. He would ask a question and then begin pacing like a cage lion.
“You did use a program called “Autopsy”, didn’t you?”
“Yes,” John Smith answered calmly. One got the feeling that he did not know what the hustle and bustle was about.
“It’s a free program for everyone?”
“Yes.”
“It’s never been verified, has it?” Juan accused.
“Not really,” he answered. “I have not had any issues with it.”
“Don’t police departments normally use a program called “EM Case”?
“I think so,” John Smith answered.
“Let’s talk about the term UTC,” Juan said quickly changing subjects. “What is UTC on a computer? “
“It stands for Universal Time Code,” the witness answered.
“Yes, it does,” Juan agreed. “What is seven minus twenty two?”
“Uh,” John Smith said, stalling. “It’s, um, fifteen.”
“Correct. It is fifteen hundred or three o’clock. Right?”
“Yes.”
“The two intrusions in green on your “Autopsy” Graph are really the same times, aren’t they?”
John Smith looked a little confused as he thought about the two separate times that the computer showed searches the day the defense team looked at the computer with the prosecution in the room in June of 2009. “I don’t think so,” he said, finally.
Juan took a couple steps toward the prosecution table away from the witness. He turned toward the witness and crossed his arms over his chest. “Where did you go to school?”
“San Jose State, Sir,” John answered.
“Did you graduate from San Jose State?” Juan Martinez asked.
“No,” he answered.
“Did you graduate from anywhere?”
“Uh, no,” he answered.
“Do you have any degree, Sir?” Juan asked raising his voice.
“No,” he answered quietly.
“All your information was collected from “Autopsy”?
“Pretty much,” he answered.
“Okay,” Juan said. “Did you use “EM Case”, what professional computer forensics normally use?”
“No.”
“How about “PTK” which another computer forensics tool recognized by police departments? Did you obtain results from that as data scientist?”
“No,” he answered.
“All the results you obtained came from one tool called “Autopsy”, right?” Juan Martinez reiterated.
“Yes, Sir.”
“You used that program and then gave us the results. Am I right?”
“Yes, Sir,” he answered.
Kirk Nurmi got up and slowed everything down by questioning his now defunct witness. It was like bringing someone back from the dead a week after they were gone. He was not going to be resurrected despite Kirk Nurmi trying to show that big businesses hired the services of John Smith. It was mentioned that the Department of Homeland Security trusted John Smith to do work for them.
Kirk Nurmi emphasized in questioning that these corporations had no concern that he did not graduate from college proven by their continuation of using John’s services. He further tried to show that no one had ever complained about using this unrecognized tool, “Autopsy”.
I know as speaking from experience as a Juror that Juan Martinez caused significant damage. His questioning was pointed, direct and clear and concise in its intent. I further see that the plethora of questions, more questions than this Jury has asked any witness, are an indication that not only is this Jury engaged, they are also searching for truth in a muddled array of inconsequential details. They are struggling to see the importance of anything having to do with the computer especially with the array of viruses found on it.
We were dismissed for lunch and I went to Crazy Jims to have a salad. It’s across the street and a block down from the Court house. Although I like their pizza by the slice, I thought a salad a little more healthy and I didn’t want to risk getting sleepy in Court. Our Jury used to go to Crazy Jims a lot because few Court personnel could be found there.
I was making my way back to the Court house and I ran into Judge Steinle and Donna, my old Judge and his assistant. There is nothing like an ex-Juror being able to talk to the seated Judge on a trial they shared. The respect endowed each other is mutual and lifelong. It is completely refreshing to be able to talk to a person that you had been prohibited to speak with for six months.
There were a hundred questions I probably wanted to ask him but only thought of a few. At one point, when he asked me of the Arias Trial and how it was proceeding, I responded that I felt it was painstakingly slow in comparison to the speed of his death penalty trial. He laughed in understanding and then quipped, “I don’t do sidebars.”
I can still picture him when attorneys were presenting arguments. I cannot tell you how many times Judge Steinle III would unabashedly tell the attorneys, no matter which side, “Save it for appeal, gentlemen! Let’s move along. We have a jury empaneled.”
I think Dale Harrell, the victim in our crime, got a good shake when he got Judge Steinle III in charge of the Court.
We returned from lunch and welcomed Detective Flores back to the stand as presented by the defense. Jennifer Willmott handled the questioning wearing a blue business skirt suit with black high heeled shoes and black stockings. Her hair, as always, in perfect order resting on her shoulders.
The discussion went toward June 1, 2008 and who had who had access to the computer of Travis Alexander. She was able to establish that Travis Alexander’s roommates, Enrique Cortez and Zack Billings owned their own computers and would not have been on the computer in the office of Travis Alexander.
Jennifer Willmott presented a tape of Zack Billings and tried to get Detective Flores to say he recognized the voice of Zack Billings recorded a significant time earlier. She was playing the tape and it was heard that Zack Billings had never heard Travis Alexander say he was a virgin nor did he ever hear Travis Alexander say that he had lost his “Temple Recommend”.
I do not think she wanted the Jury to hear those things as she was quick to shut the interview off before the Jury heard more. I know the Jury saw this as inconsistent to what the defense team had presented far earlier in the retrial. Juries love details because that is where the truth often hides. This truth was itching to be exposed.
The next hour was a bickering squabble over details that Detective Flores would not give in to. It sounded like supposition and speculation which police investigations are typically not supposed to be about. There was definitely tension between Willmott and Flores. Much to the relief of everyone in the room, she completed her work with the detective.
I glanced at the Jury as Juan Martinez made his way to the center of his playing field, that zone between the Jury and in front of detective Flores. He paused before he began and I could see the Jury readying themselves for taking notes, some leaning forward. They knew by now that he moved fast when he was in his comfort zone. They would also be used to the fact that he pulled no punches and played no pleasantries with any witness even if was his own.
“Do you recognize this?” he asked Flores as he walked toward him with a piece of paper in his hand. Along the way, he said “May I approach?”
“You may,” Judge Stevens responded. She watched Juan and Flores intently as she did with all testimony.
“Will you look at Exhibit number 810. Do you recognize this?” he asked as he handed Flores the paper.
Juan looked at his feet and rocked back imperceptibly. He waited patiently for Flores to give it back and he agreed he recognized it. Juan then marched over to the projection screen and displayed the paper for the Jury to see.
“What is this, Detective Flores?” he asked as he turned to face the witness.
“It is a Chain of Custody receipt,” Flores answered.
“It’s a voucher from the Mesa Police Department dated June 19, 2009. Is that right?” Juan asked.
“It is,” Flores answered.
“Would I be correct in saying that this is a log of any movements of the Compaq Presario? It goes in and out of computer forensics evidence room, right?”
“Yes,” Detective Flores answered while his hands rested comfortably in his lap.
“Can anybody come in off the street and look at evidence?”
“No, they can’t.”
“Can anybody access computer forensic evidence without a Chain of Custody form being filled out?”
“No.”
“You always give notice if you or anyone on the case needs to look at it?”
“Correct.”
“This form says you returned it around five o’clock. Is there any reason to believe that’s not true?”
“The personnel who check it in and out of the property room fill out the form and are in charge of making sure items are logged. This has a bar scan on it which shows it was returned at 16:51,” Flores explained.
“You check it out over a counter?”
“Yes.”
“Are they open twenty four hours?” Juan Martinez asked.
“No. I believe they stop around nine in the evening.”
“Is anyone there to check out computer evidence at eleven o’clock at night?”
“No, Sir,” Flores answered.
“Do you know of any computer that turns on and off on its own?” Juan asked.
There were nine Jurors busily taking notes.
“No.”
“You are familiar with computer operating systems as an investigator?”
“Yes,” Flores answered dutifully.
Juan moved in for the attack. “Doesn’t a computer have to be on for an operating system to work?”
“Yes.”
Juan Martinez opened his palm and looked at it as if he was holding an invisible computer. “So, if the operating system is not on, can it access files within the browser?”
“No,” Flores answered. “It would be like running a car without a key.”
Juan then brought the questioning back to June 1, 2008, days before Travis Alexander was murdered. The laptop was in his office that he allowed anyone in the household to access. He did not believe in making boundaries in his own home. He was known for leaving his doors unlocked.
“The computer was in his office, wasn’t it?” Juan asked Flores.
“Yes.”
“The defendant would have had access to it?”
“Yes,” Flores responded.
“Travis Alexander never kept the door locked, did he?”
“Not that I know of,” Flores answered.
“His house was available to everyone because he liked it that way, didn’t he?”
“There was no indication his office was locked, was there?” Juan asked, stopping.
“No.”
“The defendant had access to it as well, didn’t she?” Juan reiterated.
“Yes,” Flores said.
Juan Martinez finished with his witness. For a moment, he had managed to bring us all, including the Jury, into Travis Alexander’s life. It may only have been for a moment but he was suddenly human again. It was not about computers and pornography or whether they went on and off in the night. It was about a man who was caring and opened his door to all without fear. It was as if his empty office stood in the courtroom and an innocuous computer on a back desk brought him to life, if only for a moment.
Jennifer Willmott finished with Detective Flores but it sounded weak and without weight. She tried to imply that logs might have been changed because of his superior position within the Mesa Police Department. There was a typographical error on the form and maybe he should have made a supplement to the document to rectify this error.
Detective Flores felt it was too minor to worry about in spite of Willmott’s vehemence that something should have been done.
She grasped the edges of the podium. “There’s another issue I would like to discuss. You know that Jodi Arias was nowhere near Mesa on June 1, 2008, don’t you?” she asked accusingly.
“Yes,” Flores answered.
“She was not in Mesa, Arizona. She was in Yreka, California. Right?”
“Yes,” Detective Flores answered.
The Jury would look into this tidbit when they got in the Jury room once deliberations started. I don’t think they believed Jennifer Willmott. I don’t think they believe Jodi Arias. I think they will want to know who was really on the computer on June 1, 2008.
The Jury’s day went south when Judge Stevens informed them that they would need to advise her of any conflicts for February as this trial was going a little longer than expected. The Jury already knew that since they had told their employers, husbands, wives, children and schools they would be complete by December 18, 2014.
The Jury was dismissed until Tuesday of next week and Judge Stevens ruled on the motion to remove the death penalty from the table because of the defense claims of malfeasance by the prosecution, sometimes worded as prosecutorial misconduct.
The Jury is probably irritated but not surprised that there is another month expected trial. They are certainly confused about the computer and why it seemed so important when they have to live with the face of Travis Alexander in his final moments every moment of their lives until they reach a decision in the matter. The computer and the issues arisen because of it hardly seems the value of a single raindrop in a hurricane named Travis.
In the end, Judge Stevens said that the death penalty shall remain on the table.
I wonder if Jodi Arias shed emotionless tears that night on her cot, alone in her cell, as she realized the Grim Reaper may soon be standing at her door….

“Every good relationship that develops as a result of this Trial is the
manifestation of the Spirit of Travis Alexander.”
Justice 4 Travis Alexander…
Justice for Dale…
Paul A. Sanders, Jr.
The 13th Juror @The13thJurorMD (Twitter)

DAY 25 “SEED OF DESTRUCTION” Written by: Paul A. Sanders, Jr. The 13th Juror @The13thJurorMD (Twitter)

DAY 25

“SEED OF DESTRUCTION”
Dr. Geffner smiled at the jury when he returned to the stand for his fifth day of testimony. He was comfortable in the witness chair wearing a gray suit, light blue shirt and blue striped tie. He crossed his fingers in his lap and smiled toward Jennifer Willmott as she gave him a friendly greeting to start the day.
The timeline that Dr. Geffner had created was displayed for all to see. It was based on Arias’ journal entries, text messages and emails. Blue arrows pointed to significant dates, dates that the Doctor had deemed important in his evaluation of the defendant.
“…and May 18, 2008 is significant, as well,” the Doctor explains as he turns to the jury. “Jodi Arias writes in her journal that she is looking forward to the visit of Travis Alexander but has reservations because she feels he only wants one thing. This is consistent with what I have said all along.”
Jennifer Willmott nods her head as she looks toward the projection screen. She is wearing a black business skirt suit with high heels. “Thank you. You said that May 18, 2008 is important. What is important to you, Doctor?”
“This is the day of the sex tape and we are seeing more signs of aggression by Travis Alexander. He is becoming jealous as can be seen by his saying he wanted to “whoop a vibe” on a gentleman named Abe with the intent of beating him down. I also think it important that Travis thinks Miss Arias sounds like a twelve year old girl. This is consistent with his entertaining child pornography interests,” the Doctor explains.
“Thank you, Doctor,” Willmott responds. “Why did you create the timeline that we are looking at?”
The Dr. laughs. “The amount of information we had to go through was quite intimidating. There are sixteen full binders and we had to condense sixteen thousand words into something manageable. We were able to glean it down to a summary of one hundred and twenty pages and that was still a lot of information to consume. In order to get a big picture of what was going on, I built the timeline.”
“So, in talking about your timeline, you identify five instances of physical abuse. The first is in March of 2007 when she notes that he grabs her wrist because he is angry. Is it unusual that she did not make a big deal of this?” she asks him.
“She demonstrates classic qualities of a domestic violence victim and therefore she minimizes the importance of this,” the Doctor answers.
Jennifer Willmott looks at the screen and back at Dr. Geffner. “In October of 2007, another incident is reported when she says she is pushed down by Travis Alexander and he restrains her. It is noted that he rapes her. Do you consider this physical violence?”
“I don’t think there is a question this is physical violence. It’s important to know that this incident has a higher intensity level than the incident in March.”
“Very good,” Willmott says moving to the next target date on the timeline. “We see that in January of 2008, Travis Alexander body slams Miss Arias and screams at her that he is sick of her. Is this physical violence?”
I look to the Jury as they watch Willmott and Geffner. I note that two are taking intermittent notes and their faces tell me nothing further.
“This is definitely physical abuse,” he says with a soft chuckle. “A person is being body slammed, as Miss Arias refers to it, and demonstrates a violent confrontation.”
“If I can draw your attention to March of 2008, a year after their first physical confrontation, it is noted that Travis Alexander slaps Miss Arias in the face. Is this physical violence?”
“Yes,” Dr. Geffner nods in agreement.
“Finally, on April 1, 2008, we see that they have a violent argument which results in a body slam and back handed slap. She is choked out and it results in her losing consciousness. This, too, would be considered physical?”
Dr. Geffner turns toward the jury. “This is certainly physical and the thing that makes alarms go off in my head is the fact that she is choked to unconsciousness. It shows that the situation has escalated and the time periods are closer together. This is a dangerous situation for Miss Arias although she continues to minimize its importance.”
Jennifer Willmott pauses and looks toward Dr. Geffner as if she wanted to give the jury a moment for it to sink in. “Now, Doctor, is there any documentation that she received medical care for these violent incidents?”
“No.”
“What of counseling? Is there any report that she received counseling?”
“No, she did not.”
“Don’t you find that unusual?” Willmott asks.
“Absolutely not. This is characteristic of domestic violence to minimize and hide cases of domestic violence. They do want to admit to themselves that these things happened,” he explains. “Victims of domestic violence rarely report these cases and they rarely go to shelters. There is a sense of learned helplessness and a general feeling that they cannot get out of these destructive situations. Miss Arias’ behavior after the fact is consistent with how victims of domestic violence handle their situations. It is a family secret and kept behind closed doors.”
“To your knowledge, has she spoken of these situations?” Willmott asked.
“Miss Arias only spoke of two of these incidents. I think it took her four or five years to recognize that she was a victim. Again, she minimizes these situations she found herself in,” the Doctor explains, his attention turned toward the jury.
“How can we corroborate these incidents aside from what Miss Arias wrote in her journals?”
“I looked at indirect evidence, those things that lined up with her journals. I looked at outside witnesses as well as the history of the parties involved,” he explained. “Victims of child abuse or early domestic violence when they are young tend to make themselves more susceptible to being in these situations later in life. I also used testing results to put the pieces of the puzzle together.”
Jennifer Willmott marched to the defense table, picked up a sheet of paper and placed it on the screen. She still had the same black nail polish with silver sparkles on her fingernails. “This is Exhibit number 787. It is a statement from a co-worker of hers in Big Sur, California. He says that he found Jodi Arias to be confident, kind, never sexual. She was always upbeat and very happy until she broke up with Daryl Brewer. The co-worker says that he felt that Miss Arias had been brainwashed by Travis Alexander. Do you see that?”
“Yes,” the Doctor answers affably. “This is important to us because it shows how she began changing after she met Travis Alexander and people around her were witness to it. Even though they minimize domestic violence, it is hard to hide signs that it is happening and this is clearly seen by the comments of her coworker.”
“What are other ways to corroborate her journal entries?”
“There are a host of tests that revealed problems with domestic violence and trauma,” the Doctor answers.
“What of her history growing up?”
“That is extremely important,” he says. He looks to the jury. “You see, victims of child abuse, where it is not recognized, increases the chances for a victim to be re-victimized in later relationships. They have low self-esteem and by themselves, may seem minor, but in the big picture, it has lasting impacts.”
“Okay. Going back to the journal entries of Miss Arias, what is important in the big picture?”
Dr. Geffner smoothed his tie and looked toward the jury. “The history of the journal is from August of 2007 through mid-2008. I can identify a change in personality from her arguments with Travis Alexander and the abuse she suffered. She makes many references to being suicidal. The situation gets worse in the escalation of violence.”
“These journal entries have matching emails and text messages?” Willmott prodded.
“Yes,” he answered. “The messages focus on their relationship and is consistent with her abuse. I saw many consistencies. Almost too many to really count,” he answers in a slightly goofy laugh.
“Did you interview Jodi Arias at some point?”
“I interviewed her three times, actually. I needed to get a diagnostic impression of her and spread these interviews over nine months from October of 2013 through July of 2014.”
“Was this counseling?”
“I was there as a forensic evaluator,” he explains. “It was not counseling. I was there to get information for the court and the jury.”
“What were your observations?” Jennifer Willmott asked.
“Miss Arias had a tendency to be very close lipped about all of it. She showed signs of disassociation. She was also very tangential, not being able to stay on one subject, going off in other directions,” he said. He got comfortable in his chair as he faced the jury. “She was minimizing the incidents she experienced throughout her life as is expected with victims of domestic violence. Miss Arias kept everything inside. In fact,” he said, “she only showed emotion two times and for very brief periods during our interviews. She became emotional in talking about her mother, tearing up for thirty seconds or so. The other time she was emotional was when she spoke of Travis Alexander and how she missed him in her life…”
“Objection,” Juan Martinez suddenly said. It was nice to hear from him and although he did intermittently object through the Doctors testimony, I could almost feel his discomfort in hearing it. “Residual doubt,” he stated firmly.
The sidebar completed with Jennifer Willmott returning to her position six feet from the Doctor. “Did she get remorseful?” she asked.
“Oh, yes,” Dr. Geffner answered. “She cried and got very emotional. She was trying to apologize to him on a spiritual level.”
Jennifer Willmott moved to the psychological test results that we had last seen in Dr. Geffner’s first appearance before the Christmas holiday break. Results of the MMPI 2 (Minnesota Multi-phasic Inventory) and a host of other test results were exchanged on the screen one by one.
We had seen these results and the jury had seen the results before the break. These various pages had shown her to be in the highest of categories in some areas and also featured the results of documents with Sharpie scratched markings on the top. They had struck me as subjective, as I am sure they did to the jury, and somewhat messy in their presentation.
I could not help but notice that not one juror was taking notes at this point.
The Doctor explained that these results in the big picture showed Arias to suffer from depression, emotional problems and being traumatized. He explained that she felt persecuted and did not have positive emotions. She had elevated scales in bizarre thinking and suicidal thoughts. These issues were created because of her childhood abuse and abusive relationships.
“What is your overall opinion of her mental condition?” Willmott asked, after Dr. Geffner had seemed to go on for hours with random speculation and subjectivity in his assessment.
“Clinically,” he began, “She suffers from Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome brought about by her experience with child abuse and domestic violence in all of her relationships. She shows severe signs of dissociation and detachment “
“Is that your complete assessment?” she asked.
Dr. Geffner laughed in response. “You want me to continue?”
“Well, yes,” Willmott answered. “is there more?”
“She is in deep and major depression. Plus, I saw signs of manic depression as well as bipolar characteristics. I actually assessed these characteristics because of some who had been in relationships with her.”
“Doctor?” Willmott asked, pausing. “Is Jodi Arias a victim of domestic violence?”
“Yes,” he answered. “Both from her childhood and her boyfriends.”
“So it is more likely than not that she is a victim of domestic violence?”
“Oh, yes,” the Doctor answered resolutely.
“I am finished with questions for this witness,” Jennifer Willmott said as she strutted back to the defense table and sat down.
The court and the jury waited in silence. There was a communal realization that the game was about to change. I could see jurors sitting slightly forward. I saw one turn a page on his notepad. I could see others with pen in hand. The pause was perceptible and the silence loud as the court waited.
Watching Juan Martinez in action on the stage in front of the jury and witness is like watching a great a seasoned prize fighter as he steps into the ring. His body is clothed in a suit but is like the glistening sweat of a fighter ready for contact. His words and questions are not tender blows but are like punches to the face and vulnerable areas of the body. His thoughts move as quick as the constant moving feet of a boxer. Each step is on purpose and each phrase is important. The aura is that of the excitement of a sold out house with everyone anticipating but not seeing every blow that strikes with imperceptible speed. His next move can never be anticipated
In the moments that Juan Martinez commands the audience, he becomes the voice of the victim who can no longer speak: Travis Alexander. The jury and participants in the court room were waiting for the bull to come loose.
Juan Martinez stepped to the center of the room. He does not look at Dr. Geffner. Instead, he looks to the floor and makes a quarter turn on his feet. He puts a hand in his pocket and with the other he gesticulates.
“One of the things you talked about was the affidavits we saw yesterday. Do you remember that?” he asks.
“I’m not sure which one you are…”
Juan cuts him off piercingly. “Yes or no!”
“Yes,” he answers.
“And one of the things you said is that you used these affidavits to make an assessment of the defendant. You said these were one of the things that you used to, as you put it, put the pieces of the puzzle together. Right?” Juan Martinez asked as he raised an open hand.
“Yes,” he answered. One could not help feeling that he was walking into a trap.
“You made the assessment that Travis Alexander was the owner of a file folder with pornographic photos of children from a computer in the Bishop’s house in 2001. Am I right?”
“Well, no,” Dr. Geffner answered. “My co-worker actually made that determination.”
“But you used that information in your testimony yesterday to say that it was true that Travis Alexander owned those pictures, Am I right?”
Dr. Geffner faltered. “I don’t know.”
“Your coworker that you’re referencing is Stephanie Platte?”
“Yes.”
“Isn’t it true that witness number one told you something different than what was in the original interviews?”
“I’m not sure what you’re referring to,” Dr. Geffner answered.
“Let me make it clear for you. Didn’t witness number one in the affidavit say that Travis Alexander owned pornographic pictures on a computer shared in the Bishops house when Deanna Reid, his bride to be and Travis Alexander lived there?!”
“Uh, I don’t know exactly,” he answered uncomfortably.
Juan Martinez walked over to his desk and walked a sheet of paper to him saying “May I approach?” along the way. He handed the sheet to Dr. Geffner and walked back toward the prosecution table and turned around while the witness inspected the exhibit.
“Don’t you see that it says ownership by Travis Alexander right there?”
“Uh, yes,” the Doctor answered. “But I’m a little confused.”
Juan stared at him in the eye. “Isn’t it true that you did not review the statement made by Stephanie Platte before the trial?”
“I did,” Dr. Geffner defended. “I saw this before the trial.” He is inspecting the document.
“You don’t need to look down,” Juan Martinez barked. “Answer me here!” Juan demanded as he pointed toward his own two eyes with two fingers.
“Objection!” Willmott shouted, jumping up from her chair. “Argumentative!”
The Judge calls them to a sidebar and Juan Martinez casually walks toward the bench, his hand still in his pocket. They a have a few minute discussion and everyone returns to their seats but Juan. He takes position in the center of the room with his focus on the witness.
“Isn’t it true that when Stephanie Platte spoke with the witness, he denied they were his photographs?”
“Um, I’m not sure,” the Doctor answered.
Juan marches over to the Judge’s assistant seated next to her behind a computer. The court waits patiently while she copies an exhibit that Juan promptly takes and hands to the defense team and has it admitted as exhibit number 821. A copy is put in Dr. Geffner’s hands.
“Do you mind looking at the first page, Sir?” Juan Martinez commands. “Look at the second page and the third page.”
The witness waves the paper without looking at it. He looks toward the judge and the defense table.
Juan looks nowhere but at the witness. “Put your eyes to the paper and look at it!”
“Argumentative!” Willmott says jumping up. One can tell she is getting flustered.
The jury’s attention is gripped on Juan.
“The very first page you see,” Juan directed. “Isn’t this an accurate account of what Stephanie Platte wrote down?”
“Yes,” Dr. Geffner answers softly.
“According to this,” Juan explains. “Witness number one says that he put a Post-It on the Bishops computer that it had crashed. He then confronted Travis Alexander about the crash due to pornography being in a folder. Did he not say that Travis admitted it was his pornography?”
“Yes, at two AM,” Geffner concedes.
“Look at the second page of that document,” Juan says. “This document is dated February 7, 2014 after Stephanie Platte made another contact with Witness number one. Am I right?”
“Yes?” the Doctor answers in more a question than answer.
“The date is February 7, 2014. Right?”
“Yes.”
“You remember this because you had her type the interview because you said she types faster than you write. Do you remember that?”
Dr. Geffner laughs. “She does type fast. Yes, I remember that.”
“Does it not say that Witness number one put a note on the computer and talked to Travis at two in the morning and Travis Alexander, in fact, denies anything to do with the pornography which is not what you told us in earlier testimony. Isn’t that right?” Juan asked pointedly.
Dr. Geffner stares at the paper as if confirming what Juan said. “Well, it looks like it.”
“You were wrong, weren’t you?” Juan Martinez states loudly.
The Doctor looked away from the jury and down at his lap and then back toward Juan Martinez. “I really can’t answer that.”
Juan did as we are accustomed to and changed gears without warning. I, and the jury, actually liked that about him. He keeps the mind busy. He keeps the juror searching for answers down a darkened hallway where one does not know what is around the corner. He keeps the room mentally charged with grace, perception and commanding authority.
Juan begins to pace. “Did you speak to Deanna Reid?”
“No,” Geffner answers.
“One of the things we talked about was, according to Witness number one, was that he was in the area to get married in December of 2000. Am I right?”
“Yes, Deanna Reid was staying at the Bishops house,” he answered.
“He courted his future bride by the internet . Do you remember saying that they had never met?”
“I don’t really recall,” Dr. Geffner says as he looks toward the ceiling. “I can’t remember.”
“Isn’t it true he didn’t meet his bride to be until he went to California? And during that time, she had been staying at the Bishop’s house. She kept a diary, right?” Juan says as he stops his pacing.
“It’s my understanding that they met in December 2000.”
“Yes,” Juan Martinez responds. “They were engaged in January of 2001 and married in March of the same year. You saw that in Dr. Platte’s notes, right?”
“Yes, I think so,” he answers falteringly. One thinks that he is feeling the tightening of a noose.
“This was a communal computer shared by his future bride, Travis, Witness number one and the Bishop. Right?”
“That is my understanding.”
“But witness number one was not living with the Bishop, right?” Juan asks.
“Yes,” the Doctor answers quietly.
“Witness number one was having a relationship with his future bride, though. Witness number one had access to this computer, right?”
“I would imagine so.”
“And Mark McGee got engaged with his bride in January of 2001 and married in March of 2001. They then moved to California. Right?”
“Yes,” Geffner acquiesced.
“Let’s talk about some other letters. The affidavit marked as number 819 said that Witness one may have erred and the events actually took place in November and December of 2001. Right?”
“Yes. Witness number one submitted a new affidavit recently and noted events were from November of 2001.”
“Correct,” Juan said. “This event happened in the household where Deanna Reid was living. Right? Witness number one told you that, right?”
Juan paused, looked at the witness, looked at shoes and back up at the witness. “Didn’t Deanna Reid serve on a mission for her church from January of 2000 until June of 2001?”
“Yes,” he answered. The noose had gotten tight.
“Isn’t it true that Mark McGee admitted lying to the Bishop about this incident?”
“No, no,” Dr. Geffner responded quickly. He was trying to escape. “He said he was not honest about what happened that night with the computer. I don’t have much more information on that.”
Juan marched over to the Judge’s assistant and had a new exhibit copied which he promptly marched to the defense table. It was admitted as Exhibit number 825.
“Take a look at Exhibit 825,” Juan commanded the flailing witness. “I want you to read it with me. It states in quotes ‘I was not honest with Bishop Parker how it went down’. Do you see that?”
“Yes,” Geffner answered.
“Witness number one got married on March 10, 2001. He remembers when the computer crashed and he would have been in trouble with the church and the Bishop. Isn’t it true that it was his pornography and not that of Travis Alexander?!”
There it was staring at the jury straight in the face. A reasonable man could see exactly what happened with witness number one. He was not afraid to testify because of online bashing or fear of supporters of Travis Alexander. His story did not fit. Deanna Reid was gone on her mission so she could not have been present in January of 2001. Further, witness number had self-impeached himself in not only a conflict of dates but having motive to hide the pornography from knowledge of anyone.
Witness number one had thrown Travis Alexander under the bus to be trashed like the lies of Jodi Arias. It reeked foul in intent as well as lack of truth and that truth would resonate with the Jury. The Jury would discard this segment of pornography and the words of witness number one like a boxer would throw a sweat laden towel into a spit bucket in the corner of the ring.
The downhill slide of Dr. Geffner continued as Juan Martinez dissected the incident where Arias claimed she had seen Travis Alexander masturbate to little boy pictures on the bed. It had caused her such mental trauma and PTSD.
“Didn’t you point out that there was a significant discrepancy between what Jodi Arias claimed on one date and then on another?” Juan Martinez highlighted.
“I did,” Dr. Geffner stated.
“What was that discrepancy as detailed in Exhibit number 827?”
Dr. Geffner was silent and his laughs had disappeared the moment Juan Martinez went on the attack. He looked tired and worn. It is not an easy task to suffer the wrath of Juan. He showed the wear and tear. Slowly he admitted, “In one instance, she stated she had seen him masturbating to multiple pictures of little boys with the pictures spread on the bed.”
“And what did the other instance say, in the words of the defendant?” Juan Martinez asked.
“She said that he was masturbating to pictures on the internet…”
“They contradict each other, don’t they?” Juan asked.
The seed of destruction had been planted as Judge Stevens closed the Court for the day.
Travis Alexander was in the room in the words of Juan Martinez. He would be back tomorrow to witness the seed grow into full bloom as Juan’s cross examination of Dr. Geffner continued…
“Every good relationship that develops as a result of this Trial is the
manifestation of the Spirit of Travis Alexander.”
Justice 4 Travis Alexander…
Justice for Dale…
Paul A. Sanders, Jr.
The 13th Juror @The13thJurorMD (Twitter)

Letter sent from Jodi Arias to Travis’ family on July 28, 2008 Posted by: Court Chatter.

ja is one of the most vicious, cold, calculating, and heartless murderers, that I've ever heard about!  






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