Last Updated: Friday, June 23, 2000, 2:20 p.m.
Fitzhugh attorneys challenge evidence collection
by Jennifer Kavanaugh
With defense attorneys sharply questioning how Palo Alto police had handled
evidence, the preliminary hearing into whether Kenneth Fitzhugh should
be tried for the murder of his wife, music teacher Kristine Fitzhugh,
opened today.
Kenneth Fitzhugh's attorney,
Thomas Nolan, vigorously cross-examined Detective Jean Bready about the
methods she and her colleagues used to collect evidence at the Escobita
Avenue crime scene, particularly some bloodied items found in Kenneth
Fitzhugh's Suburban SUV. The prosecution is pointing to three
items found in Fitzhugh's car--a blood-stained paper towel, a pair of
running shoes and a medium-sized men's polo shirt--as major pieces of
physical evidence linking Fitzhugh to the crime. Through the
questioning, Nolan established that an officer had moved the blood-stained
running shoes without first photographing them; a detective had put the
paper towel and running shoes in evidence bags without recording the time
and date; and investigators had failed to notice the green polo shirt,
reportedly stuffed under the driver's seat, until after the Suburban had
been taken to the county crime lab. Nolan questioned police
after Deputy District Attorney Michael Fletcher began presenting evidence
before Judge Charles Hayden, who will decide if Fitzhugh should be bound
over for trial. The hearing, which recessed at noon today, is expected
to resume on Monday. After the hearing, Nolan did not answer
reporters who asked if he planned to argue that evidence was somehow compromised
in the investigation. Fletcher, however, told reporters that he felt the
hearing today went well and that there are no problems with either the
evidence or how it was collected. "The Palo Alto Police Department
did an excellent job," Fletcher said. "I don't expect any legitimate problems
with any of that." In criminal cases, courts pay close attention
to both the collection and chain of custody of evidence--whether police
and prosecutors can account for each item of evidence and whether it was
in the custody of the appropriate people at all times. If the proper chain
of custody is not established, defense attorneys may argue that the evidence
was tainted or corrupted. Bready testified that she and her
partner, Detective Sandra Brown, decided to stop the search of the Suburban
and seal off the car as soon as they saw the shoes and paper towel. The
shirt was discovered in the county crime lab by a technician doing the
search. Nolan also challenged how Bready interviewed a Peet's
Coffee & Tea employee, who was supposedly the last person to see Kristine
in public. Nolan asked why Bready didn't get a receipt of the coffee and
muffin Kristine purchased at the shop to establish the time, but Bready
said the receipts weren't itemized and that there was no way to prove
that a particular receipt was for Kristine's purchase. A second
member of the police force, Agent Cornelius Maloney, testified today about
blood stains he observed in the Fitzhughs' kitchen, where police say Kristine
was beaten to death with a blunt object. Maloney's testimony
is expected to continue Monday.
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