On Saturday morning, February 2, 2002, 7-year-old Danielle van Dam
was reported missing by her mother, Brenda, who had been out
partying with friends at a local bar until almost 2:00 a.m.
Danielle's father, Damon, had been left behind at home to babysit
their three young children, and their dog, a sleek gray Weimaraner.
He said that he had put the kids to bed, cracked their doors, and
fell asleep in the master bedroom, along with the dog, and with the
door closed. Shortly before 2 a.m., he opened the bedroom door, and
let the dog out to greet his wife, knowing she would be home soon.
Some people, like KFMB talk show host Rick Roberts, began to
question the parents' behavior, after it was reported in the media
that they were "swingers," and they did not check on their
children, even after they said they found two outside doors open
that night. Danielle's body was discovered at Dehesa on February
27. The police had almost immediately suspected neighbor David
Westerfield, as he went away that weekend, leaving his garden hose
lying untidily across his neat front yard. Was he responsible for
Danielle van Dam's death, or was he the victim of a "rush to
judgement"? What does the evidence say? No evidence was found that
he was ever in her home, nor that he had been at the body recovery
site. Why were no fibers from her pajamas or bedding found in his
house or vehicles? Had she ever played in his motor home while it
was parked in their street? Did his pornography collection include
child porn? Did he fail his lie detector test? What is the truth
about the plea deal story? Was the body rapidly mummified by a warm
dry wind that hadn't yet begun to blow? What happened to the
photographs the searchers took of the body? Did the orange fiber in
her hair come from something in her own home? Whose hair was found
under her body? It was neither Danielle's nor Westerfield's. On
February 15, Brenda received an anonymous phone call that Danielle
was abused but alive. Who made that call? The insect evidence
indicates she died soon afterwards. A year later, James Selby, a
convicted serial rapist, confessed in writing to killing Danielle.
Was he just a "quack"? One of his victims was a 9-year-old girl,
whom he abducted sleeping from her bed. This book examines these
questions and many more. This was a high-profile case, with an
enormous amount of public attention; the trial was broadcast live
on radio and TV, so a book on it is long overdue, and this is an
authoritative book. There are books with titles like "MS-DOS Bible"
and "Windows 7 Bible." This book is the Westerfield-van Dam case
"bible." It is a comprehensive reference source about the case, and
a "must read" for everybody interested in it, and especially all
those who were personally involved: the jurors, the police, the
crime laboratory, the DA's office, the defense lawyers, the
neighbors and other witnesses. This case has similarities to the OJ
Simpson case, not only in the intensity of public and media
attention, but also in the fact that George "Woody" Clarke was a
prosecutor on both cases, and Jo-Ellan Dimitrius was a jury
consultant on both, but for the defense in the OJ trial, and for
the prosecution in the Westerfield trial. Did clever juror
selection contribute to a miscarriage of justice in either case?
David Westerfield's automatic appeal is due soon, making this book
timely.
General
| Imprint: |
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
|
| Country of origin: |
United States |
| Release date: |
June 2011 |
| First published: |
June 2011 |
| Authors: |
C. Stevenson
|
| Dimensions: |
246 x 189 x 40mm (L x W x T) |
| Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
| Pages: |
796 |
| Edition: |
New |
| ISBN-13: |
978-1-4609-5697-7 |
| Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
True stories >
Crime
Promotions
|
| LSN: |
1-4609-5697-4 |
| Barcode: |
9781460956977 |
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