Page 76 of A Good Marriage

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EXAMINATION

BY MS. WALLACE:

Q: Thank you for being here, Mr. Jameson.

A: Yes. Okay.

Q: Can you state your job title for the record, please?

A: Senior New York City crime scene analyst, Second Department.

Q: And how long have you been a crime scene analyst?

A: Twenty-five years. I’ve been a senior analyst for fifteen years.

Q: Did you visit the scene at 597 Montgomery Place in the early morning hours of July 3rd?

A: Yes.

Q: And what did you observe at the scene?

A: There was a deceased female. Extensive blood spatter.

Q: Could you determine the cause of death at that time?

A: I made a preliminary determination. Cause, homicide. Method, blunt-force trauma.

Q: Have you identified the murder weapon?

A: Not definitively. We are waiting for final test results.

Q: Have you made a preliminary assessment?

A: Yes.

Q: And what is that assessment?

A: That Mrs. Grayson was struck with a golf club.

Q: How did you reach this conclusion?

A: First, it was found at the scene right next to the body. Second, it was found to have blood on it matching the victim’s.

Q: Anything else?

A: She had a defensive wound to her arm. She held it up to block the blow.

Q: Anything else?

A: The blood spatter patterns in the area of the body are consistent with that object being used to strike the victim repeatedly.

Q: Can you elaborate, please?

A: You can tell from the shape of the blood drops and their pattern the manner in which they were left. Blood spatter provides a blueprint for the way a particular crime was committed.

Q: And what did you discern from the blood spatter pattern in this case?

A: That Mrs. Grayson was struck multiple times about the head.