'Did you find anyone else's blood on the body?'
'No.'
'Did you then remove the knife?'
'Yes. The knife handle was first bagged then the blade retracted from the body. It was photographed and measured then placed in an evidence bag and delivered to the criminologist who was attending the autopsy. There had been no medical intervention.'
'Which means?'
'The deceased had not been administered medical treatment for the stab wound in an effort to save his life. So the wound was unaltered.'
'Would you please describe the wound?'
'The wound was located approximately nineteen centimeters above the navel and measured four centimeters in width and extended almost through the entirety of the body. It was a fatal wound.'
'Did you then conduct an internal examination?'
'Yes. I removed and examined and took tissue samples from all major organs and glands. I collected and examined the gastric contents and peripheral blood for a tox screen.'
'And did the screen come back with any positives?'
'Yes. For alcohol and cocaine. So I collected liver and kidney tissue for follow-up tests. The deceased's blood alcohol level was point-two-six and there was cocaine in his system, six hundred nanograms per milliliter.'
'Indicating that Mr. Rawlins had drunk a significant amount of alcohol and ingested cocaine immediately prior to his death?'
'Yes.'
'Thank you, Dr. Sanjeev.'
During a short recess, the D.A. stepped over to Scott and said, 'Sanjay, he's a bit dry. Someone dies in a house fire, he calls it a 'thermal event.' '
Outside, Renee was interviewing Dr. Sanjeev.
After the recess, the county criminologist, Herman Deeks, thirty-five, took the stand. He looked nothing like the cool crime scene guys on CSI Miami. He looked more like the guy working behind the counter at the neighborhood video store. He had arrived directly from a murder scene in shirt sleeves. The judge gave him a hard look then said, 'Mr. Deeks, is that blood on your shirt?'
'What?' Deeks checked his shirt. 'Oh, yeah. Nasty crime scene on the mainland, shotgun to the head. Blood splatter was pretty spectacular and-'
'Thank you.'
Deeks testified on direct about his collection of evidence from the crime scene and from the body at the autopsy. He collected fingerprints from the murder weapon; fingerprints, handprints, and footprints in the bedroom, the outside deck, and elsewhere in the residence; blood samples from the victim and the defendant and from the scene; clothing worn by the defendant; bedding; sand from the bed and floor; sand and DNA from the defendant's underwear; hair from the victim, the defendant, and unidentified blond hair from the victim's closet.
Bobby stood and asked, 'Mr. Deeks, you were just at a murder scene?'
'Yes.'
'Did you wear latex gloves while processing the scene?'
'Yes.'
'Why?'
'So I didn't get blood on my hands.'
'And so you didn't leave your fingerprints on the evidence?'
'Yes.'
'And so you didn't disturb fingerprints already on the evidence?'
'Yes.'
'Did you wear latex gloves at the Rawlins crime scene?'
'Yes.'
'Mr. Deeks, what did you do with the prints you collected?'
'Sent them to the DPS lab.'
'Were any prints found that did not belong to either the victim or the defendant?'
'Yes. I found prints that belonged to Rosie Gonzales and three sets of unidentified prints-one set on the island counter in the kitchen, another on the headboard of the bed in the master suite, and another on the mirror in the master closet.'
'Have you subsequently identified those prints?'
'I have not. I turned the file over to Hank Kowalski, the district attorney's investigator. I understand that he followed up on those prints.'
'Mr. Deeks, you examined and photographed Ms. Fenney that night, correct?'
'Yes.'
'Did you find any evidence that Ms. Fenney had engaged in a recent physical struggle?'
'No.'
'Did you find any skin tissue under her fingernails?'
'No.'
'Did you find any bruises or abrasions on her knuckles indicating that she had recently hit someone?'
'No.'
'What was the form of the DNA collected from Ms. Fenney's underwear?'
'Semen.'
'And to whom did that belong?'
'The victim. Trey Rawlins.'
'Indicating recent sexual intercourse?'
'Yes.'
'And was sand recovered from Ms. Fenney's underwear?'
'Yes.'
'Which would indicate that the sexual intercourse occurred on the beach?'
'Yes.'
The Department of Public Safety lab in Austin sent technician Stephen Haynes to testify about the fingerprints on the murder weapon. He seemed more concerned about his per diem travel allowance than his testimony. Under the Assistant D.A.'s questioning, he testified that Rebecca's right hand fingerprints were found on the handle of the knife and aligned with her thumb toward the end of the handle and not toward the blade, indicating that she had held the knife with the blade down as if to stab rather than with the blade up as if to cut. Bobby then questioned the witness.
'Mr. Haynes, when were those fingerprints put on the knife?'
'When?'
'Yes, when. Were they put there on June fifth or May fifth or April fifth?'
'I can't say.'
'Why not?'
'I have no way of knowing that.'
'Why not?'
'Because those prints could have been put on that knife the day before or the year before.'
'You're saying that Ms. Fenney could have handled that knife a year before the murder and never touched that knife again, and her prints might still be on that knife?'
'Yes. That's what I'm saying.'
'Mr. Haynes, if I put on a latex glove and removed the murder weapon from the plastic bag and then grabbed the handle right now in this courtroom, would I leave my fingerprints on that knife?'
'No. The glove would prevent that.'
'Would I obliterate Ms. Fenney's prints that are on the knife?'
'Not necessarily.'
'Okay. So, Mr. Haynes, your testimony is in no way stating or implying to this jury that because only the