Ross Harris murder trial: Jury will get to see SUV
BRUNSWICK, Ga. - The Ross Harris murder trial continues in Brunswick, Georgia. The state called a second detective to the stand late Wednesday morning.
Cobb County Police Detective David Raissi said when police told Harris he would be charged with his son's murder, he found Harris' comment about having "no malicious intent" odd and started recording the interview again on his phone. On cross examination, defense attorney Maddox Kilgore ask detective Raissi if he knew that Harris' brother was head of a police academy in Tuscaloosa. He also asked if he knew Harris had worked as a dispatcher, knew the Ten Codes and was college educated.
The detective responded, "No."
Defense attorney Kilgore also asked the detective if he had participated in confirmation bias, which is a tendency to recall information in a way that fits one pre-existing beliefs.
After the jury was dismissed for lunch, the judge ruled jurors would walk around Harris' SUV twice with the door open, then twice with the door closed, and finally have up to five minutes to view the Hyundai Tucson. She also made it clear they would not be allowed to touch it on Thursday when they view it.
The lead detective remained on the stand Wednesday morning, as the state tried to clean up some comments about Harris viewing a PSA on hot car deaths. Wednesday morning, prosecutor Chuck Boring asked the lead detective who was the person that tied this (hot car) video to Cooper Harris in the first place?
"It was the defendant, Ross Harris," Stoddard said.
Mr. Boring went to ask, "Did anyone ever say the defendant searched hot car deaths?"
"No," the lead detective replied, which appeared to be inconsistent with what Stoddard testified to Tuesday during cross examination by the defense.
This was Detective Stoddar's fourth day on the stand.
Tuesday, Defense attorney Maddox Kilgore forced Stoddard to admit Harris told police he had watched a recent Public Service Announcement about leaving pets in a hot car. Attorney Kilgore had Stoddard to read Harris 'exact words.
"I watched that and I'm like that would be terrible if my son were in the car, I would hate that" Stoddard reads.
"Those words you just read, they are not the same as these words, He had recently researched through the Internet child deaths inside vehicles and what temperature it needs to be for that to occur, those are not the same words are they? No, sir.
Defense attorneys also pointed out that Stoddard did not try to reach the travel agent Harris was communicating with about a family cruise that included Cooper. Attorney Maddox questioned why the detective had not reached out to the travel agent and he had no explanation.
"Did it not fit your theory?
over the 28 months as the lead detective in the case, did he find one witness who said Harris had any malice or hatred toward Cooper?
"No," the detective said.
"You didn't find any history of abuse or neglect did you?"
"No," the detective agreed.
"Ross also had an emotional outburst at the scene that you didn't see?" Attorney Kilgore asked.
"He was yelling and screaming, but I didn't believe it was true or sincere," Stoddard said. " There were no tears," He followed up.
On Monday, Stoddard said that when he told Ross Harris that he would likely be charged with felony murder charges in the death of his soon Cooper, Harris responded ‘but there was no malicious intent. Prosecutors thought that was a very unusual response.
The state has said the Cobb county father was leading a double life. Harris seemed to admit that in his own words as prosecutors read more than 30 minutes of Whisper and KIK conversations where Harris says he prefers sex with strangers, is cheating on his wife, is only married because of his son and has a sex addiction.
One of the people Harris was communicating with told him she was 14-years-old.
Earlier in the day, prosecutors showed jurors several videos of the quick drive from the Chick-fil-A, where Ross was seen on surveillance video holding his son Cooper, to the Home Depot parking lot, where Harris worked. Each time, the drive was less than five minutes.
Prosecutors seemed to imply that it was hard to believe that Harris forgot his son was in the back seat during the short ride.
Detective Stoddard said Harris argued with police about the criminal charges.
Another point that prosecutors made was that Harris neglected to tell Stoddard about his lunchtime visit the Home Depot and to his car as Cooper sat in the backseat of his hot SUV.
Testimony ended Friday with playing the police interrogation video, where Harris could be seen openly weeping when police were not in the room and asking, “What have I done?
Trial evidence shows Harris swapped sexual text messages with a teenage girl while his toddler son was dying in his car.
The young woman who exchanged the texts with Justin Ross Harris testified Friday that he asked for a photograph of her breasts, and she sent him one in reply, on the afternoon of June 18, 2014. Harris' 22-month-old son Cooper was found dead just a few hours later in Harris' SUV.
Harris is charged with murder as well as disseminating harmful material to a minor and criminal attempt to commit sexual exploitation of a minor, offenses dealing with the sexual texts. The witness said she was 16 and 17 during the months she and Harris exchanged sexual banter and photos online.