Attorney still not done with ‘Jane Doe’
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Lolita Harper
Defense attorneys continued their meticulous cross-examination
Thursday of the victim of an alleged gang rape in a Corona del Mar
home, sifting through pages of transcribed testimony and
minute-by-minute accounts of the weekend in question looking for
inconsistencies.
The victim, referred to as Jane Doe, was on the witness stand from
10:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. -- with an hour break for lunch -- during
the first round of cross-examination by Joseph Cavallo, defense
attorney for Greg Haidl.
Haidl, the son of Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and
Keith Spann are accused of raping the unconscious 16-year-old girl during a party in the Corona del Mar home of the elder Haidl. All
defendants claim the sex was consensual and deny the rape charges.
Doe, who is now 18, wore a black suit with a light blue sweater
underneath for her third court appearance. The top of her long,
brownish-blond hair was pulled away from her face in two neat
ponytails and she wore a silver necklace. She spoke clearly and
collectedly, with the exception of two instances, when she broke into
tears.
The first was after Cavallo had Doe watch a videotape from June
30, 2002 of her and Spann having sex at a party. Doe said she did not
know she was being filmed.
Cavallo played the footage of the incident, stopping it repeatedly
to point out a variety of camera angles used during the filming. He
called attention to at least six scenes.
Cavallo then played the beginning portion of the night of the
alleged incident, when Doe and the defendants sat on the couch in the
Haidl garage. The defense attorney argued that the camera was placed
directly across from the couch on the pool table, in plain view.
“Is that you?” Cavallo asked.
“I don’t know,” Doe said.
He asked again and she gave the same response. Doe was asked to
walk to the large video monitor, angled away from the audience, and
take a close look.
“Is that you?” Cavallo asked.
“I think so,” Doe said, sniffling.
“How was that filmed?” Cavallo said.
“I have no idea,” she said, unable to hold back the tears.
“I didn’t want to show her the tape, she has been through enough,”
Cavallo said later that day, adding that it was necessary to prove
the camera was not hidden from her.
Doe admitted to consenting to various sexual acts with the boys
before the alleged rape on the pool table. She said Nachreiner tried
to have sex with her in the pool, and though she was there for Spann
and not Nachreiner, she did nothing to stop his advances.
“So you wanted to,” Cavallo asked, in regard to Nachreiner pulling
Doe into the pool with him.
“No,” Doe said.
“But you didn’t stop him,” Cavallo said.
“No,” she answered.
“So, if you didn’t stop him that means you wanted it,” Cavallo
said.
Doe admitted to having sex with Haidl that same night, despite the
fact that his girlfriend was in the next room, and she said she later
had sex with Spann. Cavallo continually referred to previous
statements Doe made to the police and asked her to recount the days
of April 5 and 6, 2002 with painstaking detail.
Cavallo asked about Doe’s usage of the words “conscious” and
“consciousness” during her direct examination on Tuesday, adding that
she had not used such language in her interviews with the police just
after the incident.
“She’s been prepped,” Cavallo said later on Thursday. “Probably
not by the prosecutor but by someone here, maybe her parents.”
After four hours of cross-examination, Cavallo had still not
finished his line of questioning. At 3:30 p.m. Superior Court Judge
Francisco Briseno cut the day short. In one of the few light moments
in court, Briseno also suggested Cavallo’s time was running out.
“How much more time do you need with this witness -- five
minutes?” Briseno asked.
“No,” Cavallo said.
“Four? Three?” Briseno asked and the courtroom broke into
laughter.
Cavallo said he would finish his cross-examination when court
resumed on Tuesday. Other defense attorneys estimated they would each
need about an hour to question Doe.
After Doe and the jury were dismissed, Deputy Dist. Atty. Dan Hess
asked the judge to make a formal ruling banning the defense, or any
parties working for them, from handing out confidential documents
such as Doe’s medical records. Hess pointed out former district
attorney’s office employee Tori Richards, who is now working as a
public relations representative for the defense, as the culprit.
Richards said she had given out copies of Doe’s medical records
but only with the permission of defense attorney Pete Scalisi. She
agreed to return the documents and stop handing them out.
Scalisi denied giving her permission to disclose the inadmissible
documents.
“Are you kidding, of course not,” he said.
Scalisi and Cavallo both distanced themselves from Richards’ role
on the defense team, saying they did not know “who hired her.”
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