2011年9月20日 星期二

ABC News: U.S.: Petit Challenged on Memory of Triple Murder

ABC News: U.S.
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Petit Challenged on Memory of Triple Murder
Sep 20th 2011, 18:37

Dr. William Petit, the lone survivor of a gruesome Connecticut home invasion that left his wife and two daughters dead, was aggressively grilled today by a defense attorney who suggested that a blow to his head during the attack left him "woozy" and his recollection of that night unreliable.

Petit's cross examination came after he described to the court a harrowing attack in which he was beaten with a bat, bound to a pole in his basement where he could hear thumps and the groans of his wife, who was raped and strangled.

His testimony came in the second day of the murder trial of Joshua Komisarjevsky, 31, who is facing a possible death sentence for his role in the 2007 triple murder.

Petit had previously testified in the trial of Komisarjevsky's alleged accomplice Steven Hayes. Hayes was convicted and sentenced to death last year and is currently on Connecticut's death row.

Within seconds of the start of cross-examination, defense attorney Jeremiah Donovan was peppering Petit with questions about his recollection of the events of July 23, 2007.

Triple Murder Defense Grills Dr. William Petit, Lone Survivor of Attack

Donovan suggested that Petit's memory may have been "altered" by all the time he had spent in court listening to testimony. Petit attended every day of Hayes' trial.

PHOTO: Dr. William Petit Jr. arrives at Superior Court in New Haven for the first day of the trial of Joshua Komisarjevsky in New Haven, Conn., Sept. 19, 2011.

Jessica Hill/AP Photo

Dr. William Petit Jr. arrives at Superior... View Full Size
PHOTO: Dr. William Petit Jr. arrives at Superior Court in New Haven for the first day of the trial of Joshua Komisarjevsky in New Haven, Conn., Sept. 19, 2011.
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Petit responded that "he didn't believe" his testimony had changed and that he had testified truthfully. Undeterred, Donovan spent the better part of an hour shooting rapid-fire questions at Petit as jurors took notes in their journals.

At one point, Donovan handed Petit a copy of his 2007 statements to police and asked which were accurate, "the ones made today or the ones made back then."

Petit responded, "I trust what's written, sir."

To which Donovan replied, "Don't trust me, sir." That flip response from the defense attorney drew small gasps from Petit family members sitting in court.

Donovan suggested that Petit's head injuries caused him to be "woozy" and in a "dreamlike" state of consciousness after he woke up in the hospital and that because of those injuries Petit couldn't possibly be so certain of his recollections.

The defense lawyer also challenged Petit about what he did not know, namely who killed his wife Jennifer Hawke-Petit, 48, and his daughters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11. The girls, tied to their beds, died when the house was set ablaze.

"You did not see who purchased and poured the gasoline and who lit the match, did you?" Donovan asked Petit.

The defense, which is trying to save Komisarjevsky from a death sentenced, contended in opening arguments that Komisarjevsky is a man with psychological "scars" who is easily led. He never intended to kill anyone that day and he only wanted to burglarize the suburban home. But events escalated out of his control, his lawyers argue.

It was Hayes who bought the gasoline and poured it in the home, and it was Hayes who raped and strangled Hawke-Petit and lit the match that set the house ablaze, Komisarjevsky's lawyers contend.

Earlier in the day Petit, wearing a dark grey suit and purple tie, answered questions from prosecutor Michael Dearington as pictures of his wife and daughters flashed onto a screen in the courtroom.

Petit said he heard one of the intruders upstairs say, "Don't worry, it will all be over soon" shortly before Petit made his escape from the basement to a neighbor's driveway.

It is the second day of testimony in Komisarjevsky's trial.

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