12161 1 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA 2 IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA 3 SANTA MARIA BRANCH; COOK STREET DIVISION 4 DEPARTMENT SM-2 HON. RODNEY S. MELVILLE, JUDGE 5 6 7 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ) 8 CALIFORNIA, ) 9 Plaintiff, ) 10 -vs- ) No. 1133603 11 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 12 Defendant. ) 13 14 15 16 17 REPORTER’S TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS 18 19 THURSDAY, MAY 26, 2005 20 21 8:40 A.M. 22 23 (PAGES 12161 THROUGH 12207) 24 25 26 27 REPORTED MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 BY: Official Court Reporter 12161 1 APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL: 2 3 For Plaintiff: THOMAS W. SNEDDON, JR., 4 District Attorney -and- 5 RONALD J. ZONEN, Sr. Deputy District Attorney 6 -and- GORDON AUCHINCLOSS, 7 Sr. Deputy District Attorney -and- 8 MAG NICOLA, Sr. Deputy District Attorney 9 1112 Santa Barbara Street Santa Barbara, California 93101 10 11 12 For Defendant: COLLINS, MESEREAU, REDDOCK & YU 13 BY: THOMAS A. MESEREAU, JR., ESQ. -and- 14 SUSAN C. YU, ESQ. 1875 Century Park East, Suite 700 15 Los Angeles, California 90067 16 -and- 17 SANGER & SWYSEN BY: ROBERT M. SANGER, ESQ. 18 233 East Carrillo Street, Suite C Santa Barbara, California 93101 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12162 1 I N D E X 2 3 Note: Mr. Sneddon is listed as “SN” on index. 4 Mr. Zonen is listed as “Z” on index. Mr. Auchincloss is listed as “A” on index. 5 Mr. Nicola is listed as “N” on index. Mr. Mesereau is listed as “M” on index. 6 Ms. Yu is listed as “Y” on index. Mr. Sanger is listed as “SA” on index. 7 8 9 R E B U T T A L 10 11 PLAINTIFF’S WITNESSES DIRECT CROSS REDIRECT RECROSS 12 VILLEGAS, 13 Gina 12188-Z 12190-M 12203-Z 12205-M 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12163 1 E X H I B I T S 2 FOR IN PLAINTIFF’S NO. DESCRIPTION I.D. EVID. 3 448 Brad Miller phone records 12185 4 5 6 DEFENDANT’S NO. 7 901 Brad Miller e-mails 12175 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12164 1 Santa Maria, California 2 Thursday, May 26, 2005 3 8:30 a.m. 4 5 (The following proceedings were held in 6 open court outside the presence and hearing of the 7 jury:) 8 9 THE COURT: Good morning. 10 COUNSEL AT COUNSEL TABLE: (In unison) 11 Good morning, Your Honor. 12 THE COURT: All right. We have two issues I 13 think to take up before -- at least two before the 14 jury comes in. 15 THE BAILIFF: Is your microphone on? 16 THE COURT: I’m sorry, we have two issues to 17 take up before the jury comes in. 18 The first issue is on the tape that was -- 19 I watched yesterday afternoon. The Court will allow 20 the playing of the tape. I think the -- it’s awful 21 long. It seemed to me that, you know, playing half 22 an hour of it would be better than playing the whole 23 hour. There’s a lot at the beginning that’s not 24 even the boy talking. 25 MR. SANGER: Could I be heard on that part, 26 Your Honor? 27 THE COURT: Yeah. 28 MR. SANGER: I watched -- of course the 12165 1 prosecution made the motion towards the end of the 2 day, and so I watched that thing in the middle of 3 the night, basically, again to see what it looked 4 like from the standpoint of playing it. And there’s 5 a tremendous amount of prejudicial material by way 6 of police officers making statements that are 7 absolutely inadmissible in court. 8 On the other hand, to simply pick out, you 9 know, statements of Gavin Arvizo in a vacuum that 10 don’t show that the police officer just said, you 11 know, “You’re really brave. We want you to do this. 12 You’re doing the right thing,” and all the other 13 things that they were saying, you know, takes it out 14 of context. I don’t think that we’re prepared -- I 15 don’t think the People are prepared either to 16 present a pared down version, nor are we. 17 THE COURT: This is -- excuse me. This is 18 one of those rulings that is not -- you know, if the 19 defense wants the whole tape played, then -- you 20 know, they don’t want any of it played, but if it’s 21 played, they want the whole tape played, then that’s 22 all right. I would understand that. 23 MR. SANGER: I understand what the Court’s 24 saying, and I’m just saying if we’re going to come 25 up with a pared down version, I think we’d have to 26 meet and confer on that because they’re going to 27 want some parts and -- 28 THE COURT: Yeah. 12166 1 MR. SANGER: I don’t think we can do it off 2 the cuff right now is my point. 3 THE COURT: Well, let me ask you this: Are 4 you saying that if they -- I understand that you 5 don’t want to play it at all. Having made that 6 ruling, are you saying you would rather have it all 7 played than parts of it? 8 MR. SANGER: I can’t absolutely say that 9 either. I think it probably should be edited, but 10 the question would be how would it be edited. 11 THE COURT: You’re not going to agree on 12 that. I mean, you make the suggestion that you and 13 the prosecution could get together and agree on 14 that. That’s not going to happen. I mean, you 15 couldn’t agree on a simple stipulation on some 16 evidence that had no significance whatsoever. So I 17 just don’t really -- 18 MR. SANGER: I don’t want to argue with the 19 Court on that. But I think we have agreed on quite 20 a number of things, Your Honor, in fairness. 21 THE COURT: This is -- 22 MR. SANGER: But it seems somewhat 23 impractical, because we’re at -- and Your Honor is 24 saying, you know, “Do you want all” -- “You don’t 25 get nothing, so do you want all or part?” And what 26 I’m saying, I don’t know what part they want to 27 show. 28 THE COURT: They wanted to show all -- you 12167 1 know what they said. They said it yesterday. They 2 want all except from 49 minutes 50 seconds to 51 3 minutes 45 seconds and the last 20 seconds. I mean, 4 they told you what they wanted. They told me what 5 they wanted. 6 MR. SANGER: No, I understand that, Your 7 Honor. Maybe I’m not communicating here. I 8 understand that. Your Honor is suggesting they 9 should show a half an hour, more or less. 10 THE COURT: I thought, because it’s a lengthy 11 tape and there’s a lot of material there that 12 doesn’t relate to anything, that they should show 13 less. 14 MR. SANGER: Right. And having had our 15 motion denied to exclude the whole thing, I don’t 16 necessarily disagree with the Court, but I can’t 17 agree unless I know what half hour they want to 18 play. So all I’m saying is, we have to at least 19 know what they’re proposing if they’re going to do 20 that. I would agree there’s extraneous material on 21 the tape that probably shouldn’t be shown, but I 22 don’t know which half hour they want. 23 Does that make any sense? 24 THE COURT: Okay. That was just a suggestion 25 that they try to reduce the amount. I wasn’t 26 ordering that. 27 MR. SNEDDON: Good morning, Your Honor. 28 First of all, I think we’re in a position -- 12168 1 I don’t have a problem with what the Court 2 suggested. I think that the first part of the 3 video, where the -- what we might call the 4 rapport-building stage could easily be deleted out 5 or edited out. 6 Mr. Auchincloss doesn’t have any witnesses 7 this morning, so he could go upstairs and begin the 8 editing process and come back with a suggestion. If 9 the Court would like us to do that, we’d be more 10 than glad to do that. I think probably that would 11 account for about 10 or 15 minutes, at least, of the 12 interview that I don’t have a problem with. And we 13 would be willing to do that. I’m not saying that -- 14 I mean, I’m -- I share the Court’s concern about 15 reaching an eventual stipulation, but I’m willing to 16 do what we can do to at least take that part out and 17 move on with it. And so if you want us to do that, 18 we’ll do that. 19 And absent that, then my position is -- 20 other than the things that we’ve indicated to you 21 that we really feel should not go to the jury 22 because of the 352 nature of it -- to the defense, 23 not to us. But it’s not appropriate, and I agree 24 with that, and I’m sure the Court does, too, having 25 heard what’s in there. So that’s our position, and 26 we’ll do what we can to accommodate the Court. 27 MR. SANGER: Your Honor, I have a 28 suggestion. I’m just still a little taken aback. 12169 1 I don’t think the Court’s fully aware of how much 2 cooperation there has been, despite the fights over 3 other things here. 4 THE COURT: I’m sorry, there has been a lot 5 of cooperation. 6 MR. SANGER: There we go. Thank you. A 7 little appreciation goes a long way at a time like 8 this. 9 THE COURT: You guys have really done a good 10 job on this. 11 MR. SNEDDON: You don’t sound too sincere 12 about that. 13 THE COURT: No, I want to make Mr. Sanger 14 feel better. 15 (Laughter.) 16 MR. SANGER: Thank you. It’s working. Just 17 another minute or two and -- 18 THE COURT: And your last argument was 19 really excellent. 20 (Laughter.) 21 MR. SANGER: There you go. Thank you. That 22 would be the one I lost on this tape. 23 THE COURT: But a good argument nonetheless. 24 (Laughter.) 25 MR. SANGER: Well, what I would suggest is 26 this: With the consent or concurrence of the 27 District Attorney, I will ask Mr. Dunkle, who’s my 28 associate lawyer in my office here in Santa Maria, 12170 1 I’ll ask him to go over to the D.A.’s Office. They 2 can get a running start if they want to, but at some 3 point this morning, if they would meet with him and 4 try to confer and try to work it out, we’ll take our 5 best shot. 6 THE COURT: That’s a good way to do it. 7 MR. SANGER: I think Mr. Mesereau and I 8 should have the final say, so we probably need to -- 9 THE COURT: Confer. 10 MR. SANGER: -- have some time to confer, 11 but we’ll try to do that. 12 Now, with regard to the Court’s ruling that 13 the tape is coming in in one fashion or another, we 14 had indicated that we would need to then have Gavin 15 Arvizo made available. We’d also like to have 16 Janet Arvizo, Dr. Katz and Larry Feldman. 17 THE COURT: For a moment, I thought you were 18 going to say something else. But that’s fine. 19 MR. SANGER: Could you indicate what it is 20 and I’ll add it to the list? 21 So we’d like to have them available, and I 22 understand they were the People’s witnesses and that 23 they would have a number to call them. We tried to 24 find a number for Dr. Katz to give him a heads-up 25 and we didn’t have one, so -- 26 THE COURT: All right. So I think that one 27 of your people should call them right away this 28 morning, right? 12171 1 MR. SNEDDON: Yes, Your Honor. We’ll do 2 that. 3 I want to tell the Court that, first of all, 4 we’re not waiving any objection with regard to the 5 materiality of whether it’s appropriate. 6 THE COURT: That’s fine. 7 MR. SNEDDON: Okay. Second of all, my 8 understanding as of -- I’m trying to think of the 9 day, because I don’t want to misrepresent to the 10 Court. Whenever it was that Larry King was here. 11 As of that point in time, Mr. Feldman was in South 12 Africa, and I didn’t know that until I called up to 13 talk to him and he was gone and his partner told me 14 that. 15 So I will call the office today and find out 16 if he’s back. But I know he’s -- I know at that 17 point last week, whenever Mr. King was here, that 18 Mr. Feldman was in South Africa. So I’ll do what 19 the Court told me to. 20 THE COURT: And you have the list of 21 witnesses that he just gave? 22 MR. SNEDDON: Right. There was four of 23 them. Dr. Katz, Mr. Feldman, Mrs. Jackson, and 24 Gavin. 25 THE COURT: All right. 26 MR. SNEDDON: And that’s not a problem. We 27 already alerted the family. So that’s not a 28 problem. 12172 1 THE COURT: Okay. All right. Then -- 2 MR. SNEDDON: Judge, if that’s the 3 situation, then I think we can -- the other issue I 4 talked to you about, the letters with Mr. Geragos, I 5 guess we’ll have Mr. Geragos come back tomorrow and 6 establish the foundation since we can’t reach a 7 stipulation. Unless there’s one that they reached. 8 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 9 table.) 10 MR. SNEDDON: If the Court agrees to receive 11 it into evidence based on the circumstantial nature 12 of the thing, like some of the Schaffel documents. 13 So I guess what I’ll say is we’ll move for 14 the admission of those. If the Court doesn’t admit 15 it, then we would have Mr. Geragos come back 16 tomorrow. It looks like we’re going to be here 17 tomorrow. But let’s play it by ear and see what 18 comes about. 19 THE COURT: Well, I would prefer that, rather 20 than have Mr. Geragos come back, that both sides are 21 working so well together throughout this case. 22 MR. SNEDDON: I have no problem with that. 23 THE COURT: I thought we reached -- I thought 24 you reached some possible agreement when you were 25 talking to me just before we came -- 26 MR. SNEDDON: That was on a different piece 27 of evidence, Your Honor. That was on the tape. And 28 I think Mr. Mesereau and I have -- I don’t want to 12173 1 speak for Mr. Mesereau, but I think we probably 2 worked that one out to our satisfaction. 3 But this is a different -- this is the 4 e-mails, the Brad Miller e-mails to Mr. Geragos that 5 the Court allowed us to -- 6 THE COURT: That were seized in the search 7 warrant. 8 MR. SNEDDON: Yes, sir, these are the ones 9 that were the subject of the attorney-client 10 privilege and were released to us late, I think last 11 week. We got them on Saturday, actually, because of 12 the waiver, and that was the first time we saw them, 13 and so we determined that we want to have those 14 admitted into evidence. 15 And we’d so move. I could have them marked 16 right now, if you like, for identification. 17 THE COURT: Have them marked so I can look at 18 them and see what you’re talking about. 19 MR. SNEDDON: Hand me the stickies. 20 MR. SANGER: I believe it’s our position -- 21 I’m sitting down at the microphone, so I’ll stand. 22 It’s our position that we need Mr. Geragos 23 with regard to the content. They are not 24 necessarily self-authenticating. And even if they 25 are, the relevance is not established without his 26 testimony, so that’s why we’re asking that he come 27 back up in order to -- it’s not just perfunctory, 28 there is a reason for him to come up. 12174 1 THE COURT: Okay. 2 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, the documents have 3 attached to them a one-page cover sheet. Actually, 4 I don’t know if there’s a page missing, but it’s a 5 document from counsel to us. I really think that 6 probably should not be part of the exhibit. So with 7 their permission, I’ll remove that and just have the 8 e-mails themselves marked for identification. 9 MR. SANGER: Could I see? 10 MR. MESEREAU: That’s fine. 11 MR. SANGER: Yeah, that should be removed. 12 THE COURT: All right. 13 MR. SNEDDON: This would be Exhibit 901, 14 Your Honor. And it’s a multi-page document. I 15 haven’t counted them, but it’s maybe 20 -- 20 pages, 16 and I’ll hand that to the clerk. 17 THE COURT: I’d like that exhibit. 18 THE CLERK: Oh, sorry. 19 THE COURT: All right. The next issue that 20 we have is the motion to admit evidence concerning 21 Jordan Chandler. 22 Do you wish to be heard on that, Mr. 23 Sneddon? 24 MR. SNEDDON: Mr. Zonen is going to handle 25 that, Your Honor. 26 THE COURT: Mr. Zonen? 27 MR. ZONEN: Your Honor, I think we’ve 28 adequately stated our position in the pleadings. I 12175 1 can tell you that with regard to the relevance of 2 that material, there was quite a bit of testimony 3 that was presented during the course of the defense 4 case about nothing untoward or inappropriate 5 occurring in Michael Jackson’s bedroom and numerous 6 witnesses who have testified to the fact that many 7 children, particularly back in the 1993, ‘94, ‘92 8 period, who spent not just nights, but weeks and 9 even months in Michael Jackson’s bedroom, in Michael 10 Jackson’s bed, and it was a completely nonsexual 11 event. 12 The fact that this child was able to give a 13 description of a unique feature of his anatomy that 14 could not have been known by him except for a very 15 intimate acquaintance with Mr. Jackson is very good 16 circumstantial evidence of the fact that the 17 relationship between he and at least that child was 18 something more than casual and something more than 19 innocent. 20 In that regard, we’ll submit, unless you 21 have questions. 22 THE COURT: Let me hear from the defense. 23 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. 24 MR. SANGER: I, once again, tried to keep 25 the brief brief. I hope the Court -- 26 THE COURT: I appreciate you keeping your 27 briefs brief. 28 MR. SANGER: Yes. I don’t want a lack of 12176 1 volume to suggest that this didn’t take well into 2 the night to get done here. And I don’t want to 3 repeat everything, but I think because it is such an 4 important issue, we’re right at the end of the case, 5 I feel compelled to speak about it just briefly, if 6 I may. 7 First of all, this seems to come directly 8 within the California Supreme Court’s discussion in 9 the Carter case, which basically says it’s not 10 proper to bring in evidence that magnifies evidence 11 that the opposition has not had a chance to meet 12 squarely during the case-in-chief, which we haven’t, 13 because this was not offered, it was not hinted at. 14 It was not even in the original 1108 motion from 15 which the Court made a cut and reduced what they had 16 presented originally. So it wasn’t even in there. 17 I mean, we had no notice to deal with these 18 issues -- with this issue at all. So there is 19 certainly unfair surprise, as stated directly in the 20 Carter case. 21 And Carter also says that the Court is 22 supposed to avoid dramatic evidence introduced late 23 in the trial that’s going to have an undue effect. 24 Now, as we pointed out, this was not 25 offered. I mean, this is really a stretch to even 26 come up with any kind of an argument as to why this 27 should -- why they could even ask to bring this in. 28 And they’re not asking to bring it in as 1108 12177 1 evidence. They’re asking to bring it in as 1101(b) 2 evidence. 3 And the idea is, I think they’ve said in 4 their pleadings, that this goes to the issue of 5 whether or not Mr. Jackson was shy or modest. Now, 6 that’s not what Mr. Zonen just said when he got up 7 here and argued. I think he shifted the argument a 8 bit, if I’m not mistaken, and talked about things 9 happening in the bedroom. 10 They didn’t offer -- I mean, we can’t just 11 keep having a moving target here. They didn’t offer 12 it in their moving papers. They didn’t offer it for 13 that purpose. They offered it on the shy and modest 14 purpose. So it would be 1101(b) evidence on kind of 15 a collateral matter, if it ever happened. But it 16 didn’t happen in this case in the defense. 17 We went through and did a word search on the 18 entire transcript, several different words, “shy,” 19 “modest,” all sorts of things. We found one 20 question that used the word “shy,” not even in this 21 context. It had to do with whether or not a maid 22 saw Mr. Jackson change his shirt. And the objection 23 was sustained to that question. So it was never 24 answered. So it didn’t happen. 25 We also went through and -- just to be sure, 26 and read -- we read all the testimony from the key 27 witnesses in the defense who might have said 28 something like that if anybody said it. And the 12178 1 only thing we can come up with is an investigative 2 report where the word -- I think “shy” -- it was 3 either “shy” or “modest,” one of the two was used. 4 We quoted it in there. And it turns out that that 5 was never brought out from that witness on the 6 stand. 7 So it seemed to me that, when I was looking 8 at this, this was a pocket brief the District 9 Attorney had originally prepared in case somebody 10 did this. It didn’t happen. Now they’re trying to 11 bring it in by way of rebuttal, and it would just be 12 absolutely inappropriate as 1101, because it doesn’t 13 rebut anything, okay? 14 What really they’re trying to do, and I 15 think that’s what I heard Mr. Zonen just argue, is 16 they’re trying to argue this is 1108. And it 17 doesn’t meet the criteria for 1108. It doesn’t meet 18 the criteria the Court set down that it would be 19 somebody directly observing something. So it would 20 have the prejudicial effect of the jury considering 21 it, obviously, for 1108 purposes. Because it would 22 be very shocking to see pictures of -- anatomical 23 pictures and all that sort of thing. 24 So just from that standpoint, they’ve made 25 no -- show no basis. There’s no foundation to admit 26 this as rebuttal, because there’s -- they haven’t 27 shown what they’re rebutting under 1101(b). And 28 obviously, if they did that, the prejudice would be 12179 1 so overwhelming, because it would go to the 1108 and 2 it shouldn’t come in for that reason. 3 And as we said before, 1108 -- as the Court 4 is well aware, 1108 is a very delicate kind of an 5 issue. The jury is given tremendously prejudicial 6 evidence, that is, prejudicial in the sense that it 7 is propensity evidence, and that propensity 8 evidence -- under this weird law we have in 9 California that doesn’t exist most other places, 10 propensity evidence is allowed to come in, but the 11 Court has to exercise discretion in limiting it, so 12 it doesn’t overwhelm the trial. And the Court made 13 those rulings. And to bring this in at this point 14 and emphasize 1108 in rebuttal with something that 15 isn’t even really 1108 evidence would be 16 tremendously prejudicial. 17 But when you get right down to it, the main 18 reason that it has to stay out is it violates 19 Crawford and the confrontation clause. It’s not 20 admissible hearsay. It is testimonial directly 21 under Crawford. This is the kind of stuff that 22 Crawford is talking about, when police officers do 23 interviews, and they get information and they write 24 it down in reports, and then they preserve that and 25 the prosecution wants to bring it in, that violates 26 the confrontation clause. You cannot do that. 27 So you would have a violation of a federal 28 constitutional right were this allowed in, in any 12180 1 event, and so the Court can start at either end. 2 Either just decide it on that and it’s over, or you 3 look at the other end. It’s not proper rebuttal, 4 because there was no evidence to rebut. And under 5 the Carter case, it’s simply dramatic evidence that 6 would be overwhelming at the end of the trial and 7 really, in my opinion, and as we briefed, totally 8 meaningless. There is no probative value. But if 9 there was, by a stretch, it would be on a collateral 10 matter. 11 And so I think -- I feel very strongly about 12 this that this is absolutely inappropriate. And I 13 will submit it, Your Honor. Thank you. 14 THE COURT: Mr. Zonen? 15 MR. ZONEN: Just briefly with regards to 16 Crawford. This is not hearsay at all. It’s not an 17 exception to hearsay. It’s not hearsay. 18 The issue is whether or not this child had 19 knowledge of the existence of that particular spot. 20 And the evidence of his knowledge, certainly his 21 ability to draw that picture, would be 22 circumstantial evidence that he knew about it. It 23 would be the equivalent of a child being able to say 24 that a room was green. And he would only know that 25 if he had been in the room. It’s not for the truth 26 of the matter that the room is green. We can show 27 that independently with the photograph as can we 28 show the spot with the photograph. But the fact 12181 1 that a child would know that the room was green 2 would only be knowledge that the child would have 3 circumstantially because he was there or because 4 somebody told him. 5 In this particular case, it’s the type of 6 information that was not commonly available at the 7 time, and circumstantially it would be relevant for 8 the fact that he must have seen that particular 9 spot, and therefore it’s not testimonial. It’s not 10 communication in that regard. It would not fit 11 within Crawford. It’s simply not hearsay. 12 MR. SANGER: And if I may make just one 13 comment on that -- I know we shouldn’t go back and 14 forth but -- 15 THE COURT: I’d really like you not to do 16 that. 17 MR. SANGER: Very well, Your Honor. 18 THE COURT: I’m going to deny the request to 19 bring in the evidence of the blemished penis. This 20 is the reason: It’s twofold, really. And under a 21 352 analysis, the Court agrees with the defense, 22 that shyness really was not an issue of any 23 proportion. I think you’ve reminded me -- I knew 24 there had been some statement somewhere in the trial 25 about shyness, but the -- I think you’ve reviewed 26 that with me, and I think I agree with -- my 27 recollection now has been refreshed to exactly what 28 that was. But I knew it was only a small thing to 12182 1 start with, if anything. And you’re saying it was 2 actually nothing. 3 But the analysis there would be, even if 4 shyness had been raised as an issue, the prejudicial 5 effect would far outweigh the probative value of the 6 shyness issue. And secondly, I think -- even though 7 your analysis is I think correct, I keep going 8 through it, but I think it is not hearsay. I still 9 think Crawford would apply to the ability to 10 cross-examine the boy -- or the -- you know, Mr. 11 Chandler. He’s not a boy anymore -- on that issue, 12 and that’s definitely not available, so that would 13 be my reasoning for excluding that evidence. 14 Was there anything else we needed to discuss 15 before we brought the jury in? 16 MR. ZONEN: Could we have just one moment? 17 MR. AUCHINCLOSS: Your Honor, we delivered 18 to the Court the only copy of the DVD of the -- oh, 19 that’s already been delivered. Thank you. 20 THE COURT: The clerk has it. I’ve -- 21 THE CLERK: Is it okay to release it? 22 THE COURT: Yes, I’ll release it. I’m going 23 to release it to the District Attorney in accordance 24 with our agreement that he’ll notify your associate 25 to work with him to -- 26 MR. SANGER: Yes, certainly. And we’ll need 27 a minute or two to get on the phone and arrange 28 that, if that’s all right, Your Honor. 12183 1 THE COURT: Yes. 2 MR. SANGER: Since you’re there, there’s one 3 housekeeping matter. And let me address that first. 4 Mr. Mesereau may have something. 5 Just one quick housekeeping matter. I 6 identified a phone record, for the record, at the 7 end of the day yesterday, and it was the last 8 exhibit marked for the defense, the number of which 9 is not directly in front of me. 10 Let me stand up, I’m sorry. 11 I talked to Mr. Sneddon, and when we offered 12 that exhibit, I just want the record to be clear, I 13 indicated that it was actually from the subpoenaed 14 materials. And I’ve clarified that with Mr. Sneddon 15 because I went back and checked. The same 16 information is in the subpoenaed materials. It’s in 17 a different computer printout. This is from an 18 actual bill that Mr. Sneddon agrees to the 19 foundation. 20 Do we have the number, just so we’re -- 21 THE CLERK: 5108. 22 MR. SANGER: 5108. So the foundation is 23 taken care of, and I wanted to clarify that so there 24 wasn’t any misrepresentation. And we’ll address the 25 issue of the admissibility of that, and I think 26 we’ll bring a witness to court to show the 27 relevance. 28 Thank you. 12184 1 THE COURT: That’s where we left it 2 yesterday. You’re just clarifying where the 3 document came from. 4 MR. SANGER: Yes, sir. 5 THE COURT: All right. Is everybody ready 6 to bring in -- 7 MR. SANGER: Well, I just need a couple 8 minutes. I’ve got to talk to Mr. Dunkle and find 9 out if he’s -- 10 THE COURT: All right. Would you -- 11 MR. SANGER: Excuse me one second. 12 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 13 table.) 14 MR. SANGER: Oh, okay. The bailiff 15 indicated she called Mr. Dunkle for me and he will 16 be coming over, so I’ll -- 17 THE COURT: I’ll give you a couple of 18 minutes to talk to him before we call the jury in. 19 Just do it as quickly as you can. 20 MR. SANGER: Yes. Yes, sir. 21 MR. NICOLA: Your Honor, there’s one matter 22 that we might be able to take up. It’s a subpoena 23 duces tecum for the Brad Miller telephone records. 24 It’s premarked as Exhibit 448. It’s been discovered 25 to Mr. Sanger. There’s a certificate by the 26 custodian. We’d be offering that into evidence. I 27 don’t know if the Court would like to look at that 28 now or when the jury comes in. 12185 1 THE COURT: Does it have to do with your next 2 witness, or is this -- 3 MR. NICOLA: We’re going to be presenting 4 some more link charts. It will be brief telephone 5 testimony. 6 MR. SANGER: The only issue that I have with 7 that, I assume that it is from the correct source. 8 I did not know they were going to bring in Brad 9 Miller records today. I knew they were bringing in 10 Geragos records. I did not get -- bring over that 11 set of records. So if I could have just a moment on 12 that, when we have the break here, I’ll take a look, 13 and I think it should be okay. 14 THE COURT: Okay. 15 MR. NICOLA: Thank you, Your Honor. 16 MR. ZONEN: Could we have a couple of 17 minutes before the jury is brought in? 18 THE COURT: Yes. I’m not going to call the 19 jury in until you tell me you’re ready, but I’ll ask 20 you to expedite it for me. 21 MR. ZONEN: We’re going to make efforts to 22 contact the witnesses that they’ve requested for 23 tomorrow. 24 THE COURT: Okay. 25 (Recess taken.) 26 // 27 // 28 // 12186 1 (The following proceedings were held in 2 open court in the presence and hearing of the 3 jury:) 4 5 THE COURT: Good morning. 6 THE JURY: (In unison) Good morning. 7 THE COURT: Sorry for the delay, but it’s 8 going to be a little bit this way as we get through 9 these rebuttal and perhaps surrebuttal issues. 10 Go ahead, Counsel. 11 MR. ZONEN: We’ll call Gina Villegas to the 12 stand. 13 THE COURT: Please remain standing. Face the 14 clerk here and raise your right hand. 15 16 GINA VILLEGAS 17 Having been sworn, testified as follows: 18 19 THE WITNESS: Yes. 20 THE CLERK: Please be seated. State and 21 spell your name for the record. 22 THE WITNESS: My name’s Gina Villegas. It’s 23 G-i-n-a, V-i-l-l-e-g-a-s. 24 THE CLERK: Thank you. 25 MR. ZONEN: May I proceed? 26 THE COURT: Yes. 27 // 28 // 12187 1 DIRECT EXAMINATION 2 BY MR. ZONEN: 3 Q. Miss Villegas, good morning. 4 A. Good morning. 5 Q. What is your current occupation? 6 A. I am an office manager for Hollywood Ford. 7 Q. And what is Hollywood Ford? 8 A. Hollywood Ford is an automobile dealership. 9 Q. In Hollywood, I’m assuming? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. And that’s in Los Angeles County, correct? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. And what is your position at Hollywood Ford? 14 A. I’m an office manager. 15 Q. What does that mean? What do you do? 16 A. I do payroll and I also do DMV for the 17 company. 18 Q. Are you familiar with the record systems 19 that they have at Hollywood Ford? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. And you’re familiar with how they keep 22 records of the purchases and sales of cars? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. Were you asked to make a search of your 25 records at Hollywood Ford to determine whether or 26 not a car had been sold to a person by the name of 27 Janet Arvizo or Janet Ventura? 28 A. Yes. 12188 1 Q. And for what period of time did you search? 2 A. I was told to search from 2002 to 2003, and 3 then I just took it upon myself to go back to 2000 4 to 2004, to make sure. 5 Q. So the earliest date you went to is what? 6 A. 2000. The year 2000. 7 Q. The year 2000? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Would that be January 2000? 10 A. Yes. The whole year of 2000, yes. 11 Q. Through 2004; is that correct? 12 A. Correct. 13 Q. Were you able to determine if Janet Arvizo 14 or Janet Ventura ever purchased a car from Hollywood 15 Ford? 16 A. She never did. 17 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. No further 18 questions. 19 THE COURT: Cross-examine? 20 MR. ZONEN: Oh, excuse me. If I could. 21 One -- one last question. 22 THE COURT: All right. 23 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Were you able to determine 24 whether or not there had been other inquiries into 25 this exact matter, whether or not Janet Arvizo or 26 Janet Ventura had ever purchased a car? 27 MR. SANGER: Objection, Your Honor, that 28 would call for hearsay. 12189 1 MR. ZONEN: I’ll change the question. 2 THE COURT: Overruled. 3 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Go ahead and answer. 4 A. If I checked if there was other ways? 5 Q. Were there other inquiries about this exact 6 matter, whether Janet Arvizo or Janet Ventura had 7 purchased a car? 8 A. I got paperwork in the mail from another 9 attorney asking to -- to look for those files. 10 Q. And was that an attorney for Michael 11 Jackson? 12 A. I’m assuming it was. I don’t really -- 13 I can’t be for sure because I didn’t even bother to 14 look. I just looked for the names, if it was on 15 there, and I called back the person to let them know 16 that I didn’t find anything under those names. 17 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. No further 18 questions. 19 THE COURT: Cross-examine? 20 MR. MESEREAU: Yes, please, Your Honor. 21 22 CROSS-EXAMINATION 23 BY MR. MESEREAU: 24 Q. Good morning. 25 A. Good morning. 26 Q. Miss Villegas, we haven’t met. My name is 27 Thomas Mesereau and I speak for Mr. Jackson. 28 A. Okay. 12190 1 Q. Were you asked by the prosecutors to do a 2 search? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. And when did they ask you to do that search? 5 A. It was Thursday -- I got a phone call on 6 Tuesday from a Detective Alvarez. He didn’t 7 personally ask for me, he just asked if he could 8 speak to somebody who could do a search under 9 certain people’s names. 10 Q. Okay. Now, did he ask you to determine 11 whether or not a money order was ever presented to 12 Hollywood Ford by someone named Janet Ventura? 13 A. No, that he did not ask me. 14 Q. Do you know, as you speak today, whether or 15 not someone named Janet Ventura ever presented a 16 money order in the amount of $23,000 and zero cents 17 to Hollywood Ford at any time? 18 A. No, we never got a check from -- 19 Q. Did he ask you to determine if Janet Ventura 20 ever presented a money order drawn on Washington 21 Mutual Bank to Hollywood Ford between 2002 and 2003? 22 A. Did he ask me to check for the check? 23 Q. Yes. Yes. 24 A. No. No. 25 Q. Did you look to see what deposits were made 26 at Hollywood Ford during that period of time? 27 A. No. I didn’t look for the deposits. 28 Q. Do you know whether or not a Janet Ventura 12191 1 essentially laundered a money order through 2 Hollywood Ford during that period of time? 3 MR. ZONEN: Objection, that’s argumentative, 4 Your Honor. 5 THE COURT: Sustained. 6 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Let me ask you this: If 7 someone goes to Washington Mutual Bank and says, 8 “Prepare a money order payable to the order of 9 Hollywood Ford for $23,000 and zero cents,” and 10 someone shows up at Hollywood Ford with that money 11 order, what is the normal procedure for handling it? 12 A. The normal procedure for handling it is 13 making a receipt for the cashier’s check. And also 14 we reference if -- they’re called stock numbers. 15 Every car is identified by a number. So we 16 reference the number on there and the receipt number 17 on there, so that if something should come back, 18 fraud or NSF or however, then we know what deal it 19 belongs to. 20 Q. Let me ask you this: What does Hollywood 21 sell besides automobiles? 22 A. They sell service to vehicles, and they sell 23 parts. 24 Q. Okay. Now, if someone came to Hollywood 25 Ford with a money order to the amount of $23,000 26 dated November 9th, 2001, and wanted to purchase 27 parts with that money order, could they do so? 28 A. I assume so. I’ve never seen that amount of 12192 1 money being purchased for parts, but -- 2 Q. And if they purchased parts for less than 3 $23,000, would they get change? 4 A. On a money order, no. 5 Q. What would the procedure be to handle that 6 money order? 7 A. The procedure would be, we would wait 15 8 days for that -- we treat it as a check. We would 9 wait 15 days for it to clear and then we would 10 create an account where we would refund you the 11 money back after the 15 days had cleared. 12 Q. Now, to your knowledge, as an office 13 manager, if someone were to go to Washington Mutual 14 Bank, have a money order prepared that’s 15 nonnegotiable, written in the amount of $23,000 and 16 zero cents, payable to the order of Hollywood Ford, 17 and it says on the money order, “Remitter, Janet 18 Ventura,” and then changed their mind about 19 presenting that money to Hollywood Ford, what would 20 the procedure be, if you know, to get that money in 21 your pocket? 22 A. Well, if it was done all in the same day, if 23 we made the receipt and it was done in the same day, 24 we would void out the receipt and give it back to 25 you. But if we’ve already deposited also into our 26 account, then again, we would wait 15 working days 27 for the check to clear. 28 Like I said, everything is set up by a stock 12193 1 number, so that money would be holding with that 2 stock number and that account number. And then 3 we -- if there was no deal, they would say, “Hey, 4 there’s no deal,” and we refund back the money. 5 Q. How would you refund back the money? 6 A. With a Hollywood Ford check. 7 Q. And did the prosecutors ever ask you to 8 check to see if a Hollywood Ford check was ever 9 presented to someone named Janet Ventura? 10 A. No. 11 Q. Did they ever ask you to check to see if a 12 Hollywood Ford check was ever given to Janet Ventura 13 designated to receive that money on her behalf? 14 A. No. 15 Q. Okay. What if you get a cashier’s check in 16 the amount of $23,000, zero cents, payable to 17 Hollywood Ford, drawn on Washington Mutual Bank for 18 $23,000, will you allow someone to negotiate that 19 instrument? 20 A. Negotiate to get -- 21 Q. Yeah. Can they use that to purchase 22 something? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. And how hard would it be to purchase 25 something with a cashier’s check? 26 A. Not hard. It would -- I mean, they would 27 just present it, and -- 28 Q. Could you use it almost as you could any 12194 1 other check? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. Okay. And if you see a cashier’s check like 4 that, $23,000, paid to the order of Hollywood Ford, 5 it says, “Remitter, Janet Ventura,” and someone 6 wants to purchase something with that check, what is 7 the procedure at Hollywood Ford for authenticating 8 the check or making sure it’s valid? 9 A. The same as we would treat any other check. 10 We would just deposit the same way, I mean, or 11 whatever they’re purchasing, whether it’s a vehicle, 12 parts or service, deposit it the same way. 13 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. May I approach the 14 witness, Your Honor? 15 THE COURT: You may. 16 MR. MESEREAU: Your Honor, I have a document 17 I’d like to mark next in order. Oh, it’s already 18 marked? 19 MR. ZONEN: May I see it, please? 20 MR. SANGER: Your Honor, I have Exhibit 5098 21 and we’d like to put that up, if we could, please. 22 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Miss Villegas, I want you 23 to look at that exhibit, if you can. It’s a little 24 bit blurry. You may notice at the top, you see 25 “Washington Mutual Bank, Paid to the Order of 26 Hollywood Ford.” Do you see that? 27 A. Yes. 28 Q. And you see to the right, the date is 12195 1 November 19th, 2001. The amount’s $23,000, okay? 2 A. Okay. 3 Q. It says, “Balancing Copy Non-Negotiable.” 4 See that to the right? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. It says under that, “Remitter, Janet 7 Ventura.” Do you see that? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Now, if someone comes to Hollywood Ford and 10 presents them with that check -- 11 A. Uh-huh. 12 Q. -- what can they do with that check at 13 Hollywood Ford? 14 A. They can either use it to deposit, you know, 15 money for a car or pay cash for a car, if that’s the 16 total amount. I’ve never seen service or parts meet 17 any kind of total like that, but, I mean, I guess if 18 they’re going to buy tons of accessories, maybe I 19 guess it would be. 20 Q. Okay. Did you determine whether or not 21 someone named Janet Ventura had ever purchased 22 anything from Hollywood Ford during that period of 23 time? 24 A. Janet Ventura did not purchase anything. 25 Q. Purchase anything? 26 A. Right. 27 Q. And do you know if anyone ever was presented 28 with that check for any purpose? 12196 1 A. No, I don’t know. I mean, I wouldn’t think 2 so, because on any type of -- on the top part of the 3 check, there would have been our account numbers, 4 our receipt numbers. Even if you purchase, you 5 know, service or parts, there would be a repair 6 order number, a counter ticket number. And we also 7 do ask for people’s driver’s license, because we do 8 get fraud copies of cashier’s checks or personal 9 checks. So we ask for a lot of identification. 10 Q. Okay. So basically you don’t know what this 11 person, Janet Ventura, ever did with this particular 12 document? 13 A. No, I do not. 14 Q. You don’t know why she had it drawn paid to 15 the order of Hollywood Ford? 16 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object as irrelevant. I’ll 17 object as irrelevant, beyond the witness’s scope of 18 understanding. 19 MR. MESEREAU: That’s what I’m trying to 20 determine, Your Honor. 21 MR. ZONEN: Lack of foundation. 22 THE COURT: You may answer. 23 THE WITNESS: Okay. I’m sorry, could you 24 repeat the question? 25 MR. MESEREAU: Yeah, sure. Let me withdraw 26 the question and repeat it. 27 Q. As you sit here today, you don’t know 28 whatever happened to that document, correct? 12197 1 A. No, I do not. 2 Q. And if Janet Ventura withdrew $23,000 in 3 this form of a document from an account for the 4 benefit of her son, Gavin Arvizo, who was ill, you 5 don’t know what she did with it? 6 MR. ZONEN: Your Honor, I’m going to object 7 as argumentative and beyond the scope of this 8 witness’s knowledge. 9 THE COURT: Sustained. 10 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Now, let me refer you to 11 the document on the bottom, okay? 12 A. Okay. 13 Q. You may notice that the instrument on the 14 top says, “Remitter, Janet Ventura,” the one on the 15 bottom has the name Janet Arvizo. Do you see that? 16 A. Yes, I do. 17 Q. And you see it says, “Payable to Hollywood 18 Ford”? 19 A. Correct. 20 Q. It’s on Washington Mutual. Looks like a 21 receipt, okay? 22 A. Uh-huh. 23 Q. That’s not something that you can find in 24 any of your records, correct? 25 A. No. Those are deposit or withdrawal slips 26 from Washington Mutual. 27 Q. Yeah. Okay. 28 A. So I wouldn’t have that. 12198 1 Q. Wouldn’t have that at all? 2 A. No. 3 Q. Now, did anyone from the prosecution ask you 4 to check your records to see if the name Janet 5 Ventura came up anywhere? 6 A. In vehicle sales -- 7 Q. Yeah. No vehicle sales. 8 A. No vehicle sales for Janet Ventura. 9 Q. Okay. And none for Janet Arvizo? 10 A. And none for Janet Arvizo either. 11 Q. So I guess it would be safe to say that 12 whatever was done with that check, you don’t know 13 what happened to it? 14 A. Hollywood Ford -- 15 MR. ZONEN: Object as speculative. 16 THE COURT: Sustained. 17 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: And if whoever Janet 18 Ventura is, or Janet Arvizo, took that and endorsed 19 it and deposited it into some other account, that’s 20 nothing you’d know about? 21 A. No. 22 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Asked and answered 23 and speculative. 24 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Did your records -- 25 THE COURT: Overruled. You need to wait. 26 MR. MESEREAU: I’m sorry. 27 THE COURT: The answer is, “No.” Next 28 question. 12199 1 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Did your records indicate 2 whether a Janet Ventura had ever even been to 3 Hollywood Ford during these particular years? 4 A. I mean, if she came off the street to 5 inquire about a vehicle? 6 Q. Yes. 7 A. No, I’m sorry, I wouldn’t know that. Just 8 the sale itself I would know. 9 Q. Okay. Now, at your business, if someone 10 comes in off the street, claims they’re interested 11 in buying a vehicle or parts, is there any procedure 12 for keeping their name and address in a marketing 13 file, or a public relations file, or a file where 14 you would send promotional brochures, that kind of 15 thing? 16 A. Not for the accounting office purposes. But 17 for the salesman, I mean, he could keep her name to 18 contact her later to see if she’s interested. 19 Q. Okay. 20 A. I’ve seen that happen. 21 Q. Now, would the individual salesperson be 22 responsible for that particular account information 23 or would the actual store keep the information? 24 A. Information, her personal information, like 25 an inquiry type of thing? 26 Q. Yes. 27 A. The salesman would have that. 28 Q. So basically, these are salespeople on 12200 1 commission; is that the idea? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. Okay. So they’re responsible for their own 4 marketing files, their own index of potential 5 customers or clients? 6 A. Correct. 7 Q. The company itself wouldn’t keep that 8 information? 9 A. No. Only the actual sale. 10 Q. And would the salesperson put that 11 information into a computer owned by the company, do 12 you know? 13 A. We’re manual, we don’t go off of computers. 14 Everything we have is manual. 15 Q. Now, what other -- let me rephrase that. 16 Specifically what was the task you were 17 asked to do by the prosecution? 18 A. The task I was asked to do was to look for 19 either a Janet Arvizo or Janet Ventura to see if she 20 had purchased a vehicle between the years 2002 and 21 2003. 22 Q. Now, if you wanted to find out whether or 23 not the company had any other information on Janet 24 Ventura, what other files could you have checked? 25 A. Um, as for sales or service, there wouldn’t 26 really be anything I could check for that. I would 27 have to -- like I said, the reference on the check 28 would have a counter ticket number, which are all 12201 1 filed numerically, and I can go back and look at 2 that. 3 Q. Okay. Okay. And is there any other source 4 of information on potential customers, clients, 5 whatever, that could possibly have any information 6 on Janet Ventura that you didn’t check? 7 A. Just the service and the parts. I mean, 8 like I said, if that money was used for service or 9 parts, that would be the only thing. 10 Q. Okay. 11 A. The reference number would have to be there. 12 Q. Okay. All right. Now, were you asked to 13 check the name Janet Arvizo? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. And nothing showed up for her either? 16 A. Nothing came up for her either. 17 Q. Okay. Let’s see, did you check the name 18 Gavin Arvizo? 19 A. No, I just looked for “Arvizo.” I didn’t 20 have any Arvizos. 21 Q. And no Venturas either? 22 A. And no Ventura either. 23 Q. Okay. So we really don’t know what happened 24 with that? 25 A. No, I do not. 26 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. Thank you very much. 27 MR. ZONEN: Happened with what? Objection; 28 vague. 12202 1 THE COURT: Sustained. 2 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: We don’t know what really 3 happened to this $23,000 that apparently a Janet 4 Ventura had paid to the order of Hollywood Ford, 5 really? 6 A. As for car sales, no. 7 MR. ZONEN: That’s a misstatement of 8 evidence. Objection. And argumentative and 9 speculative. 10 THE COURT: Sustained. 11 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. No further questions. 12 13 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 14 BY MR. ZONEN: 15 Q. Is Hollywood Ford a check cashing service? 16 A. No. 17 Q. If I walk in there with a $23,000 check and 18 tell you, “I’m not particularly interested in a Ford 19 product, but I have a check to cash,” would they 20 cash it? 21 A. No. 22 Q. All right. Did you determine whether or not 23 any checks had been cashed on behalf of Janet 24 Arvizo? 25 A. I didn’t look in the deposit books to see 26 anything like that. 27 Q. All right. But you would have records if a 28 check was cashed in conjunction with a purchase of a 12203 1 car? 2 A. Right. 3 Q. There would be no other reason that somebody 4 would be cashing a check of that size? 5 A. No. 6 Q. If I walked in and said, “I’d like to buy a 7 $20 sun visor and I’d like to pay for it with a 8 $23,000 cashier’s check,” they might balk at that; 9 no? 10 A. I’m sorry? 11 Q. They might be resistant to selling me a 12 $23,000 sun visor -- or excuse me, a $20 sun 13 visor -- 14 A. For 23,000 -- 15 Q. -- with a $23,000 check -- 16 A. No. 17 Q. No? 18 A. Right. 19 Q. There was no record at all of a purchase of 20 a car by Janet Arvizo, a Janet Ventura? 21 A. No. 22 Q. And this information was given to the 23 defense in advance; is that right? 24 A. Yes. 25 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. No further 26 questions. 27 // 28 // 12204 1 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 2 BY MR. MESEREAU: 3 Q. Excuse me, what information was given to 4 the defense in advance? 5 A. About not purchasing -- Janet Ventura or 6 Janet Arvizo not purchasing a vehicle. 7 Q. Okay. But you didn’t tell the defense what 8 Janet did with that money, correct? 9 MR. ZONEN: Objection; argumentative. 10 THE COURT: Sustained. 11 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: You certainly -- the 12 prosecutor asked a question about providing 13 information to the defense. You couldn’t provide 14 the defense any information whatever happened to 15 this money, right? You don’t have that knowledge? 16 A. I don’t have a car sale -- 17 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object -- 18 THE WITNESS: I don’t have a car sale for 19 that name. 20 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Yes, okay. The only 21 information you gave to the defense was that it 22 didn’t look like a car was purchased, but what the 23 person did with that money is beyond your knowledge? 24 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object as argumentative. 25 THE COURT: Sustained. 26 MR. MESEREAU: No further questions. 27 MR. ZONEN: No further questions. 28 THE BAILIFF: It’s break time. 12205 1 THE COURT: You may step down. 2 We’ll take our break. 3 (Recess taken.) 4 --o0o-- 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12206 1 REPORTER’S CERTIFICATE 2 3 4 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE ) 5 OF CALIFORNIA, ) 6 Plaintiff, ) 7 -vs- ) No. 1133603 8 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 9 Defendant. ) 10 11 12 I, MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, 13 CSR #3304, Official Court Reporter, do hereby 14 certify: 15 That the foregoing pages 12165 through 12206 16 contain a true and correct transcript of the 17 proceedings had in the within and above-entitled 18 matter as by me taken down in shorthand writing at 19 said proceedings on May 26, 2005, and thereafter 20 reduced to typewriting by computer-aided 21 transcription under my direction. 22 DATED: Santa Maria, California, 23 May 26, 2005. 24 25 26 27 MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 12207 1 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA 2 IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA 3 SANTA MARIA BRANCH; COOK STREET DIVISION 4 DEPARTMENT SM-2 HON. RODNEY S. MELVILLE, JUDGE 5 6 7 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ) 8 CALIFORNIA, ) 9 Plaintiff, ) 10 -vs- ) No. 1133603 11 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 12 Defendant. ) 13 14 15 16 17 REPORTER’S TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS 18 19 THURSDAY, MAY 26, 2005 20 21 8:40 A.M. 22 23 (PAGES 12208 THROUGH 12374) 24 25 26 27 REPORTED MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 BY: Official Court Reporter 12208 1 APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL: 2 3 For Plaintiff: THOMAS W. SNEDDON, JR., 4 District Attorney -and- 5 RONALD J. ZONEN, Sr. Deputy District Attorney 6 -and- GORDON AUCHINCLOSS, 7 Sr. Deputy District Attorney -and- 8 MAG NICOLA, Sr. Deputy District Attorney 9 1112 Santa Barbara Street Santa Barbara, California 93101 10 11 12 For Defendant: COLLINS, MESEREAU, REDDOCK & YU 13 BY: THOMAS A. MESEREAU, JR., ESQ. -and- 14 SUSAN C. YU, ESQ. 1875 Century Park East, Suite 700 15 Los Angeles, California 90067 16 -and- 17 SANGER & SWYSEN BY: ROBERT M. SANGER, ESQ. 18 233 East Carrillo Street, Suite C Santa Barbara, California 93101 19 20 21 The Interpreters: Doris Vick Rose O’Neill 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12209 1 I N D E X 2 3 Note: Mr. Sneddon is listed as “SN” on index. 4 Mr. Zonen is listed as “Z” on index. Mr. Auchincloss is listed as “A” on index. 5 Mr. Nicola is listed as “N” on index. Mr. Mesereau is listed as “M” on index. 6 Ms. Yu is listed as “Y” on index. Mr. Sanger is listed as “SA” on index. 7 8 R E B U T T A L 9 10 PLAINTIFF’S VOIR WITNESSES DIRECT CROSS REDIRECT RECROSS DIRE 11 12 AGGERS, Donna 12213-Z 12217-SA 12228-Z 12229-SA 13 12230-Z 14 (Further) 15 ERWIN, George 12231-SN 12245-SA 12263-SN 16 MARQUEZ, 17 Theresa 12271-Z 12274-SA 18 DICKERMAN, William 12278-Z 12294-M 12325-Z 12329-M 19 CAUSER, 20 Christine 12335-SN 12337-M 21 VENTURA, Maria 12342-Z 22 (Re-called) 23 BONNER, Craig 12347-N 12362-SA 24 (Re-called) 12359-SN 25 (Contd.) 26 27 28 12210 1 E X H I B I T S 2 FOR IN PLAINTIFF’S NO. DESCRIPTION I.D. EVID. 3 4 157 Photo of view of electronic device under 5 the table on the bottom floor of Jackson’s 6 master bedroom suite 12361 12363 7 159 Photo of close-up view of latch at top of door 8 within Jackson’s master bedroom suite 12361 12363 9 160 Photo of close-up view 10 of ceiling electronic video device within 11 Jackson’s master bedroom suite 12361 12363 12 447 Affidavit of custodian of 13 records for Exhibit No. 448 12348 14 448 Brad Miller phone records 15 for Pay Less Cellular 12346 12346 16 449 Mark Geragos phone records 12348 12350 17 460 Phone link chart prepared by Craig Bonner 12350 18 901 Brad Miller e-mails to 19 Geragos 12333 12333 20 903 Copies of documents from William Dickerman’s office 21 containing communications between Dickerman and 22 Geragos 12278 12294 23 904 Copy of records from Dino’s Moving & Storage 12233 12235 24 905 Copy of inventory made by 25 George Erwin 12241 12256 26 906 8-28-98 - Janet Arvizo’s Kaiser Permanente 27 medical records 12272 12272 28 12211 1 E X H I B I T S (Continued) 2 FOR IN DEFENDANT’S NO. DESCRIPTION I.D. EVID. 3 4 5109 West Covina Police Department records for 5 David Arvizo 12217 12220 6 5110 West Covina Police Department records for 7 Janet Arvizo 12217 12220 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12212 1 THE COURT: Call your next witness. 2 Please remain standing. Face the clerk and 3 raise your right hand. 4 5 DONNA AGGERS 6 Having been sworn, testified as follows: 7 8 THE WITNESS: Yes. 9 THE CLERK: Please be seated. State and 10 spell your name for the record. 11 THE WITNESS: My name is Donna Aggers. 12 D-o-n-n-a, A-g-g-e-r-s. 13 THE CLERK: Thank you. 14 15 DIRECT EXAMINATION 16 BY MR. ZONEN: 17 Q. Good morning. 18 A. Good morning. 19 Q. What is your current occupation? 20 A. Records supervisor at the West Covina Police 21 Department. 22 Q. How long have you held that position? 23 BAILIFF CORTEZ: Your microphone’s not on. 24 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: For what period of time have 25 you held that position, records supervisor? 26 A. West Covina, since August. 27 Q. And this is the West Covina Police 28 Department; is that correct? 12213 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. West Covina is located in Los Angeles 3 County? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Were you asked to do a records check to 6 determine the time, release time, on a person who 7 had been taken into custody at West Covina City 8 Jail? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. Was that person David Gavino Arvizo? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. Do you have those records with you? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. All right. And is this an arrest that 15 occurred on or about the 28th of August of 1998? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. All right. Can you tell me when that person 18 was booked into the jail and when he was released? 19 A. He was arrested at 1813 hours, booked in the 20 jail at 2145 hours, and released on that same 21 evening at three minutes after midnight. 22 Q. So three minutes after midnight on the 28th? 23 A. On the 28th. 24 Q. So he was brought in on the 27th? 25 A. 27th, right. 26 Q. And released three minutes after midnight on 27 the 28th? 28 A. Right. 12214 1 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. I have no further 2 questions. 3 MR. SANGER: Excuse me one second. There 4 was a change in the order of witnesses. I 5 apologize. 6 Miss Frey, do you have the West Covina 7 records? They were the ones that Steve Dunkle came 8 over and looked at and got a copy of yesterday. 9 Perhaps we should hand it to the Judge 10 first. 11 Your Honor, I was going to ask that -- there 12 were records that were subpoenaed from the West 13 Covina Police Department by the defense, and I 14 believe they were -- 15 THE COURT: There’s a return. 16 MR. SANGER: -- handed to you there by the 17 clerk. 18 THE COURT: Yes. 19 MR. SANGER: And I would like to have those 20 records marked as defense next in order. 21 THE COURT: Did you want me to open them? 22 I’m not quite sure why you handed me -- 23 MR. SANGER: Yes, well, in case there was 24 any question. I would like them opened. I believe 25 they were opened previously. 26 THE COURT: They do not appear to have been 27 previously opened. 28 MR. SANGER: All right. Maybe that’s a 12215 1 different set. So let’s live dangerously and find 2 out what’s in the envelope if we may, Your Honor. 3 THE COURT: All right. They appear to be 4 West Covina City Jail booking records with the 5 appropriate subpoena attached and the declaration of 6 business records. 7 MR. SANGER: All right. May I approach and 8 check that out? 9 THE COURT: I’ll let you decide how you want 10 them marked. 11 MR. SANGER: Please. Before they’re all 12 stapled together, there might be two groups. Let me 13 take a quick look, if I may. Thank you. 14 I think the most appropriate thing to do, 15 Your Honor, now that I look at them, there appears 16 to be, in the materials handed to counsel, the 17 subpoena and then the declaration, and then there 18 appears to be a set of records pertaining to Janet 19 Arvizo and another set pertaining to David. 20 I would be interested in marking as separate 21 exhibits the set pertaining to Janet and the other 22 set pertaining to David, and then it would be up to 23 the Court and counsel as to what should be done with 24 the other documents. I don’t think they’re 25 relevant, except for foundation. 26 THE COURT: All right. I’ll have them 27 marked separately as you’ve requested. 28 MR. SANGER: And then the other documents 12216 1 would be lodged with the envelope and would remain 2 with the court files. 3 THE COURT: That would be fine. 4 THE CLERK: David’s records are 5109 and 5 Janet’s records are 5110. 6 7 CROSS-EXAMINATION 8 BY MR. SANGER: 9 Q. Okay. Miss Aggers, sorry to keep you 10 sitting there? 11 A. That’s okay. 12 Q. I see you brought some papers with you. 13 Is that a copy of the same thing that was provided 14 directly to the Court? 15 A. Yes. 16 Q. All right. And you have reviewed the 17 records to testify to what you told us just a little 18 while ago; is that correct? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. In other words, you wouldn’t remember off 21 the top of your head everybody’s booking 22 information? 23 A. No. 24 MR. SANGER: All right. I would like to 25 approach, if I may, Your Honor, with 5110, and show 26 the witness this packet of information. 27 THE COURT: You may. 28 MR. SANGER: That’s the -- Janet. 12217 1 MR. ZONEN: Yes, go ahead. 2 Q. BY MR. SANGER: Did you have occasion to 3 review the information pertaining to Janet Arvizo? 4 A. Briefly, when I sent this to the court. 5 Q. All right. So you were the actual person 6 that sent this in, then? 7 A. That’s correct. 8 Q. Okay. And those records are, in fact, true 9 and correct records of the West Covina City Jail? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. And they’re kept in the ordinary course of 12 business as official police records; is that 13 correct? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. And similarly, the records that you provided 16 with regard to David Arvizo, which I’ve marked as 17 5109, would also be true and correct records of the 18 West Covina City Jail, and they are official police 19 records; is that correct? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. Kept in the ordinary course of business? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. All right. So let’s take a look at 5109. 24 And I’m going to ask if you can tell, by looking at 25 that packet, when Janet Arvizo was booked into the 26 West Covina City Jail. 27 A. 5110? 5109? 28 Q. I’m sorry, you’re right. 5110, I’m sorry. 12218 1 Let me restate it, just so we’re clear. 2 Taking a look at 5110, Exhibit 5-1-1-0, can 3 you tell from those records when Janet Arvizo was 4 booked into the West Covina City Jail? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. And when was that? 7 A. She was arrested at 1800 hours. And she was 8 booked in the jail at 1948 hours. 9 Q. Okay. And is there a different place to 10 book in females than males in that jail? 11 A. It’s the same place. 12 Q. Same place. So you go into the booking area 13 and people are processed as they go through; is that 14 right? 15 A. Right. 16 Q. So it appears that Janet Arvizo was booked 17 into the jail before David Arvizo; is that correct? 18 A. That’s correct. 19 Q. And what time does it show she was released? 20 A. At 2115 hours. 21 Q. So she was released before David Arvizo; is 22 that correct? 23 A. Yes. Yes. 24 MR. SANGER: All right. Now, may I approach 25 just to make sure we’re literally on the same page, 26 here? 27 THE COURT: Yes. 28 MR. SANGER: They have this in a different 12219 1 order for some reason. Excuse me one second, Your 2 Honor. 3 Okay. First of all, Your Honor, I’d like to 4 move into evidence 5109 and 5110 if I can, please. 5 THE COURT: All right. They’re admitted. 6 MR. SANGER: And I think the easiest way to 7 do this, because we have different pagination here, 8 would be to put this up on the board, if I may, and 9 so I’d ask to show 5110, if that’s all right. 10 THE COURT: Yes. 11 Q. BY MR. SANGER: First of all, in these 12 records with regard to Janet Arvizo, is there any 13 indication that Janet Arvizo was beaten up? 14 A. I didn’t see any indication of that. 15 Q. Okay. And I’m going to turn to -- two, 16 three, four, five, six, seven -- I’m going to turn 17 to page seven and put that up, with the Court’s 18 permission. 19 THE COURT: Yes. 20 Q. BY MR. SANGER: And again, this is of 5110. 21 Excuse me. 22 This form, are you familiar with this 23 particular form? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. How many years have you worked for West 26 Covina? 27 A. This is my first year with West Covina. 28 Q. Have you worked elsewhere? 12220 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. During your year, have you become familiar 3 with these forms at the West Covina Jail? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Okay. And is that one of the standard 6 forms? 7 A. Yes, it is. 8 Q. And it says, “County of Los Angeles 9 Sheriff’s Department.” Does West Covina have a 10 independent -- an independent police department, or 11 is it part of the sheriff -- 12 A. Independent police department. 13 Q. And is the jail facility run by the sheriff 14 or the police? 15 A. Police department. 16 Q. Okay. So for some reason you’re using an 17 L.A. County Sheriff’s Department Medical Receiving 18 Screening Form; is that correct? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. And that’s something you use in the ordinary 21 course of business there, right? 22 A. Right. 23 Q. And what is the purpose of this particular 24 form? 25 A. Basically to screen the incoming 26 in-custodies to make sure there are no medical 27 problems that you need to be aware of. 28 Q. Can you go a little closer to the right 12221 1 microphone there? Everyone has this problem, 2 especially when we ask you to turn around. Sorry. 3 All right. So, you want to find out if an 4 inmate comes in and they’re suffering from any kind 5 of injury; is that right? 6 A. That’s correct. 7 Q. Because you want to make sure that they 8 either have medical attention or something happens 9 so they’re not just put in the jail and have a 10 further problem, right? 11 A. Right. 12 Q. If somebody was severely beaten, for 13 instance, you would want to know that when you book 14 them in, correct? 15 A. Correct. 16 Q. The first question on this form is, “Do you 17 require any medical attention?” And in Janet 18 Arvizo’s case, it’s checked “No”; is that correct? 19 A. That’s correct. 20 Q. And then at the bottom of this form, there 21 is a place there for “Inmate Signature”; is that 22 correct? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. And I know you’re not a handwriting expert, 25 but you would expect that the inmate, in this case 26 Janet Arvizo, is the one that signed there; is that 27 right? 28 A. That’s correct. 12222 1 Q. And before somebody’s booked into the jail, 2 unless they’re unconscious or something else is 3 going on, they’re required to sign this form in the 4 presence of an officer; is that right? 5 A. That’s right. 6 Q. Okay. Now, if we look at the page preceding 7 that, there’s a form here entitled, “Officer’s 8 observations”; is that correct? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. And is this also a form that’s used in the 11 ordinary course of business there at the West Covina 12 City Jail? 13 A. Yes, it is. 14 Q. And what is the purpose of this form? 15 A. The same as the previous form. It’s just 16 more in-depth, to see if there’s any observation 17 that the jailer or officer would have indicating 18 injuries. 19 Q. And who is the one that actually fills out 20 this form? 21 A. The jailer. 22 Q. Okay. And the jailer is somebody whose job 23 it is to take people in and process them into the 24 jail; is that correct? 25 A. That’s correct. 26 Q. So when you have somebody -- when you say 27 “jailer,” you have a booking officer who’s assigned 28 to take people in, fill out their paperwork, 12223 1 correct? 2 A. Right. 3 Q. And that person is also supposed to observe 4 the individual to see if they have any visible signs 5 of injury, correct? 6 A. That’s correct. 7 Q. And they look not only for actual injury, 8 but they look for symptoms of drug withdrawal, 9 mental illness issues, other issues; is that 10 correct? 11 A. That’s correct. 12 Q. And once again, they are concerned to make 13 sure that they’re not checking somebody in who has 14 injuries that may not be readily visible; is that 15 right? 16 A. That’s right. 17 Q. All right. In this -- in this particular 18 case, it says, “Deputy Completing the Form,” and 19 there’s a deputy’s name there; is that right? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. With a badge number or employee number? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. And that would be -- that would indicate 24 that that individual, whoever it is, did that 25 screening when Janet Arvizo came into the jail, 26 correct? 27 A. That’s correct. 28 Q. And it says the form is “Approved By” -- it 12224 1 looks like a doctor down there. Does that mean the 2 doctor actually conducted an examination of the 3 person? 4 A. I don’t believe so. 5 Q. All right. So the doctor signs off in 6 general, saying that, you know, he’s looked at the 7 form and it looks okay, and this -- as he goes 8 through this night’s paperwork, it looks okay; is 9 that right? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. And in this particular case for Janet 12 Arvizo, there is a “No” checked in each of the 13 categories on the form; is that right? 14 A. That’s correct. 15 Q. And the way it works there, if you have a 16 “No” in every category, that means that the person 17 doing the actual booking has not seen any indication 18 that there’s anything physically wrong with the 19 person or anything that would require medical or 20 psychiatric attention at that time; is that correct? 21 A. That’s correct. 22 MR. SANGER: If you could leave it on for 23 just one second. 24 Q. All right. And then there are also other 25 questions -- and I’m going to turn to another page 26 in just a second. But there are other questions 27 that are asked to evaluate a person’s mental 28 level -- let me withdraw that. 12225 1 There are other questions that are asked to 2 determine a person’s level of mental functioning; is 3 that correct? 4 A. That’s correct. 5 Q. So you want to see if you have someone who’s 6 developmentally disabled who may, you know, not 7 really be understanding what’s going on; is that 8 right? 9 A. That’s correct. 10 Q. And again, in this case, it appeared that 11 Miss Arvizo was, according to the records, was 12 functioning at an appropriate level; is that 13 correct? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. Then there’s a property inventory showing 16 what property was on the person’s -- on the person 17 of the individual who was being booked into jail; is 18 that correct? 19 A. That’s correct. 20 Q. All right. Now, is there also a process for 21 obtaining a booking photo? 22 And just as the lights go on, that’s what 23 I’m going to put up. Anyway, if I may, Your Honor, 24 I’m going to put up the booking photo. 25 Is there a process for obtaining a booking 26 photo? 27 A. Do you mean during the booking process? 28 Q. Yes. 12226 1 A. It’s just done during the course of the 2 booking. 3 Q. Yes. Okay. So during the booking, you take 4 a photograph of the individual, correct? 5 A. Right. 6 Q. And in this case there is a photograph as 7 part of the records, here, of the West Covina City 8 Jail, correct? 9 A. That’s correct. 10 Q. And if there were particular -- let me 11 withdraw that. 12 If you had an individual who had -- well, 13 let me withdraw that and just put this up. This is 14 the last page of the exhibit. 15 Is that a true and correct copy of the 16 booking photo that was taken at the time that Miss 17 Arvizo was arrested? 18 A. Yes, it is. 19 Q. And by the way, both Mr. and Mrs. Arvizo, 20 both Janet and David Arvizo, show as their residence 21 address 12643 Ramer in El Monte; is that correct? 22 A. I don’t have her copy in front of me, but 23 his address shows that. 24 Q. All right. Let me show you this. And I’ll 25 just put it up on the board, if I may. 26 A. Yes, it shows the same address. 27 MR. SANGER: Excuse me one second. I think 28 somebody was trying to get my attention. 12227 1 (Discussion held off the record at counsel 2 table.) 3 MR. SANGER: Okay. And, Your Honor, I think 4 I offered both and they were received; is that 5 correct? 6 THE COURT: That’s correct. 7 MR. SANGER: So I have no further questions. 8 Thank you. 9 THE COURT: Are there Social Security numbers 10 on that? 11 MR. ZONEN: We’ll take a look at it. If 12 there are, we’ll delete it. 13 MR. NICOLA: There are; halfway down on the 14 left. 15 MR. SANGER: Oh, there is. Hard to read. I 16 apologize, I put it up. I don’t know if I got that 17 whole thing up there. 18 19 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 20 BY MR. ZONEN: 21 Q. Do you know if Miss Arvizo was actually put 22 into a jail cell? 23 A. I don’t know that. 24 Q. If somebody is arrested and kept for less 25 than two hours on a misdemeanor, where are they 26 processed? 27 A. They may be placed in a cell temporarily. 28 Q. Okay. Is there a reception center that they 12228 1 would be taken to? 2 A. There is. 3 Q. So they wouldn’t go through the whole 4 process of actually changing clothes into the jail 5 garb, would they? 6 A. Not for a misdemeanor. 7 Q. Not for a misdemeanor. 8 And do you know if she was released on O.R., 9 own recognizance, or she posted bail of any kind? 10 MR. SANGER: Objection; relevance. 11 I’m sorry. Objection; relevance. 12 THE COURT: Sustained. 13 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: This appears to be a fairly 14 prompt processing of an inmate; would that be your 15 opinion? 16 A. It would be. 17 MR. ZONEN: All right. I have no further 18 questions. 19 MR. SANGER: I have just one question, I 20 think, just to clear this up. 21 22 RECROSS-EXAMINATION 23 BY MR. SANGER: 24 Q. You said they are booked on misdemeanors; is 25 that right? 26 A. Yes. 27 Q. And a misdemeanor is a crime? 28 A. Yes. 12229 1 Q. It’s not like a traffic violation. It’s an 2 actual crime in California; is that correct? 3 A. That’s correct. 4 MR. SANGER: All right. Thank you. 5 6 FURTHER REDIRECT EXAMINATION 7 BY MR. ZONEN: 8 Q. I’ll reask the question. Was she released 9 on O.R. or did she post a bond? 10 MR. SANGER: Objection; relevancy. 11 MR. ZONEN: It’s relevant given the last 12 question. 13 THE COURT: Sustained. 14 MR. ZONEN: No further questions. 15 MR. SANGER: And obviously no further 16 questions. 17 THE COURT: You may step down. 18 Call your next witness. 19 MR. SNEDDON: I’ll call George Erwin. 20 THE COURT: Come forward, please. When you 21 get to the witness stand here, remain standing. 22 Face the clerk over here and raise your 23 right hand. 24 25 GEORGE ERWIN 26 Having been sworn, testified as follows: 27 28 THE WITNESS: I do. 12230 1 THE CLERK: Please be seated. State and 2 spell your name for the record. 3 THE WITNESS: My name is George Erwin. 4 G-e-o-r-g-e, E-r-w-i-n. 5 THE CLERK: Thank you. 6 7 DIRECT EXAMINATION 8 BY MR. SNEDDON: 9 Q. Good morning, Mr. Erwin. 10 A. Good morning. 11 Q. And the microphone that you want to use is 12 the one over there. Yes, sir. And lean into it, 13 because we’ll want everybody to hear what you have 14 to say. 15 You have a business in the Los Angeles area, 16 correct? 17 A. That’s correct. 18 Q. And what is the name of that business? 19 A. It’s Dino’s Moving & Storage. 20 Q. And how long have you been associated with 21 Dino’s Moving & Storage? 22 A. Oh, 25, 30 years. 23 Q. It’s a family business? 24 A. It’s a family business. 25 Q. Passed on to you and your brother? 26 A. Correct. 27 Q. And where is this? Give you a little free 28 advertising. Where is it located? 12231 1 A. It’s in North Hollywood. 2 Q. So could you give us a brief description of 3 what the nature of this moving and storage business 4 is that you have? 5 A. We are a third-generation family business, 6 referral-based, residentially oriented. We move 7 homes, and store as incidental to moving. We do 8 packing and relocating of homes. 9 Q. And when you are asked to store items, do 10 you have a storage facility that you use to do that? 11 A. Yes, we do. 12 Q. Is that located at your headquarters? 13 A. Yes, it is. 14 Q. And could you just describe generally to the 15 ladies and gentlemen of the jury what your storage 16 facilities are? 17 A. Our storage facility is a 12,500-square-foot 18 concrete tilt-up warehouse. It’s a state-of-the-art 19 building. It is high security; motion detectors; 20 wired into the police and the fire department. 21 Inside the warehouse, we have hundreds of 22 vaults. Vaults are large wooden cubes approximately 23 five feet by seven feet by eight feet tall. They 24 stack three high. We have approximately 330 vaults 25 in the warehouse. 26 Q. Okay. Now, were you asked to come to court 27 here today and to bring some records in connection 28 with the storage of some items under the name of an 12232 1 individual by the name of Bradley Miller? 2 A. Yes, I was. 3 Q. And did you bring your file? 4 A. Yes, I did. 5 Q. And you have the original documents in the 6 file; is that correct? 7 A. I do. 8 MR. SNEDDON: Okay. Your Honor, may I 9 approach? 10 THE COURT: Yes. 11 MR. SNEDDON: I’m just going to show them to 12 counsel. 13 MR. SANGER: I don’t want to interfere with 14 counsel, but would it be appropriate for me to look 15 at them at the same time? 16 MR. SNEDDON: I was going to bring them to 17 you. 18 MR. SANGER: Oh. Then that’s even better. 19 If I could have just a moment, Your Honor. 20 May I just have a second? 21 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 22 table.) 23 MR. SNEDDON: All right. Your Honor, with 24 the permission of counsel, I believe that -- let me 25 ask the witness for foundation, and then we’ll just 26 make the offer. 27 Your Honor, I’m going to have a set of 28 documents marked as People’s No. 904 for 12233 1 identification purposes. Where shall I put it? 2 Q. Mr. Erwin, you were kind enough to bring 3 your original documents on the Bradley Miller file 4 to the court, correct? 5 A. That’s correct. 6 Q. You also made copies of the originals that 7 are in your file, correct? 8 A. That’s correct. 9 Q. And have you had a chance to compare the 10 copies that you made with the originals in your 11 file? 12 A. Yes, I have. 13 Q. And they’re accurate with regard to the -- 14 they’re accurate with regard to the originals. 15 They’re duplications of it, correct? 16 A. Yes, they are. 17 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I would move -- 18 Q. And these are kept in the normal course of 19 business at your establishment? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. And they’re prepared at or about the time of 22 the transaction? 23 A. Correct. 24 Q. And they’re used in the conduction of 25 business for you; is that correct? 26 A. That’s correct. 27 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I would move that 28 Exhibit 904 be admitted. And we used the copies and 12234 1 we’ll allow the witness to take the originals back 2 to his office. 3 MR. SANGER: With the exception of the word 4 “conduction,” I would not have an objection. 5 THE COURT: They’re admitted. 6 And the agreement is you may take the 7 originals back. 8 MR. SANGER: I would like the witness to 9 keep the originals there until I finish 10 cross-examination. 11 THE COURT: Exactly. 12 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: I’ll try not to use any 13 more bad grammar in my questions to you. 14 All right. Your Honor, is the Elmo on the 15 right -- it should be, I think. 16 Mr. Erwin, I’m going to put these documents 17 up and just ask you a few quick questions about it, 18 all right? 19 A. All right. 20 Q. And you have the originals in front of you, 21 so if you need to look at them, but I think you 22 should be able to see from the board. 23 The first document I’m going to place up has 24 the actual tag “904” on it. 25 Now, with regard to this document, does this 26 document have a title? 27 A. Yes. This is a bill of lading. 28 Q. And what purpose does it serve? 12235 1 A. It serves as a -- an accounting of where 2 we -- of origin and destination, and a time ruler 3 across the top for the time of arrival, time at a 4 location, transportation time to destination or next 5 pick-up or delivery. So it’s a time accounting and 6 geographical locations. 7 Q. All right. If we could just scoot that 8 document down a little farther so we could see the 9 top of it. 10 No, the other way. 11 All right. It has a No. 5020 in the upper 12 right-hand corner. What is that? That’s just the 13 receipt number? 14 A. That’s just random printing -- it’s a random 15 print number. When these are printed, they 16 routinely do sequential numbers. 17 Q. Underneath that is a date, or is a series of 18 numbers, “3-1-03.” What is that? 19 A. That would be the date of the -- that this 20 activity took place. 21 Q. And then on the left-hand side of the 22 exhibit, “From,” has the name “Brad Miller.” Would 23 that be the person that you were doing business 24 with? 25 A. That’s correct. 26 Q. And underneath that is an address that’s on 27 Soto Street, and an apartment number. What would 28 that indicate? 12236 1 A. That would be the pick-up location. 2 Q. Okay. And then where it says, “To,” what 3 does that information indicate? 4 A. The “DMS” is our in-house -- it stands for 5 Dino’s Moving & Storage. The Lot No. 439, which is 6 a number -- it’s comparable to an account number 7 that we assign whenever we bring a lot into storage. 8 Q. Okay. And then there is a part of the form 9 that is not prefabricated or preprinted, with a 10 “CK#1477.” What does that indicate, if you know? 11 A. That means that the charges on the bill of 12 lading were paid with that check number. 13 Q. Okay. Now, on -- where it indicates 14 “From: Brad Miller,” there is information there with 15 a name and a phone number. What is the purpose of 16 that information? 17 A. That’s a contact name, where it says, “See 18 Asaf,” I believe. 19 Q. Okay. 20 A. Apparently they’re a representative of Brad 21 Miller’s or -- or I don’t know. That would be the 22 contact person to see there. 23 Q. Okay. Let’s go to the next document. 24 And this one, what is this particular 25 document? 26 A. All right. This is a service agreement. It 27 goes hand in hand with the bill of lading. And 28 it -- it simply -- it states the -- as a service 12237 1 contract, it states the itinerary for the job, which 2 would be in this case a pick-up location, and 3 bringing the shipment to Dino’s Storage. It’s 4 assigned as Lot No. 439. States the hourly rate at 5 which we’ll proceed. 6 Q. Okay. And this was also filled out on March 7 1st of 2003, correct? 8 A. That is correct. 9 Q. All right. Let’s go to the next document. 10 This document has a “5025” at the upper 11 right-hand corner and a series of numbers, “3-5-02,” 12 underneath it. What is this document? 13 A. This is another bill of lading that was 14 issued for a continuation of the job. 15 Q. Now, I noticed that the first document had 16 “03” and this one appears to have “02.” Is that a 17 “2” or a “3”? 18 A. Right, we do not use those numbers in our 19 system. 20 Q. What do you mean by that? 21 A. You’re referring to the “5025” in the top 22 right-hand corner? 23 Q. I’m referring to the “3-5” and what appears 24 to be “02.” 25 A. Well, it should be “03.” I don’t know if 26 it’s an error or it’s just illegible. 27 Q. But this transaction, this series of 28 transactions, occurred in ‘03, correct? 12238 1 A. That’s correct. 2 Q. Now, on this particular document is another 3 group of writings that are placed on it, and it 4 looks like a dollar sign. 5 What does that information on the 6 right-hand -- middle right-hand side of the document 7 indicate? 8 A. That’s payment information again. 9 Q. For the services you provided? 10 A. Correct. 11 Q. The payment by check? 12 A. Correct. 13 Q. Okay. Let’s go to the next document. 14 May I approach the witness for a moment, 15 Your Honor? It appears that there’s one page 16 missing. 17 THE COURT: Yes. 18 MR. SANGER: Perhaps I could have a moment, 19 too, so I can figure out what’s going on. 20 MR. SNEDDON: I’ll show counsel what I think 21 is missing from the exhibit. 22 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 23 table.) 24 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Mr. Erwin, in your original 25 documents -- well, let me put it this way. Let me 26 just do it so we have it in evidence. 27 That’s good. Well, drop it just a little 28 bit. There. 12239 1 This document has a “No. 439” in the upper 2 right-hand corner, correct? 3 A. Correct. 4 Q. Okay. And it has a date of “3-1-03” on it, 5 correct? 6 A. That’s correct. 7 Q. Could we scoot the exhibit up just a little 8 bit? All the way, so we -- okay. Keep going. 9 All right. That’s good. 10 All right. Now, the information that’s 11 contained on the bottom portion of this exhibit that 12 is part of 904, what is this information? 13 A. That is an inventory of the items that we 14 picked up. 15 Q. Now, what I want to ask you is, it appears 16 on the right-hand side that there’s -- it says, 17 “Pick-up, 3-4-03.” Do you see that? 18 A. Yes, I do. 19 Q. Was there more than one pick-up of goods at 20 this particular location? 21 A. There were two -- there were two pick-ups. 22 Q. When was the first one? 23 A. The first one was on 3-1-03, and the second 24 one was on 3-5-03. 25 Q. Okay. Now -- 26 A. So that should read “3-5-03” for the second 27 pick-up there. 28 Q. Now, is there a document in your original 12240 1 files that reflects just what was picked up the 2 first day, on 3-1-03? 3 A. Well, that document shows that. 4 Q. That shows -- okay. 5 Let me approach, if I might, Your Honor, 6 just so counsel and I can get this straightened out. 7 (Whereupon, an off-the-record discussion was 8 held between Mr. Sneddon and the witness at the 9 witness stand.) 10 MR. SANGER: I was going to say, could we do 11 it on the record so we all hear it, I guess is what 12 I was going to ask. 13 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to have a document 14 marked as 905 for identification purposes, Your 15 Honor. I’ll show it to counsel. 16 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 17 table.) 18 MR. SNEDDON: May I approach the witness and 19 ask him some questions about Exhibit 905, Your 20 Honor? 21 THE COURT: Yes. 22 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Mr. Erwin, do you recognize 23 the exhibit that I’ve shown you as 905? 24 A. Yes, I do. 25 Q. Do you find the original of that document, 26 905, in your file presently, currently? 27 A. Yes. I have the original document that this 28 was copied from after the first stage in the 12241 1 development of the original. 2 Q. Okay. Would that be the exhibit that’s on 3 the board right now? 4 A. No, sir, that is -- the exhibit on the board 5 now is a complete document. This is a copy after 6 the first pick-up. It’s a copy of what -- of the 7 inventory at the time of the first pick-up. 8 Q. Okay. So that document -- go ahead. 9 A. And before we were called back to -- for the 10 second pick-up. 11 Q. So that document - and by “that,” I mean 905 - 12 reflects the items that were picked up on the first 13 occasion, on March 1st? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. All right. 16 A. I probably -- I probably made a copy -- when 17 I knew that this original was going to go back out 18 for a continuation of additional items, as a 19 caution, I made a copy of the original for myself -- 20 Q. Okay. 21 A. -- to keep in the office, which I don’t have 22 in my file because you have it. 23 Q. Thank you for sharing. 24 MR. SANGER: The problem is, I don’t have it 25 either, so I’m just a little bit lost here. Perhaps 26 I could have just a moment with counsel to ask a 27 question off the record? 28 THE COURT: All right. 12242 1 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 2 table.) 3 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Okay. Mr. Erwin, the 4 document that you have in your hand is 905, and that 5 reflects the items that were picked up on the first 6 time, on March 1st, 2003, correct? 7 A. That’s correct. 8 Q. All right. Now, the item that’s on the 9 board that the ladies and gentlemen of the jury are 10 now viewing, that is a compilation of what was 11 picked up on both the first time and the second 12 time; is that correct? 13 A. That’s correct. 14 Q. And that’s an itemization, correct? 15 A. Yes, it is. 16 Q. And I noticed that in the column to the far 17 left of each of those items, there’s a little “X.” 18 Do you see that? 19 A. Yes, I do. 20 Q. What is the purpose of that “X” on the 21 document? 22 A. That “X” is -- is -- is placed there when 23 the item is checked off at the time that it leaves 24 storage. 25 Q. Okay. So when you release these items, 26 that’s how you determine and document what you gave 27 back? 28 A. That’s correct. It’s checked off as it goes 12243 1 out of storage. 2 Q. All right. Now, does your file reflect the 3 date in which these items were released? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. And what was that date? 6 A. That would be October 1st, 2003. 7 Q. And that would be to a Major Jay Jackson and 8 a Janet Arvizo, correct? 9 A. That’s correct. 10 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, if I haven’t, I 11 move that 905 be admitted into evidence. 12 MR. SANGER: I have a problem. As far as I 13 can tell, it wasn’t provided in discovery, and it’s 14 not -- it’s a copy that seems to be a fax Xeroxed 15 copy of something that’s not in the witness’s file. 16 So I’d like to have an opportunity to get a copy of 17 it, number one, and number two, ask some questions 18 before that’s received. 19 THE COURT: All right. I’ll withhold ruling 20 until he’s had a chance to ask some questions. 21 MR. SNEDDON: That’s fair enough. 22 Judge, has 904 been moved into evidence? 23 THE CLERK: Yes. 24 MR. SNEDDON: It has? 25 THE CLERK: Yes. 26 MR. SNEDDON: Thank you, ma’am. 27 I have no further questions, Your Honor. 28 MR. SANGER: To expedite -- this is yours. 12244 1 This is mine. Okay. 2 Excuse me one second. This is the entire 3 exhibit here, 904? 4 MR. SNEDDON: As far as I know. 5 MR. SANGER: Okay. Fine. 6 Your Honor, could I ask to retrieve 905 and 7 see if there’s somebody available, with the Court’s 8 permission, to make a copy for both the parties? It 9 might make it easier. 10 THE COURT: Okay. Thank you. 11 MR. SANGER: Could the court staff do it? 12 The D.A.’s offered, but whatever is quickest. 13 THE COURT: That’s what I say. Whatever is 14 quickest. 15 MR. SANGER: It’s been returned to me to 16 hand to the bailiff, and -- 17 THE BAILIFF: Just one of each? 18 MR. SANGER: No. Two. One for each side, 19 for two of us. 20 THE BAILIFF: It will be on yellow paper. 21 THE COURT: Yes. 22 23 CROSS-EXAMINATION 24 BY MR. SANGER: 25 Q. Let me ask you a few questions here while we 26 get that copied, and then we’ll go through some of 27 your documents with a couple other questions. 28 First of all, I think you said you’re the 12245 1 owner and the proprietor of Dino’s Moving & Storage; 2 is that correct? 3 A. That’s right. 4 Q. And you mentioned it’s a family business? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. This is a business that belonged to your 7 parents at one time? 8 A. My Uncle Dino. 9 Q. Your Uncle Dino? 10 A. Yeah. 11 Q. All right. And your brother and you now are 12 the principals in the business? 13 A. Yes, we are. 14 Q. And how long has the place been in 15 existence? 16 A. The facility that we’re currently at? 17 Q. The business. 18 A. The business? Well, it started with grandpa 19 in the ‘50s, and Dino jumped in in the late ‘60s. 20 John and I got involved in early to mid-’70s. 21 Q. All right. And from what I gathered from 22 the way you started out, you’re rather proud of the 23 business? 24 A. We are. 25 Q. Good. 26 A. We’re very successful. We’re referral-based 27 only. 28 Q. I heard that, and I was going to ask about 12246 1 that. You’re saying referral-based. So you don’t 2 really put out a lot of advertisements. You get 3 referrals from satisfied customers and others; is 4 that correct? 5 A. That’s correct. 6 Q. And you are bonded and licensed; is that 7 right? 8 A. We’re licensed by the State of California 9 Public Utilities Commission. 10 Q. In order to maintain that license, do you 11 have to meet certain standards? 12 A. Yeah, definitely, you must comply with the 13 minimum requirements for insurance, property -- 14 property and liability insurance, as well as 15 workers’ comp. 16 Q. And if you maintain a professional 17 operation, you can keep your license, I take it? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. And you have kept your license with the 20 Public Utilities Commission of the State of 21 California for how long? 22 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I’m going to 23 object to this as being immaterial and irrelevant. 24 THE COURT: Overruled. 25 THE WITNESS: Oh, we -- our current license 26 was obtained in 1984, and it’s been in place since 27 then. 28 Q. BY MR. SANGER: All right. And do you have 12247 1 to -- when you say “insurance,” I asked about 2 bonded. You have to have adequate insurance to 3 cover any liability for any malfeasance on the part 4 of Dino’s, if there is any; is that right? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. All right. And your job -- well, let me put 7 it this way: The work of Dino’s Moving & Storage is 8 to assist people in actually moving from one 9 location to another in some cases; is that right? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. So you have moving vans, and you have movers 12 who do their thing; is that right? 13 A. That’s it. 14 Q. And you also have the storage facility you 15 told us about where you can store people’s valuables 16 for them; is that right? 17 A. Correct. 18 Q. All right. Now, in this particular 19 situation, you’ve looked at your records, which you 20 brought with you, and it appears that there was an 21 initial engagement of your services for the date of 22 March the 1st, 2003, correct? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. And there were services performed on that 25 date; is that correct? 26 A. Yes. 27 Q. Can you tell us what services were 28 performed? 12248 1 A. Items 1 through 20 on the inventory were 2 picked up. They were tagged, inventoried, loaded 3 onto the truck, and stored in the warehouse. 4 Q. All right. So if I put up page four of the 5 exhibit, which I’ll just move to the top there, this 6 is your warehouse receipt; is that right? 7 A. That’s correct. 8 Q. And so you said Items 1 through 20. 9 Do we have our pointer? 10 A. No, it would be 1 through 19. And Number 20 11 would be the starting number on March 5th. 12 Q. All right. So what we see here, it is 13 blurry. Either that or my vision is going, here. 14 But right down this line here, it says 1 15 through, and it -- apparently the first number is 16 cut off, but that would be 19 right there. 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. It says, “Small box”? 19 A. Correct. 20 Q. And then somebody wrote a “2” in next to the 21 zero on this; is that correct? 22 A. Right. That’s how we use this form. 23 Q. All right. On your original, is it cut off, 24 or is that the way -- it just goes 1 through 10 25 repeatedly. I guess it does, doesn’t it? 26 A. It’s -- it goes 1 through -- yeah, 1 through 27 10 without the 1. 28 Q. 1 through zero and then 1 through zero? 12249 1 A. Right. 2 Q. So now that I figured that out -- all right. 3 And it isn’t cut off. It’s just not there. So this 4 one right above the 20 is where it cut off? 5 A. That was the last item on 3-1-03. 6 Q. Okay. The people that went to move this out 7 of the location were there for how long; do you 8 know? 9 A. I need to reference the bill of lading and I 10 can tell you. 11 Q. So would that be -- let me guess. Is that 12 this one? 13 A. Yes, that’s the one. 14 Q. That’s the one, okay. So the people who 15 came to do this move would have come to the 16 apartment on Soto Street, right? 17 A. Correct. 18 Q. With a truck, and they would have picked up 19 whatever is there, correct? 20 A. Yes. They arrived at 8:15. They loaded 21 until 9:30. They drove to the warehouse, stopped 22 for 15 minutes to -- for a break, and unloaded at 23 the warehouse from 10:30 to 11:00. 24 Q. All right. I was just pointing up there, so 25 I want to make sure I got this right. This is -- do 26 you count portal to portal? In other words, they 27 start the clock running when they drive from the 28 warehouse to the location? 12250 1 A. No, generally -- well, yes, with storage -- 2 with storage we do. 3 Q. All right. So 8:15 is when they would have 4 left the warehouse, correct? 5 A. 8:15 is when they arrived at origin. 6 Q. So you have some other time showing when 7 they -- 8 A. Right. Seven o’clock. 9 Q. Okay. 10 A. There’s a little -- there’s an indication at 11 seven o’clock with a “WH” above the time ruler. 12 That’s the time they left the warehouse. 13 Q. You’re looking at the original, and you can 14 read what I’m showing with the pointer. There is 15 “WH,” warehouse, “7:00.” 8:15 is the time that they 16 arrive at the location? 17 A. Correct. 18 Q. And then they load from 8:15 to 9:30, 19 correct? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. And then 9:30 to 10:15 is driving back to 22 the warehouse? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. And they take a break, represented by the 25 “X,” correct? 26 A. Correct. 27 Q. And then they offload the materials from 28 10:00 -- what is it? 10:30 to 11:00, correct? 12251 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. All right. Now, when you look back at 3 this -- do you charge for packing if your people 4 have to go pack stuff up? 5 A. Yes, we do. 6 Q. Can you tell whether or not your people had 7 to pack stuff up? 8 A. It doesn’t look like it, because there’s no 9 materials listed on this bill of lading in the 10 section to itemize materials. 11 Q. Yes. If you look up here on the bill of 12 lading, this area, you would have packing materials 13 and that sort of thing; is that correct? 14 A. That’s correct. 15 Q. All right. And when you look at page four, 16 which I’m putting up again with the Court’s 17 permission -- 18 THE COURT: Go ahead. 19 Q. BY MR. SANGER: If I may do it 20 retrospectively, it appears that the first five 21 items there, it says, “Wardrobe”; is that correct? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. So that would represent things that are in a 24 wardrobe kind of a box; is that right? 25 A. That’s correct. 26 Q. And then you have 6 through 10, it says, 27 “Small box.” So it indicates things were packed in 28 small boxes; is that right? 12252 1 A. Right. And No. 11 is a large box. 2 Q. Okay. 3 A. And No. 12’s a four-foot-five cubic-foot 4 box. Number 11 and 12 are large boxes. 13, 14 5 are -- well, 13 is a dining table. 14 and 15 are 6 dining chairs. 16 is a picture. And 17’s a 7 picture. 18’s a large box. 19’s a small box. 8 Q. All right. Now, as a part of being licensed 9 and taking pride in your business, you would expect 10 your employees to accurately record what they load 11 on and off the truck, correct? 12 A. Absolutely. 13 Q. And you would expect them to deliver to the 14 destination, in this case the warehouse, exactly 15 what it is that they picked up when they got to the 16 place where they’re picking the things up, right? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. Okay. Now, I don’t mean to insult you, but, 19 I mean, that’s an important part of your business, 20 is making sure -- 21 A. Absolutely. 22 Q. All right. Now, this other document, which 23 was marked as 905, it hasn’t been admitted yet, do 24 you have any idea where that came from? 25 A. It’s likely that I made a copy of this 26 inventory when I knew that -- that we were going to 27 have to go back to get -- to finish the job. And so 28 subsequent to -- well, no, prior to sending this 12253 1 document, this original document inventory, I made a 2 copy of the -- of the inventory as it -- as it 3 existed on -- after 3-1 and prior to 3-5. 4 Q. So -- 5 A. Because -- 6 Q. But you didn’t keep a copy in your file? 7 A. Well, I did. And that’s where that came 8 from. But I was visited by a couple of gentlemen 9 from the District Attorney’s Office that asked for 10 copies of my file. And it seems to me that I gave 11 them that copy without noticing that it was not a 12 complete copy. 13 Q. In any event -- 14 A. I probably assumed at the time that -- well, 15 here’s a copy of the inventory in my file. You can 16 have this one, rather than making a copy. I had 17 over -- it seems to me that I must have overlooked 18 the fact that that was a copy of -- a freeze frame 19 picture in the middle of the job, after Stage 1 and 20 before Stage 2. 21 Q. That’s okay. That’s fair enough. I’m just 22 trying to find out, because it’s obviously -- we 23 want to make sure it’s accurate here. 24 And you’re basically saying, now that you 25 compare it, it looks like that was the freeze frame 26 after the first move, right? 27 A. Right. And I can also tell there’s 28 something on that document that’s not on the 12254 1 original, which is -- it has a fax stamp across the 2 top, and it has a signature under -- where the 3 contract signature belongs in the middle of the 4 page, where it says, “Per G.E.” 5 Q. Yes. 6 A. “G.E.” are my initials. My foreman, who 7 executed Stage 1 here, on the -- March 1st, got a 8 signature in the bottom left-hand corner, but didn’t 9 get a signature in the middle of the page where the 10 “X” is. So I put “Per G.E.,” acting on behalf of 11 Brad Miller, who hired me to do this job. And 12 subsequently I must have faxed that copy to Brad 13 Miller to have him sign the contract line, because 14 it’s signed on that copy. 15 Q. Okay. Is Brad Miller a personal friend of 16 yours, by the way? 17 A. No. 18 Q. Was he just a customer? 19 A. I don’t know him. 20 Q. Don’t know him at all? 21 A. No. I know his assistant was a long-time 22 client of Dino’s. 23 Q. Long-time client of your company? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Okay. I couldn’t hear what you said. 26 All right. But you didn’t know Brad Miller 27 himself. All right. So the mystery is going to 28 come to a close here somehow or another. This is 12255 1 the page from 904 and it shows, “Per G.E.” 2 Your Honor, I’m going to withdraw my 3 objection to the admission of 905. 4 THE COURT: All right. It’s admitted. 5 MR. SANGER: And then I’ll ask to put it up, 6 if I may. 7 THE COURT: Well, all right. Go ahead. 8 MR. SANGER: Is that all right? Okay. 9 Q. What I’m going to try to do is put it up 10 next to this, so we get this over with here, if we 11 can. Is that all right? 12 THE COURT: The only reason that I hesitated 13 was the District Attorney was going to put it up and 14 ask some questions, and you requested to ask him 15 some questions before that, so if he has no 16 objection, then -- 17 MR. SNEDDON: I’ll defer to counsel, Your 18 Honor. 19 THE COURT: All right. Go ahead. 20 MR. SANGER: Okay. Thank you. So -- all 21 right. 22 Q. If we put this up, that’s as wide as it gets 23 here, so I’m going to slide it over. But on the 24 right is 905, and on the left is the page from 904, 25 and you can see here what you were talking about 26 when you say this seems to be a freeze frame. It 27 doesn’t have the other items listed. It just goes 28 up to 19. But it otherwise appears to be a copy or 12256 1 a faxed copy of the same document pretty much, 2 right? 3 A. Right. 4 Q. Now, when you say “pretty much,” it looks 5 like somehow somebody got Brad Miller to sign this 6 one, but he obviously didn’t sign the original, 7 because the original that had the new things added 8 on it still doesn’t have his signature on it, true? 9 A. True. 10 Q. If we look up here, though, it appears that 11 this is actually a copy of the document in progress, 12 because it has the same notations, the same slant of 13 the writing and all that, right? 14 A. It is. 15 Q. Okay. There we go. 16 Now, the significance of this, I suppose, is 17 that on 3-1, 905 is what happened, and we went over 18 this with the boxes. So pretty much a bunch of 19 boxes were picked up, a table, some chairs and a 20 couple pictures, right? 21 A. Correct. 22 Q. All right. And it appears from this that 23 somebody had already prepared this house for -- or 24 this apartment for a move, and had boxed material 25 up; is that correct? 26 MR. SNEDDON: Object. Calls for a 27 conclusion and speculation. 28 THE COURT: Sustained. 12257 1 Q. BY MR. SANGER: In any event, it appears 2 that somebody had boxed things or at least there 3 were things in boxes by the time your people 4 arrived? 5 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to object to that 6 also. No foundation. 7 THE COURT: Sustained. 8 Q. BY MR. SANGER: You indicated if your people 9 had boxed things, that you would have had a notation 10 on the -- 11 A. Only if we used our materials. If there 12 were existing materials there, which oftentimes when 13 people are relocating they have some materials. 14 Q. All right. So -- 15 A. So I wasn’t there myself personally. So I 16 don’t know -- yeah, I don’t know. 17 Q. So you don’t know, all right. Whatever it 18 was, the loading -- according to 904, the loading 19 and if there was any packing, would have occurred 20 between -- now I can’t see anymore. What is 21 that? -- 8:15 and 9:30, right? 22 A. Yes. It would -- if there was any packing, 23 it would be incidental to loading. 24 Q. Okay. Now, it appears that on -- let’s see, 25 which one is which? 26 Yes, on page four of 904, there’s a notation 27 there, “3-4-03,” and there’s other documentation in 28 here that indicates that actually the pick-up 12258 1 occurred on 3-5-03; is that correct? 2 A. Correct. 3 Q. All right. So your understanding, looking 4 at all the documents, is there was an initial move 5 of boxed materials and a couple tables, some chairs, 6 a couple pictures on 3-1. 7 And then 3-4, somebody came back, your 8 people came back and picked up a number of other 9 items; is that correct? 10 A. The actual pick-up, the second pick-up, was 11 on 3-5. 12 Q. I’m sorry, on 3-5. It says “3-4,” but your 13 other records show it was actually 3-5? 14 A. Right. 15 Q. All of this went to your warehouse, then, on 16 3-5, right? 17 A. The second half went on 3-5. 18 Q. So all of it was in your warehouse by 3-5? 19 A. That’s correct. 20 Q. And it was locked up and secure there? 21 A. It was secured in vaults. 22 Q. Was there any indication that anybody had 23 come to look at it or tamper with it between the 24 time it was placed there in early March and later 25 when it was removed? 26 A. No. 27 Q. And when was it removed? 28 A. On October 1st, 2003. 12259 1 Q. And you would not have expected, based on 2 the professional running of your business, that 3 anybody would have tampered with this material in 4 any way from the time it was delivered to you to the 5 time that it was picked up; is that correct? 6 A. It’s not possible. 7 Q. So I said “Is that correct”? You’re 8 agreeing with me; is that -- 9 A. That’s -- yes. 10 Q. You’re saying it’s not possible that anybody 11 would have tampered with it in between? 12 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, vague as to time 13 as to what “in between” is. 14 MR. SANGER: I’m sorry, I’m clarifying the 15 same question, but let me reask it so we have a good 16 question. 17 Q. Between the time that the materials were 18 delivered to you and the time when they were picked 19 up by Janet Arvizo, or by Janet, whatever her name 20 was at the time, Janet and Jay Jackson, in that time 21 period was the material that was stored tampered 22 with in any way? 23 A. No. 24 Q. Now, when you provide movers for moving 25 purposes, do you ever provide cleaning services? 26 A. No. 27 Q. So -- 28 A. We clean up our -- we pick up our own milk 12260 1 cartons. 2 Q. So if you have movers come in and they bring 3 their lunch, they’ll take their lunch and the bag, 4 or whatever, and throw it away, right? 5 A. We hope they will. 6 Q. Okay. But you don’t -- you don’t have 7 somebody come in with a vacuum cleaner and vacuum 8 the apartment? 9 A. Generally not. 10 Q. Is that possible that could happen, or -- 11 A. It’s possible. But I know most of our men 12 would not want to do that. 13 Q. All right. 14 A. Because they’re movers. 15 Q. Is there anything in your file to indicate 16 that there was -- there were cleaning services that 17 were provided? 18 A. Nothing to indicate that. 19 MR. SANGER: All right. Now, with any luck, 20 did we get the disk? 21 It would have been the CD version of that. 22 (Discussion off the record.) 23 MR. SANGER: I apologize, Your Honor, but 24 we’re trying to find the DVD of the moving and we’re 25 honing in on it. 26 I would accept any assistance from the 27 prosecution if they know. 28 MR. SNEDDON: If I know what? I know a lot 12261 1 of things, but -- 2 MR. SANGER: The number of the exhibit on 3 the move. 4 MR. SNEDDON: The surveillance move? 5 MR. SANGER: The move of the items or -- 6 MR. ZONEN: I think it’s 817 or near 817. 7 It’s near 813 to 817. 8 (Discussion off the record.) 9 MR. SANGER: I wonder if we could do this, 10 Your Honor. What I’d like to do, there were two 11 copies of this, if I’m not mistaken. One was 12 received and the other wasn’t. 13 THE COURT: They can’t hear. 14 MR. SANGER: Okay. Let’s see if we can use 15 our time wisely here. 16 What I’d like to do is play the tape of the 17 move that’s already been introduced into evidence. 18 We’re just having a little difficulty making sure we 19 have the right tape. 20 Could I defer to Mr. Sneddon to go ahead 21 with his redirect, if any, and then try to do this 22 at the break? 23 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, first of all, I -- 24 I object to the showing of this. He’s indicated he 25 wasn’t there, and he indicated his people don’t do 26 any clean-up services. So what’s the relevancy of 27 showing this to this witness? 28 MR. SANGER: There are two employees who 12262 1 appear to be movers. There’s a third person who 2 appears to be a cleaner, but I just want to 3 establish these are his people who were doing this 4 move. 5 THE COURT: You’re not going to show the 6 whole video? 7 MR. SANGER: No, we don’t need to show the 8 whole thing. I just need to show a clip of it so he 9 can look at it and tell us those are his people 10 doing the job. 11 THE COURT: Do you want to do your other -- 12 do you have any other examination? 13 MR. SNEDDON: Yes, I do. 14 THE COURT: All right. Would you accommodate 15 him by doing that until the break? 16 MR. SNEDDON: I would, Your Honor. 17 THE COURT: Thank you. 18 19 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 20 BY MR. SNEDDON: 21 Q. All right. Mr. Erwin, we placed back up on 22 the board -- 23 If we could have the lights, Your Honor, 24 please. 25 -- one of the documents containing your 26 file, and this is the one from 3-5-02, but you 27 really say it is ‘03, with the number “5025” at the 28 top. 12263 1 Does this particular bill indicate that 2 there were in fact boxes purchased, or that you 3 charged people for, for packing during the course of 4 this particular move? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. All right. So it looks like, to me, there 7 was at least two and perhaps a third -- a fifth one 8 down here? 9 A. There’s two small boxes, two medium boxes, 10 and one roll of tape. 11 Q. Okay. So that’s tape. When I say it says 12 “1,” that word is “tape”; is that right? 13 A. That’s correct. 14 Q. Okay. So there were four boxes that were 15 used? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. Okay. Now, if we could, I want the item, 18 the inventory items, please. 19 Thank you. 20 All right. Now, on the inventory items that 21 show all of the items collected over the two-day 22 process, do you see -- first of all, it looks like 23 there were some chairs taken, correct? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. And a scooter? 26 A. A scooter, yes. 27 Q. And a refrigerator? 28 A. Yes. 12264 1 Q. Okay. 2 A. And a mattress. 3 Q. And a mattress. 4 Now, with regard to the items that -- take a 5 second to review your original there, if you have 6 to, but do you see any plants at all that were 7 taken? 8 A. No. 9 Q. So there was -- no plants were taken during 10 the time that you went to the -- your movers were 11 there? 12 A. There’s none on the inventory here. 13 Q. Okay. 14 A. And they wouldn’t live well in the 15 warehouse. 16 Q. I understand that. Would you have 17 ordinarily taken them, though? 18 A. Not to our warehouse. 19 Q. What would you have done with them? 20 A. Sometimes we do transport plants over to 21 another location along the way. Some people will 22 keep their plants at a friend’s house while we put 23 their belongings in storage, if there are nice 24 outdoor plants in planters that they want to keep. 25 Q. So if there were plants, let’s say, for 26 instance, at this particular location, would your 27 workers unilaterally either leave those plants there 28 or throw them out? Do you know what your directions 12265 1 and your policy would be on that, if the owner has 2 not made any arrangements with you? 3 A. We -- we’re working for -- whatever the 4 client requests. That’s what we would do. 5 Q. So if -- 6 A. If they want them left, we leave them. If 7 they want them dropped off somewhere, we would do 8 that. If they want us to carry them to a dumpster, 9 I suppose we would do that for them. If they want 10 us to take them to the warehouse, we would advise 11 them that they’re not going to survive -- 12 Q. All right. 13 A. -- in the warehouse. 14 MR. SNEDDON: Fair enough. No further 15 questions. Thank you, Your Honor. 16 MR. SANGER: The problem is, without putting 17 it in the machine and looking at it, I’m not sure 18 which is which. From the notations that we have, it 19 appears to be Exhibit 813, but the DVD and the 20 sleeve of 813 does not appear to be that which was 21 described on the record. So we just need to look at 22 it. I apologize, Your Honor. 23 THE COURT: All right. Are the jurors going 24 to object if they get an extra five minutes? 25 No? All right. 26 (Recess taken.) 27 THE COURT: Go ahead. 28 MR. SANGER: Your Honor, I have to recite 12266 1 something for the record. 2 I’ve talked to Mr. Sneddon about this and 3 the clerk. In the transcript, at page 6335, there’s 4 a reference to playing a tape, Exhibit No. 813, and 5 a further reference to the fact that that was the 6 move from the house. 7 There’s all sorts of possibilities as to 8 what could have happened here, but it turns out that 9 813, as it’s marked by the clerk, is an exhibit that 10 did not come into evidence and is something else, 11 okay? 12 As far as I can tell, it appears that 818 is 13 in fact the exhibit previously referred to on the 14 record as 813. So I think if we just recite it, 15 we’ll let the chips fall where they may. 16 THE COURT: The chips are someone misspoke 17 and that’s what happened, and thank you for 18 correcting that. 19 MR. SANGER: Okay. 20 So 818 does show it was received into 21 evidence, and this does purport to be the video of 22 the house, so whatever the record shows before, 23 that’s what we’re going to play now, if that’s all 24 right. 25 THE COURT: That’s all right. 26 MR. SANGER: All right. Thank you. 27 What I’m going to do, with the Court’s 28 permission, is start it, just so the witness can see 12267 1 the very beginning, and then I’ll fast-forward, and 2 I’ll just use fast-forward, because it’s very 3 shortly thereafter it shows the moving people, and 4 then we’ll go from there. 5 THE COURT: Okay. 6 (Whereupon, a portion of a DVD, People’s 7 Exhibit 818, was played for the Court and jury.) 8 Q. BY MR. SANGER: I’m going to pause here 9 right at the beginning. 10 There’s a gentleman there who seems to be 11 doing some cleaning or something. Does he appear to 12 be one of your employees? 13 A. No. 14 Q. All right. And we see a date of March the 15 5th, 2003, just for the record. 16 Let me now play, and I’m going to go ahead 17 and fast-forward. 18 (Whereupon, a portion of a DVD, People’s 19 Exhibit 818, was played for the Court and jury.) 20 Q. BY MR. SANGER: On the counter, we’re now at 21 3:32. I’m going to freeze this for a second. 22 These gentlemen seem to have shirts that say 23 “Dino’s Moving & Storage.” Are those your people? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Do you know who they are from the back? 26 A. The foreground would be Joe Chavez, and the 27 background is Carlos Solano. 28 Q. And Mr. Chavez and Mr. Solano, have they 12268 1 been employed by you for some time? 2 A. Quite some time. A few years. 3 Q. Are they trusted employees? 4 A. Very much. 5 MR. SANGER: Your Honor, unless somebody 6 wants me to play more, that’s all I want to play. 7 THE COURT: Well, we’re not going to take a 8 vote on it, so -- 9 (Laughter.) 10 MR. SANGER: Very well. 11 So I’m going to press “Stop” and take the 12 thing out, and I have no further questions. 13 THE COURT: Anything further? 14 MR. SNEDDON: No, Your Honor. 15 THE COURT: All right. Thank you. You may 16 step down. 17 Now, the understanding was he can take his 18 original records with him? 19 MR. SNEDDON: That’s correct, Your Honor. 20 THE WITNESS: I also still don’t have a copy 21 of what was originally in my file. 22 THE COURT: That one sheet? 23 THE WITNESS: The in-progress with the 24 signature on it. 25 THE COURT: We can give you a copy of that 26 right now, can’t we? 27 MR. SANGER: Yes. To save time, I’ll just 28 give him my copy and I’ll have another one made. 12269 1 MR. SNEDDON: I have a copy of the other 2 one, so I’ll just give him mine and you can keep 3 yours, and then we don’t have a problem. 4 MR. SANGER: Just for the record, so we’re 5 clear, I am returning 818, in that envelope, to the 6 clerk, along with the other exhibits. 7 THE COURT: All right. Thank you. 8 All right. Call your next witness. 9 MR. ZONEN: Theresa Marquez, please. 10 THE COURT: When you get to the witness 11 stand, please remain standing. 12 Face the clerk over here and raise your 13 right hand. 14 15 THERESA MARQUEZ 16 Having been sworn, testified as follows: 17 18 THE WITNESS: I do. 19 THE CLERK: Please be seated and state and 20 spell your name for the record. 21 THE WITNESS: My name is Theresa Marquez. 22 T-h-e-r-e-s-a, M-a-r-q-u-e-z. 23 THE CLERK: Thank you. 24 MR. ZONEN: May I proceed? 25 THE COURT: Yes. 26 // 27 // 28 // 12270 1 DIRECT EXAMINATION 2 BY MR. ZONEN: 3 Q. Miss Marquez, what is your current 4 occupation? 5 A. Custodian of records at Kaiser Permanente in 6 Baldwin Park, California. 7 Q. At what location, please? 8 A. Baldwin Park, California. 9 Q. Were you asked to make a determination as to 10 whether or not there were medical records belonging 11 to a Janet Arvizo -- 12 A. Yes, we were. 13 Q. -- with a date of 8-28-98? In other words, 14 a visit to the ER room at a Kaiser facility on 15 8-28-98? 16 A. That’s correct. 17 Q. And in fact, were there records of that day? 18 A. Yes, there are. 19 Q. And which Kaiser facility is that? 20 A. Baldwin Park Medical Center. 21 Q. Where is the Baldwin Park Medical Center? 22 A. It’s located in the City of Baldwin Park off 23 the 10 freeway. You would get off on Baldwin Park 24 Boulevard. 25 Q. And that’s in Los Angeles County? 26 A. Los Angeles County. 27 Q. Did you make a copy of those records for us? 28 A. Yes, I did. 12271 1 Q. And do you have them with you? 2 A. Yes, I do. 3 Q. Could we have those, please? 4 (Whereupon, an off-the-record discussion was 5 held between Mr. Zonen and the witness at the 6 witness stand.) 7 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 8 table.) 9 MR. ZONEN: Could I approach the witness, 10 Your Honor? 11 THE COURT: Yes. 12 Q. I’m showing you now Exhibit No. 906. Is 13 this in fact what you just handed me? 14 A. Yes, it is. 15 Q. And are those in fact an accurate copy of 16 the medical records from Kaiser Hospital? 17 A. Yes, they are. 18 Q. For that date of 8-28-98; patient, Janet 19 Arvizo? 20 A. Correct. 21 MR. ZONEN: I would move to introduce those 22 records into evidence. 23 THE COURT: They’re admitted. 24 MR. SANGER: I’m sorry, Your Honor. I 25 haven’t quite had a chance to finish looking at 26 them, if I could. We just received them. 27 MR. ZONEN: If I could go on with just a 28 different question, then. 12272 1 MR. SANGER: I don’t mind if he goes ahead 2 while I’m looking at them. 3 THE COURT: Okay. Go ahead. 4 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Can you tell us the time -- 5 there’s a registration time that’s logged in these 6 reports when a patient comes in; is that correct? 7 A. That’s correct. 8 Q. What does the registration time reflect? 9 A. This reads 1:11 a.m. 10 Q. 1:11 in the morning; is that right? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. All right. Now, what does that mean, 13 “registration time”? 14 A. That’s actually the time they come to the 15 desk and they ask to see a physician, and they are 16 actually checked into the ER. 17 Q. So that’s the first time they actually meet 18 with somebody at the hospital facility? 19 A. Correct. 20 MR. ZONEN: Okay. Subject to the 21 introduction of this exhibit into evidence, I have 22 no further questions. 23 MR. SANGER: And I’ll submit it as far as 24 the admission of the documents 25 THE COURT: All right. I’ll admit the 26 records. 27 MR. SANGER: I was doing too many things at 28 once. What is the exhibit number, if I could ask, 12273 1 please? 2 THE CLERK: 906. 3 MR. SANGER: Thank you. 4 5 CROSS-EXAMINATION 6 BY MR. SANGER: 7 Q. Okay. So it appears that this person came 8 to Kaiser Permanente on the 28th at 1:11 in the 9 morning; is that right? 10 A. That’s the time that this member was checked 11 in, yes. 12 Q. All right. So somebody -- are you familiar 13 with this particular facility? 14 A. Yes, I am. 15 Q. So somebody walks into -- they can walk into 16 the emergency room; is that correct? 17 A. That’s correct. 18 Q. And they would be met by somebody who would 19 assess their immediate need for medical assistance; 20 is that correct? 21 A. Well, the procedure would be they would walk 22 in. They would speak to the receptionist. Their 23 medical record number would be taken. They would be 24 asked a few questions. Then they’d be asked to be 25 seated until a physician can come up to see them. 26 Q. So when they walk in and have that first 27 contact, that would be the time of registration; is 28 that correct? 12274 1 A. That’s correct. 2 Q. So this person walked in shortly before 1:11 3 in the morning of the 28th? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. And it appears, from the records, that the 6 person was released that evening, right? 7 MR. ZONEN: I believe that may be a 8 misstatement; vague. “Released that evening.” 9 MR. SANGER: It was early in the morning, 10 so however you want to put it. 11 Q. Early in the morning. It appears that the 12 patient was released later that morning; is that 13 correct? 14 A. Yes, it does. 15 Q. About what time? 16 A. The latest time I see on here is 4:15 for 17 the last note. 18 Q. And it indicates at 4:15 in the morning, 19 “DC’d,” right? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. That’s “discharged”; is that correct? 22 A. That’s correct. 23 Q. “Discharged in good condition,” correct? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. And she was prescribed aspirin? 26 A. I don’t know what she was prescribed. Not 27 by this note. I believe the first page, we have a 28 prescription of Motrin 400. 12275 1 Q. Okay. That was at 2:45 she was given some 2 Motrin? 3 A. I am looking at the first page which 4 indicates a prescription of Motrin. Let’s see. 5 It’s indicating that at 2:45, she was given Motrin. 6 Q. All right. And then when people come in at 7 that time of the early morning, is that a fairly 8 busy time for the emergency room, usually? 9 A. That’s difficult to say. We don’t have 10 trends of busy times and slow times. 11 Q. Okay. I guess you can have a major problem, 12 but that’s one of the times when you’re likely to 13 see people coming into the emergency room, right? 14 A. You know, I really don’t want to say that 15 that’s so, because in looking at the records, again, 16 looking at trends, there isn’t a definite trend as 17 to if it’s a peak time or not. 18 Q. Okay. If there are other people there, then 19 the person has to wait? 20 A. Correct. 21 Q. And then they’re eventually seen by a 22 physician; is that correct? 23 A. Correct. 24 Q. And then it appears here that she was seen 25 somewhere around 1:45? 26 A. Well, if you look at the first page on the 27 top, after “Time Registered, Triage Time,” that’s 28 when the nurse actually talked to her. 12276 1 Q. The triage time was what? 1:15? 2 A. 1:15. And then they probably put her in a 3 room until the physician can see her. 4 Q. So in the ordinary course of things, she 5 eventually had some X-rays; is that right? 6 A. That’s correct. 7 Q. And all of that came back negative? 8 A. “Normal study.” 9 Q. And then it -- and then it shows, “4:15, 10 Discharged in good condition”? 11 A. Correct. 12 MR. SANGER: All right. Very good. No 13 further questions. 14 MR. ZONEN: No further questions. 15 And the exhibit is in; is that correct? 16 THE COURT: The exhibit is admitted. 17 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. 18 THE COURT: Thank you. You may step down. 19 MR. ZONEN: We’ll call William Dickerman to 20 the stand. 21 THE COURT: He’s recalled; is that correct? 22 MR. ZONEN: Yes. Re-call him. Thank you. 23 Who’s doing Mr. Dickerman? Oh, okay. 24 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 25 table.) 26 THE COURT: Come to the front of the 27 courtroom. You were previously sworn. You may be 28 seated. 12277 1 WILLIAM DICKERMAN 2 Having been previously sworn, resumed the 3 stand and testified further as follows: 4 5 MR. ZONEN: May I proceed, Your Honor? 6 THE COURT: Yes. 7 MR. ZONEN: May I approach the witness? 8 THE COURT: Yes. 9 10 DIRECT EXAMINATION 11 BY MR. ZONEN: 12 Q. Mr. Dickerman, good afternoon. And we are 13 just at good afternoon. 14 A. Good afternoon. 15 BAILIFF CORTEZ: Microphone’s off. 16 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. If the trial goes 17 another four months, I will learn. 18 Q. Thank you for coming back. We have a few 19 questions to ask you about a few exhibits. 20 You brought with you a collection of letters 21 and communications; is that correct? 22 A. Yes, I did. 23 Q. And I’d like to show you right now a 24 collection of documents that’s before you that is 25 now marked as People’s Exhibit No. 903; is that 26 correct? 27 A. Yes. 28 Q. And could you take a look at those very 12278 1 rapidly, just to assure yourself that those are the 2 same documents or a copy of documents that you 3 brought with you today; is that right? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. And those are copies of documents that you 6 have in your file? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. And that file you brought with you today; is 9 that right? 10 A. Yes, I did. 11 Q. So to the extent that you have actual 12 copies, the actual copies you brought with you, and 13 these are copies of copies? 14 A. I’ve also got originals that were faxed. 15 Q. And originals that were faxed; is that 16 right? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. Now, do these represent communications 19 between you and an attorney by the name of Mark 20 Geragos? 21 A. They sure do. 22 Q. You testified previously to some 23 communications, and some of those letters were shown 24 to you previously; is that right? 25 A. Yes. 26 Q. All right. But I’d like to specifically go 27 over some of these letters and talk to you about how 28 they were communicated specifically to Mr. Geragos; 12279 1 is that all right? 2 A. Sure. 3 Q. Let’s begin with the very first letter on 4 this collection of documents that is marked 903. 5 And this letter is dated March 26th, 2003. Is this 6 a letter that you authored? 7 A. Yes, it is. 8 Q. Is this a letter that you sent to Mr. 9 Dickerman -- excuse me, Mr. Geragos? 10 A. I had it messengered to Mr. Geragos. 11 Q. All right. And explain what you mean by 12 having had a messenger deliver it. 13 A. I or my secretary phoned Allstar Messenger 14 Service, which is the attorney service/messenger 15 service I’ve been using for about 15 years, put in 16 an order, filled out a form, had them come over, 17 told them to deliver it to Mr. Geragos, and they 18 took it. 19 Q. All right. In this particular letter dated 20 March 26th, 2003, do you refer to the passports and 21 visas belonging to your clients, the Arvizos? 22 A. Yes, in paragraph two at the bottom of the 23 first page. 24 Q. And the delivery service that you use and 25 have been using for 15 years, is it your experience 26 that they are reliable and responsible in delivering 27 letters? 28 A. I don’t think I’ve had a problem with them 12280 1 in delivering anything in 15 years, whether it’s 2 court documents or letters or anything else. 3 Q. Let’s please go to the next document on 4 here, and that’s the one -- it’s about four pages 5 in. It begins with “Allstar Messenger” is the 6 heading on the top. That, plus the next page after 7 that, what are those two documents? 8 A. The first document is my copy of the form 9 that was filled out and given to the messenger 10 service, along with the letter to be sent. So there 11 are, I believe, three pages of it. The first one 12 they take, and the last one is a pink copy. I have 13 the original here, and that is what I kept for my 14 files. 15 Q. And that also is dated March 26th, ‘03? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. The second page is what, please? 18 A. The second page is the invoice from Allstar 19 Messenger Service for that delivery, reflecting that 20 I owe them $14.75 for delivering the letter to 21 Geragos & Geragos. 22 Q. All right. Move to the next page, if you 23 would, please. Is this a letter to Mr. Geragos as 24 well? 25 A. Yes. 26 Q. And is the date on this April 3rd, 2003? 27 A. Yes. 28 Q. All right. In this letter, do you reference 12281 1 a prior letter that you sent him? 2 A. Yes, I referenced the March 26th letter that 3 I just testified about. 4 Q. And how was this letter, the April 3rd 5 letter, delivered to Mr. Geragos? 6 A. That was by fax. On my fax machine to his 7 fax machine. 8 Q. All right. Now, if you’ll turn to the next 9 page, the page right after the April 3rd, 2003, 10 letter, is that a facsimile transaction report? 11 A. Yes, it is. 12 Q. Explain what that is, please. 13 A. Every time a fax is sent from my office, I 14 get a report showing that the fax was received or it 15 wasn’t received, and the reason if it wasn’t 16 received. 17 Q. All right. Is this generated by your fax 18 machine? 19 A. Yes, it is. It’s a machine that I had -- I 20 no longer have, but I had it for 10, 12 years. 21 Q. All right. Was it your experience that when 22 this machine tells you a fax has been transmitted, 23 that it actually had been? 24 A. Always. 25 Q. Did you ever have an occasion where the 26 machine told you the facsimile had been transmitted 27 and in fact it hadn’t? 28 A. Never. 12282 1 Q. Does this piece of paper now, and we’re 2 dealing with the one that says April -- April 3 at 3 6:16 p.m., does this indicate that the fax that you 4 had sent to Mr. Geragos on the 3rd of April in fact 5 had been transmitted? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. And at what time of the day was that? 8 A. It says 6:16. The fax machine always ran a 9 couple minutes off, so it could have been 6:14 or 10 6:12, something like that. 11 Q. Go to the next page, please. Is the next 12 page a cover letter from Geragos & Geragos, a fax 13 cover sheet? 14 A. Yes, it is. 15 Q. Does that contain Mr. Geragos’s fax number? 16 A. Yes, it does. 17 Q. All right. Is that in fact the same fax 18 number that you sent the prior communication to? 19 A. Yes. It says that right on the transaction 20 report. 21 Q. All right. And in fact, all of your 22 communications sent to Mr. Geragos were sent to that 23 same fax number; is that correct? 24 A. Yes. That’s correct. 25 Q. Let’s move to the next page. Is the next 26 page a letter from Mr. Geragos dated April 6th, 27 2003? 28 A. Yes, it is. 12283 1 Q. All right. Now, that’s two sentences, is it 2 not? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. Would you read it out loud to us? 5 A. “Dear Mr. Dickerman: Thanks for your letter 6 of April 3, 2003” -- 7 MR. MESEREAU: Objection. Hearsay. The 8 letter -- the document speaks for itself. 9 THE COURT: It is speaking for itself. He’s 10 just reading it. 11 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. 12 THE COURT: That’s how it talks. 13 (Laughter.) 14 THE COURT: Go ahead, Counsel. 15 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Go ahead and please read it. 16 A. “Thanks for your letter of April 3, 2003. 17 Please give me a call so that we can make 18 arrangements.” 19 Q. Now, in your experience as an attorney, when 20 you get a letter back from somebody else who thanks 21 you for a letter dated a particular date, that tends 22 to suggest that they got that letter; is that right? 23 A. In my experience, always. 24 Q. All right. Now, going back to your letter 25 of April 3rd, 2003, let’s turn back a few pages, the 26 letter that he acknowledges that you received -- 27 A. That I -- oh, sorry. 28 Q. Do you have it in front of you? 12284 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. The letter of April 3rd, 2003, that he 3 acknowledges that you received, what -- in the first 4 sentence, what do you say in that letter? 5 A. “Dear Mr. Geragos: On March 26th, 2003, I 6 wrote you and asked that you deliver certain items 7 to my office by April 1.” 8 Q. You don’t have to go any further than that. 9 That letter that he acknowledged receiving 10 referred to the March 26th, 2003, letter, the one 11 that demanded the passports and the visas; is that 12 correct? 13 A. It’s the only letter I wrote on March 26th. 14 Q. All right. Now, let’s move on. 15 We left off with Mr. Geragos’s letter to you 16 that’s dated April 6th, 2003. Go to the next page, 17 please. Is that next page a letter from you to Mr. 18 Geragos dated April 8, 2003? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. Do you refer to passports, visas and birth 21 certificates in that letter? 22 A. Yes. In the third paragraph. 23 Q. All right. How is this letter communicated 24 to Mr. Geragos? 25 A. By fax machine to the same number as the 26 others that I had faxed. 27 Q. And did you in fact keep a transaction 28 report from your fax machine indicating whether it 12285 1 had been successfully faxed? 2 A. Yes. That’s the next document. 3 Q. And that’s the next page; is that correct? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. That transaction report indicates what? 6 A. That on April 8th at 7:18 p.m., I faxed two 7 pages to Mr. Geragos’s fax number, and that it was 8 received. 9 Q. Okay. Let’s move on, please, to the next 10 page. The next page is a letter from you dated 11 April 9, 2003; is that correct? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. This is also a letter to Mark Geragos; is 14 that correct? 15 A. Yes. 16 Q. Okay. Was this letter faxed to him? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. Was that letter received by him, or at least 19 was it -- did your fax machine indicate that it went 20 through? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. All right. In that letter of April 9, 2003, 23 do you reference passports, visas and birth 24 certificates? 25 A. Yes. 26 Q. Actually, you demand their return to your 27 client; is that correct? 28 A. Yes, I asked that he, quote, “immediately 12286 1 deliver to me,” along with the documents you just 2 mentioned, some other items. 3 Q. Now, the next page again, as we acknowledge, 4 was the transaction report on the fax machine? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. Please now go to April 11, 2003. Is that 7 the next page? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Is that a letter from you to Mr. Geragos? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. Was that faxed to him as well? 12 A. Yes. At the same number. 13 Q. And the transaction report indicates that 14 that letter was processed as well? 15 A. Yes. 16 Q. Please move to the next one. We now have a 17 letter from Mr. Geragos to you, April 15, 2003; is 18 that correct? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. Okay. And that is a letter from Mr. Geragos 21 that appears to be one sentence? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. All right. What does that sentence read? 24 A. “We have retrieved various items from 25 storage and would appreciate your advising us as to 26 where they should be delivered.” 27 Q. Did Mr. Geragos up to this point, either by 28 telephone or in any other communication, indicate to 12287 1 you anything about passports belonging to your 2 clients, the Arvizos? 3 A. He -- in one conversation, I think it was on 4 March 31st, I asked him about passports and visas, 5 following up on the letter that -- well, when he 6 called me, because he wanted additional time to 7 respond to the March 26th letter, we talked about it 8 briefly. He didn’t exactly know what I was talking 9 about. I think he said that there were -- there 10 were passports around that he had heard of, but he 11 didn’t know what it was -- what that was about. 12 Q. Okay. 13 A. I understood he was going to find out and 14 get back to me. He never did. 15 Q. Did he ever? 16 A. He never got back to me on that. He never 17 responded to any of my letters asking for any of 18 these items, except for items in the storage unit. 19 Q. Okay. Moving on to the next page, a letter 20 dated April 22, 2003 -- 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. -- is that a letter that you sent to Mark 23 Geragos? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. And this letter is dated April 22nd, 2003. 26 Do you once again demand the return of their 27 possessions, including their passports? 28 A. Yes. 12288 1 Q. Was this letter delivered in some fashion to 2 Geragos & Geragos? 3 A. It was faxed at about 2:17 p.m. to the same 4 fax number as I previously stated, and it indicates 5 that it was received. 6 Q. Okay. Move on to the next page, a letter 7 dated May 12, 2003, from you to Mr. Geragos; is that 8 correct? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. All right. In this letter, do you fax this 11 letter to him? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. And did your fax report, the next page in 14 these documents, indicate that it was received? 15 A. Same as all the others, yes. 16 Q. Next letter, please, the next page. Is this 17 a letter from Geragos & Geragos, from Mark Geragos 18 to you? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. And the date is May 15, 2003; is that 21 correct? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. All right. In this letter, does he 24 acknowledge receipt of a prior letter from you? 25 A. Yes, my letter dated May 12th. 26 Q. Does he refer to passports at all? 27 A. No. 28 Q. Move to the next one, please. May 15, 2003. 12289 1 Is this a letter from you to Mr. Geragos? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. And in this letter, do you once again ask 4 him to return immediately your clients’ passports 5 and birth certificates? 6 A. Yes. And the last sentence of the second 7 paragraph, and you can see my frustration, because I 8 underlined “immediately,” and I had been getting no 9 response, so I was quite disturbed. 10 MR. MESEREAU: Objection; move to strike. 11 THE COURT: I’ll strike the -- after “Yes.” 12 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: But the word “immediately” 13 is, in fact, underlined; is that correct? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. All right. Now, did you send this by 16 facsimile? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. And do you have a transaction report that 19 indicates it was, in fact, processed? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. All right. Can you tell us when this letter 22 was processed? 23 A. It says 4:33 p.m., May 15, to the same fax 24 number. 25 Q. I’m sorry? 26 A. To the same fax number. 27 Q. Okay. The next page is a fax cover sheet 28 from Mr. Geragos; is that correct? 12290 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. And the next page after that is a letter 3 from Mr. Geragos back to you? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Now, the letter is dated, from Mr. Geragos 6 to you, May 17, 2003; is that correct? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. Please read to us the first sentence of that 9 letter. 10 A. “Thank you for your histrionic letter dated 11 May 15, 2003.” 12 Q. Are communications getting a little testy at 13 this point? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. Okay. But he acknowledges receiving the May 16 15, 2003, letter? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. And the May 15, 2003, letter specifically 19 demands the immediate return of your clients’ 20 passports and birth certificates; is that true? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. Let’s move on to the next, a letter from you 23 dated May 20, 2003. You sent that to Mr. Geragos? 24 A. Yes, by fax. 25 Q. By fax. Again, the same fax number? 26 A. Identical. 27 Q. All of these are to the same identical fax 28 number? 12291 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. And you, once again, have a transaction 3 report indicating that that letter was properly 4 processed. 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. May 29, 2003, another letter from you to 7 Mr. Dick -- from you to Mr. Geragos; is that 8 correct? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. Properly faxed that same day, May 29. 11 The next page is a letter from Mr. -- the 12 cover sheet of a fax from Mr. Geragos to you; is 13 that correct? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. And then the next page after that is a 16 letter from Mr. Geragos to you dated June 2nd, 2003? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. All right. It references your letter of 19 May 29, 2003; is that correct? 20 A. In the first sentence. 21 Q. All right. Does not mention anything about 22 passports, does it? 23 A. No. 24 Q. And finally, the last page of that is a 25 document that appears to be a fax to you from 26 Bradley Miller; is that correct? 27 A. Yes. 28 Q. And that’s dated June 12th, 2003; is that 12292 1 correct? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. Up until this facsimile was sent to you by 4 Brad Miller, did they ever tell you where your 5 clients’ possessions were? 6 A. No. 7 Q. Did Mr. Geragos or anybody from his office 8 ever acknowledge the fact that there were passports 9 that belonged to your client and were in his 10 possession? 11 A. No. 12 MR. ZONEN: No further questions. 13 I will move to admit -- excuse me. One more 14 second. 15 Q. Mr. Dickerman, the documents -- the copies 16 that you have before you that are the collection, 17 a complete -- let me do that one more time. 18 Exhibit 809 -- 803 -- 19 A. 903. 20 Q. 903. It’s Friday, isn’t it? Thursday. 21 I’ll start again. 22 Exhibit No. 903, a collection of documents 23 that are, in fact, communications between you and 24 Mark Geragos, is this a complete collection of the 25 letters that were sent by you to Mr. Geragos and 26 returned from Mr. Geragos to you? 27 A. As far as I know, yes. 28 Q. And this is an accurate copy of each of 12293 1 these documents; is that right? 2 A. Yes. 3 MR. ZONEN: I would move to introduce into 4 evidence Exhibit No. 903. 5 MR. MESEREAU: No objection. 6 THE COURT: It’s admitted. 7 8 CROSS-EXAMINATION 9 BY MR. MESEREAU: 10 Q. Mr. Dickerman, I’d like to refer you to 11 your letter which purports to be dated March 26th, 12 2003. Do you see that? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. Is that letter signed? 15 A. This document does not bear a signature. 16 Q. Do you have a copy of a signed letter of 17 March 26th? 18 A. No. 19 Q. Do you normally sign letters that you send 20 as a lawyer? 21 A. Always. 22 Q. Why didn’t you sign this one? 23 A. I did sign the letter. This is a copy. 24 Q. Does anyone know where it is, a copy of the 25 signed letter? 26 A. I didn’t -- apparently I didn’t sign -- I 27 didn’t copy the signed letter. I probably ran a 28 duplicate from the printer. And I usually do not 12294 1 copy my signature because it’s easier to run a copy 2 from the printer than to go to the Xerox machine. 3 Q. Let’s look at your letter of April 3rd, 4 2003. Does that have a signature of you? 5 A. It does, because that was a document that 6 was faxed. That’s the exact copy of what was faxed. 7 Q. You’re suggesting that when you messenger 8 copies of your letters you don’t sign them, but when 9 you fax copies of your letters you do sign them? 10 A. No. 11 Q. What are you suggesting? 12 A. A document that is faxed is the exact 13 document with the signature. I made -- I have an 14 original of a letter that I mail or messenger, and 15 the original would be signed, and very often I don’t 16 copy the signature, but I run a second copy out of 17 the printer. 18 Q. Have you been in touch with the prosecutor 19 about these letters before you testified today? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. Did he ask you to look in your file to get 22 copies of your letters? 23 A. I’m not sure. But I told him I had copies 24 of my letters. 25 Q. Did he ask you to look in your file and look 26 at the copies of the letters you claim you sent to 27 Mark Geragos? 28 A. I don’t remember specifically. 12295 1 Q. So far, there is no copy you’ve been able to 2 find of a March 26th letter that you actually 3 signed, true? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Yet, we have other letters in this package 6 that you did sign, right? 7 A. That’s right. And as I explained, they are 8 copies of precisely the document that I faxed. I 9 would not fax a document without my signature. 10 However, I did messenger the document with my 11 signature. 12 Q. How do you know that if you don’t have a 13 copy of the signed letter? 14 A. Because I sign my letters before they go 15 out. 16 Q. Where is the copy? 17 A. I didn’t make a copy of my signature. 18 There’s no reason to make a copy of my signature. 19 The -- these copies are of faxes that were sent that 20 were faxed. They are faxed, obviously, with my 21 signature. 22 Q. When you make a demand letter like the 23 letter of March 26th on behalf of a client, do you 24 routinely sign the letter? 25 A. Always. 26 Q. Where is the signed copy? 27 MR. ZONEN: That’s argumentative. 28 THE COURT: Sustained. 12296 1 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: You don’t have a signed 2 copy, do you? 3 MR. ZONEN: Objection; asked and answered. 4 THE COURT: Sustained. 5 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Let me refer you to the 6 first page of your March 26th, 2003, letter. I’d 7 like to refer you to the last paragraph. It’s 8 number two. Do you see that? 9 A. I do. 10 Q. You say as follows: “The Arvizos demand 11 that Jackson immediately return to them,” and I want 12 you to look at Item B, “The papers they have signed, 13 including passport, visa applications, school 14 documents, documents in connection with the legal 15 action in Britain concerning ‘Living with Michael 16 Jackson.’” Do you see those words? 17 A. I do. 18 Q. Isn’t it true that later, after you sent 19 this letter, assuming you sent it, your client, 20 Janet Arvizo, denied ever authorizing a legal action 21 in Great Britain? 22 MR. ZONEN: I’m going to object as compound 23 and vague and exceeding the scope of the direct 24 examination. 25 BAILIFF CORTEZ: Microphone’s off. 26 MR. MESEREAU: He introduced it into 27 evidence, Your Honor. 28 MR. ZONEN: This letter’s been in evidence. 12297 1 THE COURT: Sustained. Exceeds the scope of 2 direct. 3 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. 4 Q. Let me go to the next page, number four. 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. You asked for copies of any model release 7 your client, Janet Arvizo, signed involving footage, 8 right? 9 A. Can you point me to the line? 10 Q. Sure. Paragraph number four. One, two, 11 three, four, five -- I’d say at 5, 6 -- lines 5, 6 12 and 7 in paragraph number four. 13 A. Where it says, “Titled “This Model 14 Release’”? 15 Q. Yes. 16 A. Okay. 17 Q. Now, did you have a copy of a model release 18 when you wrote the letter? 19 A. I don’t remember. 20 Q. Did Janet Arvizo tell you she had negotiated 21 and signed a model release? 22 MR. ZONEN: Objection; exceeds the scope of 23 the direct examination. 24 THE COURT: Sustained. 25 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Let’s go to the letter you 26 claim you sent to Mr. Geragos on April 8, 2003. Do 27 you see that? 28 A. Okay. 12298 1 Q. Let’s look at the first paragraph. One, 2 two, three -- well, the first complete sentence. 3 Excuse me, I’m sorry. The second complete sentence. 4 Could you please read that sentence to yourself? 5 A. Okay. 6 Q. You say in your letter to Mr. Geragos, 7 referring to the apartment, “She tells me that, 8 contrary to what you said about there being a 9 truckload, she had very few possessions, since she 10 lived in a bachelor apartment. She does not believe 11 that much, if any, furniture was removed.” 12 Was that what Janet Arvizo told you about 13 her address at Soto Street? 14 MR. ZONEN: Objection; exceeds the scope of 15 the direct examination. 16 THE COURT: Sustained. 17 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: In that paragraph, are you 18 referring to the Soto Street address in East Los 19 Angeles? 20 MR. ZONEN: Objection; exceeds the scope of 21 the direct examination. 22 THE COURT: Sustained. 23 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Let me refer you to a 24 letter of April 11, 2003, that purports to be to 25 Mr. Geragos from you. Do you see that letter? 26 A. Yes. 27 Q. And in the second letter, you write, “My 28 clients have also learned that Mr. Jackson has 12299 1 produced or is producing and that FOX will broadcast 2 a program involving home videos or home movies.” 3 Do you see that? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Did your client tell you that? 6 MR. ZONEN: Objection; exceeds the scope of 7 the direct examination. 8 THE COURT: Sustained. 9 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Let’s move to a letter 10 from Mr. Geragos to you, which is signed and faxed 11 on April 15th, 2003. Do you see that? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Mr. Geragos says to you, “We have retrieved 14 various items from storage and would appreciate your 15 advising us as to where they should be delivered,” 16 right? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. And did you immediately advise him where to 19 deliver the items? 20 A. No. 21 Q. Why not? 22 A. Well, if you go back to previous letters, 23 and I don’t know which exactly they are without 24 going through and reading them, I had requested, on 25 numerous occasions, I believe, that Mr. Geragos give 26 us a list of what there was, and to tell us where it 27 was. And I had told him that what we were most 28 interested in were passports, visas, birth 12300 1 certificates and these other things that are 2 included in the March 26th letter that apparently he 3 says he didn’t receive, but that he acknowledges 4 having received in phone conversation and refers to 5 in subsequent letters. 6 It was obvious to me that he was skirting 7 the issue and trying to make the issue different 8 from what it was, which was to get back these items. 9 And we were not talking about the items in storage. 10 We were talking really about the passports, visas, 11 items of clothing that apparently were taken at 12 Neverland, and the other documents and tapes and 13 whatnot that was mentioned very specifically in 14 March 26th -- in the March 26th letter. 15 Q. Let me ask you the question again. You may 16 not have understood. 17 Mr. Geragos, on April 15th, says to you, 18 “We have retrieved various items in storage and 19 would appreciate your advising us as to where they 20 should be delivered.” 21 My question is, why didn’t you tell him 22 where to deliver them? 23 A. I’m just referring to these letters, because 24 I know there is voluminous correspondence here about 25 this specific issue. 26 Well, if you look at the April 22nd letter, 27 you’ll see I wrote, quote, “Your April 15” -- yes, I 28 had asked for these items to be delivered 12301 1 immediately. There was no reason for there to be 2 any discussion, any movement, any mailing, any 3 anything to get back the passports, visas, birth 4 certificates and those other materials. 5 Mr. Geragos never referred to those, except 6 in this one conversation that I referred to. He 7 never responded in these letters, and it was clear 8 he was dodging the issue. And I kept on writing to 9 him saying, “These are the things that we want,” and 10 I didn’t want him skirting the issue by dealing with 11 things that were not at issue. 12 And I wrote in that letter on April 22nd, 13 quote, “Your April 15 letter,” that’s the one you 14 just referred to, “ignores the specific requests and 15 refers simply to,” quote, “’various items,’” period, 16 close quote. “As to those referred to above, you 17 already have my instructions for delivery. I 18 demand, for the fourth time, that you comply with my 19 request,” period, close quote. 20 And then the second paragraph, here’s the 21 more specific answer to your question: Quote, “As 22 for any other items,” and that’s referring to, I 23 guess, the items that he was referring to in the 24 April 15 letter, “I repeat my request of March 26th 25 that,” quote, “’Jackson immediately provide a list 26 of all” -- “of all,” bracket, “my clients’,” closed 27 bracket, “personal property that he possesses or 28 controls or stored, whether it was left at 12302 1 Neverland, removed from my clients’ apartment, or 2 obtained in any other way. They also demand to know 3 the precise location of all such property, and the 4 identity, address and phone number of each person 5 with access and/or a key to any place where the 6 property is located.’” 7 And that’s a close quote, because I’m 8 quoting the March 26th letter. 9 And I continue, “In order to know what to do 10 with items other than those I have asked you 11 repeatedly to deliver to me,” and there I’m 12 referring to the passports, visas, birth 13 certificates and items of clothing, “my clients need 14 to know what and where it is. They have a right to 15 know, too,” period, close quote. 16 And then I go on to discuss something else. 17 Q. I understand -- 18 A. Did that answer your question? 19 Q. No, it doesn’t. I understand all the 20 legalese in your letters. What I’m asking you is, 21 where do you tell them where to deliver the 22 material? Show me some place. 23 A. I didn’t tell them where to deliver the 24 materials. 25 Q. So he asked you where to deliver it, and you 26 would not respond? 27 MR. ZONEN: I believe the witness was 28 interrupted. 12303 1 THE COURT: It’s asked and answered. 2 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Did your client tell you 3 that no furniture was stored on her behalf? And I’m 4 referring to Janet Arvizo. 5 A. I don’t remember specifically, but if it’s 6 in the letter, then that’s what happened. 7 Q. Well, in your letter of May 12th, you still 8 haven’t told them where to deliver it, right? 9 A. As of May 12, he still hadn’t told us what 10 there was, where it was stored and who had stored 11 it. I asked him very specific questions since March 12 26th. I asked him for a list of what there was, who 13 had possession of it, where it was. They had a 14 right to know those things. And his intention to 15 just dump whatever he felt like dumping was not what 16 we were about. It was quite easy for him to tell us 17 where the stuff was. That’s what I wanted to know. 18 My client wanted to go out there and retrieve the 19 items, not to have them delivered, actually, 20 anywhere. 21 What I wanted delivered and what I told him 22 repeatedly, over and over and over again, was 23 deliver the passports, birth certificate, visas, 24 clothing, to my office. 25 Yes, he knew exactly where to send those 26 materials. 27 Q. And when you didn’t respond to his letter of 28 April 15th asking you where he should deliver the 12304 1 possessions, you knew exactly what you were doing, 2 didn’t you? 3 MR. ZONEN: Objection; argumentative. 4 THE COURT: Sustained. 5 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: You and your client were 6 trying to set up Mr. Jackson for a lawsuit, true? 7 MR. ZONEN: Objection; argumentative. 8 THE COURT: Sustained. 9 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Did you have your 10 profit-sharing arrangement with Larry Feldman at 11 this time? 12 MR. ZONEN: Objection; argumentative. 13 THE COURT: Beyond the scope. 14 THE WITNESS: Could I respond to that? 15 THE COURT: No. It’s beyond the scope. Next 16 question. 17 THE WITNESS: Your Honor, could I correct a 18 statement that I made in previous testimony? 19 Because it seems to make a big difference here to 20 Mr. Mesereau. 21 MR. MESEREAU: Your Honor, I think, with all 22 due respect to the witness -- 23 THE COURT: Next question. 24 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. All right. 25 Q. Now, I’d like to refer you to Mr. Geragos’s 26 letter to you of May 15th, 2003. Do you have that 27 in front of you? 28 A. May 15th? 12305 1 Q. Yes. 2003. 2 A. Got it. 3 Q. And I’m referring you to -- excuse me, let 4 me start off -- let me withdraw the question. 5 First, Mr. Geragos indicates that your 6 landlord refused delivery of items, correct? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. And it is true that your landlord did refuse 9 to accept items Mr. Geragos had arranged to deliver 10 to your office, correct? 11 A. Mr. Geragos had not arranged to deliver 12 anything to me at any time, any place. The 13 landlord -- well, I don’t know, “landlord.” 14 Landlord’s representative, the person that I deal 15 with at the property, left me a phone message about 16 some -- some things being attempted to be dropped 17 off. I got that at home, as I was observing -- or 18 at the end of observing a religious holiday, which 19 Mr. Geragos full well knew I was doing, because it 20 was on my answering machine, and told me that these 21 items were attempted to be delivered. 22 And I came back to the office the next day, 23 saw an e-mail, I believe -- I forget who it was 24 between, and I wrote an e-mail back to the office 25 manager named Salome Ahadi and told her -- she was 26 expressing some pique about this having happened 27 because no arrangements were made. 28 And I said to her, and I’m almost quoting, 12306 1 “I would apologize if I had any idea what this was 2 about.” And I said, “I knew nothing about it, made 3 no arrangements, made no agreement, have no 4 knowledge about it whatsoever.” 5 Q. Let me refer to your letter of May 12th, 6 2003, to Mr. Geragos. 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. Don’t you confirm in the first paragraph 9 that Mr. Geragos sent movers to your office with 10 furniture? 11 A. Yes, according to what the office manager 12 had told me. I don’t know for sure whether there 13 was furniture or what was involved. 14 Q. You didn’t know for sure? 15 A. I wasn’t there. I wasn’t there. As I say, 16 I got this phone message -- 17 Q. Right -- 18 A. -- and that’s it. 19 Q. Don’t you write the following, Mr. 20 Dickerman: “This then will serve to confirm that on 21 April 24th at about 9:30 a.m., you sent purported 22 movers to my office laden with a huge amount of 23 furniture and possibly other items that the movers 24 told the receptionist and building services 25 representatives I had directed and arranged to be 26 delivered”? 27 You confirm that an attempted delivery was 28 made of items and furniture, correct? 12307 1 A. It wasn’t from my personal knowledge, but 2 that’s what it says. That’s based on what I was 3 told at the office. I have no reason to believe 4 that that’s not correct. 5 And I go on, if you want to keep this in 6 context -- 7 Q. Sir, I’ll -- 8 A. -- to state that there was no such -- 9 Q. I’ll ask the questions. 10 A. -- arrangement. 11 Q. I’ll ask the questions. 12 A. Well, if you want to get to the truth here, 13 Mr. Mesereau, instead of playing games -- 14 Q. Mr. Dickerman -- 15 A. -- I’ll be happy to explain all of this, and 16 then we can have a reasonable trial where the facts 17 come out instead of implications. 18 THE COURT: Just a minute, Counsel. You’re 19 not an advocate here. You’re a witness. 20 THE WITNESS: Sorry, Your Honor. 21 THE COURT: Everyone understands what 22 position Mr. Mesereau is in and what position you’re 23 in. Now, I want you to listen to the questions and 24 answer the questions. 25 THE WITNESS: I will, Your Honor. 26 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Mr. Dickerman, when you 27 wrote these letters on behalf of Janet Arvizo, did 28 you think it was her right to decide what materials 12308 1 would stay in storage, paid by someone else, and 2 what materials you would accept when you felt like 3 accepting them? 4 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Argumentative and 5 compound. 6 THE COURT: You may answer the question. Do 7 you want it read back? 8 THE WITNESS: No, but I’m not willing to 9 waive the attorney work-product privilege. He’s 10 asking for my thoughts, and those are out of bounds, 11 as he well knows. 12 THE COURT: I think you need to listen to the 13 question. 14 Have the question read back. 15 (Record read.) 16 THE WITNESS: He’s asking for my thoughts. 17 My thoughts are my work-product. I’m not willing to 18 waive the privilege. 19 THE COURT: The work-product privilege 20 doesn’t apply in criminal cases. I know you’re a 21 civil attorney, so I’ll give you a little leeway 22 here. 23 THE WITNESS: I am. All right. 24 I’m sorry, could you read it back one more 25 time? 26 THE COURT: What I’m going to do, though, is 27 ask you to rephrase it so that I know the question 28 you’re attempting to ask. 12309 1 MR. MESEREAU: Yes. 2 Q. Mr. Dickerman, in one of your earlier 3 letters to Mr. Geragos, you confirm your belief that 4 although there may be little furniture stored for 5 Janet Arvizo, there in fact may be some, correct? 6 A. You’d have to point me to the letter. I -- 7 Q. Sure. 8 A. I don’t have the letters memorized. 9 Q. Okay. Let me refer you to your letter of 10 April 8th, 2003. 11 A. Okay. 12 Q. In that first paragraph, referring to your 13 client, Janet Arvizo, you say that, “She does not 14 believe that much, if any, furniture was removed.” 15 A. Right. 16 Q. Do you see that? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. Now, did she tell you she did not believe 19 that much, if any, furniture was removed? 20 A. She must have, or I wouldn’t have put it in 21 the letter. 22 Q. Did you ever confirm whether or not any 23 furniture was removed from the Soto Street 24 apartment? 25 A. I’m not sure what the Soto Street apartment 26 is, so I guess the answer would be no. 27 Q. Wasn’t that the apartment that Janet 28 purported to live in? 12310 1 A. I don’t know about the address. I don’t 2 know the street name. 3 Q. Well, what -- what apartment are you 4 referring to in your letter? 5 A. An apartment that they lived in. I don’t 6 know that she ever referred to the address. 7 Q. And Janet Arvizo never told you where the 8 materials were taken from? 9 A. She told me they were taken from her 10 apartment, but I don’t know that there was any 11 reason to tell me an address, a street number or a 12 street name. Or maybe she did and I just don’t 13 recall it. The name of the street was not 14 important. 15 Q. Was the purported home of Janet Arvizo, 16 where materials were taken, allegedly, against her 17 will, important to you? 18 MR. ZONEN: I’m going to object as 19 argumentative and irrelevant. 20 THE COURT: Sustained. 21 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Are you saying under oath 22 you didn’t know what the address was of the 23 apartment where possessions were supposedly taken 24 from? 25 A. I may have known then. I don’t remember 26 now. The name is not familiar to me. 27 Q. Did you review your file before you agreed 28 to testify today for the prosecution? 12311 1 A. I didn’t review my file. I made copies of 2 the documents that have been put in evidence. 3 Q. How many meetings have you had with any 4 representative of the prosecution before testifying 5 today? 6 A. I don’t know what you mean by “meeting.” 7 I was upstairs in the room awaiting testimony. And 8 Mr. Zonen came up and I gave him these documents. 9 If that’s a meeting, I don’t know. One today and 10 one before the last time I testified. And I 11 testified to Mr. Sneddon -- meeting Mr. Sneddon, 12 gosh, I don’t know, two years ago, or a year and a 13 half ago. 14 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object as to irrelevant, 15 anything beyond the prior testimony, and asked and 16 answered. 17 THE COURT: Overruled. You interrupted the 18 witness. 19 I’m not sure you had completed your answer. 20 THE WITNESS: Yeah, I don’t know what you 21 mean by a “meeting.” A meeting can be defined as 22 two people in the same room together. 23 I never had a meeting for the purpose of 24 discussing testimony or reviewing documents. 25 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: You don’t know how to 26 define the word “meeting”? 27 A. As I said, a meet -- you define it and I’ll 28 tell you whether I had them. 12312 1 As I said, I was with Mr. Zonen for a couple 2 of minutes upstairs. If that’s a meeting, then, 3 yes, I had a meeting with Mr. Zonen today. And I 4 had a meeting with him the time -- before I 5 testified last time. 6 And I met with Mr. Sneddon long before there 7 was a case, I guess. But a long, long time ago. 8 Just an introductory meeting, you know. I -- I 9 think that’s it. 10 Q. Well, Mr. Dickerman, in this series of 11 correspondence with Mr. Geragos, you were 12 threatening to sue Mr. Jackson on behalf of the 13 Arvizos for a number of things, including 14 withholding possessions from Ms. Arvizo that were 15 taken from an apartment, correct? 16 A. You’d have to point me to that. 17 Q. Well -- 18 A. I don’t know that I ever threatened to sue 19 Mr. Jackson on behalf of the Arvizos for anything. 20 Q. Let’s go to your first letter, then, on the 21 26th. Do you see that letter, the one that you 22 didn’t sign? 23 A. I signed it. 24 Q. Okay. You just don’t have a copy. The one 25 you claim you signed, but there is no copy, correct? 26 A. Correct. 27 Q. Okay. Let’s look at the last paragraph. It 28 says, “The Arvizos expect Jackson to comply with the 12313 1 demand to cease contacting and intimidating them 2 immediately. His failure to heed this demand will 3 force my clients to seek a civil restraining order 4 and perhaps to vindicate their rights in other 5 ways.” 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. You’re not threatening a lawsuit? 8 A. Well, when you say “a lawsuit,” I think of 9 actually a civil -- a full-blown civil action. To 10 get a restraining order is -- I guess technically 11 it’s a lawsuit, but it’s a quick thing. You go down 12 to court, you put in a declaration, perhaps have 13 some testimony, and it’s done really quickly. 14 Q. But, sir, it says, “They may seek a civil 15 restraining order and perhaps to vindicate their 16 rights in other legal ways,” right? 17 A. That’s correct. And it’s purposefully vague 18 there. I didn’t threaten a lawsuit. “Other legal 19 ways” meaning anything that we can legally do is a 20 possibility, sure. 21 Q. Like what, for example? 22 A. Well, there -- 23 Q. That isn’t a lawsuit? 24 A. There’s a writ of possession. You can’t do 25 anything without actually filing a Complaint or a 26 Petition. In order to get a court order, as you 27 well know, having practiced civil law yourself, you 28 need to file some kind of an action. You can call 12314 1 that a lawsuit. You can call it an action. You can 2 call it -- I believe the civil procedure refers to a 3 number -- I think the Code of Civil Procedure refers 4 to a number of different kinds of action. 5 So as I say, when I refer to a lawsuit, when 6 I ask somebody, “Do you want to file suit?” I’m 7 talking about a full-blown civil action with causes 8 of action that you eventually go to trial on to 9 recover, usually, damages for your client. 10 Saying various other legal ways could have 11 been, as I say, a writ of possession, which is, yes, 12 you have to file some kind of a Complaint or a 13 Petition, or whatever else there was. 14 There was no decision made here as to what 15 was going to be done, so to say “other legal ways” 16 leaves open anything that my clients decided to do. 17 Q. Including lawsuits, true? 18 A. Sure. 19 Q. That’s your first letter, right? 20 A. My first letter to Geragos. 21 Q. Yes. 22 A. Yeah. 23 Q. Was that the first letter you ever wrote to 24 anyone on behalf of Janet Arvizo? 25 A. I think so. 26 MR. ZONEN: I will object as exceeding the 27 scope of the direct. 28 THE COURT: Overruled. The answer is in. 12315 1 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Now, when you first met 2 your client, Janet Arvizo, you didn’t ask about the 3 address of the apartment that she was complaining 4 about? 5 MR. ZONEN: Objection; asked and answered. 6 THE COURT: Sustained. 7 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Now, let me refer you to a 8 letter from Mark Geragos to you of May 15th, 2003. 9 Do you see that letter? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. Mr. Geragos writes the following to you: 12 “Since it appears that you are not equipped nor 13 willing to receive the property at your office, we 14 suggest that a simple matter in which to resolve 15 this situation is for your client to assume the $100 16 a month charge for the rental units in which the 17 property is being stored.” Do you see that? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. Did you agree to that in your next letter? 20 A. You’re referring to the May 15 letter in 21 which I say, quote, “You seem to believe that if 22 you repeat or imply a falsehood often enough it will 23 be believed.” Is that -- 24 Q. That’s correct. Did you think it was false 25 that he said the unit cost $100 a month? 26 A. No. What I was referring to was his 27 statement that we had somehow agreed, or that he was 28 acting properly in having these materials deposited, 12316 1 or he tried to deposit them at my office, when there 2 was no arrangement, when he knew that I was out for 3 a religious holiday, and we had no agreement 4 whatsoever, and he had never responded to any of the 5 requests to know what there was, where it was, who 6 had possession of it. 7 Q. Now, the day you learned that Mr. Geragos 8 had a mover appear at your office, did you call him 9 back and say, “I’m back in the office. Let’s 10 arrange to deliver it at a certain location”? 11 A. No. What I did was carry on correspondence 12 with Mr. Geragos. I believe at one point, and I 13 think there’s a letter here, that when it turned out 14 that he was being totally deceitful and dodging and 15 not responding, I believe I told him that we should 16 have no further communications orally, but that 17 everything should be in writing. 18 The reason these things are in writing, 19 which I usually -- I just never had an experience 20 with anybody where there’s this series of letters to 21 get an answer to a question. 22 The reason for this writing is just to 23 document the impossibility of getting him to do what 24 I had asked him to do so many times, which was a 25 simple request: Give us the passports, the visas, 26 the birth certificates. In fact, the other 27 materials were not that critical. What my clients 28 wanted were the passports, birth certificates, 12317 1 visas, the other documents that were very specific. 2 Q. Did your client prefer that someone else 3 continue to store the furniture at their own 4 expense? 5 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Asked and answered 6 and argumentative. 7 THE COURT: Sustained. 8 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: In any of these letters, 9 do you tell Mr. Geragos where to deliver the 10 furniture? 11 THE COURT: Counsel, that’s asked and 12 answered. 13 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. 14 Q. Let me refer you again to the paragraph on 15 the Geragos letter to you of May 15th, 2003. He 16 asked you on that date -- 17 A. I’m sorry, what date? 18 Q. I’m sorry, May 15th, 2003. 19 A. Okay. 20 Q. Mr. Geragos says, “Since we have not been 21 able to resolve this,” he asks if your client will 22 assume the $100 a month charge for the rental units, 23 right? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. And what was your response to that? 26 A. Well, that same day I responded to him 27 detailing his lie about having had an arrangement to 28 drop off those materials. 12318 1 And then I said, in the next paragraph, 2 quote, “I will consider your suggested resolution 3 once you comply with my previous requests that you 4 provide a list of all items you intend to,” quote, 5 “deliver,” period, close quote. 6 “I was told there was a massive amount of 7 furniture in your,” quote, “’delivery,’” close 8 quote, “while my clients, who lived in a bachelor 9 apartment, had very few possessions and little, if 10 any, furniture. Your client, thorough deception, 11 makes mine understandably reluctant to take his or 12 your word for anything. I’d also like you to 13 deliver immediately,” underlined, “my clients’ 14 passports, birth certificates, and the clothing 15 items previously described.” 16 And there, in the final paragraph, is my 17 request that he not communicate with me in any way 18 but writing, because I did not want any more -- I 19 hate to say this about another lawyer. I did not 20 want any more lies. And if they were in writing, 21 I didn’t think that he was going to lie, although he 22 continued to do so. 23 Q. I understand. Let me reask my question 24 again. 25 In your response to Mr. Geragos, Mr. 26 Dickerman, do you ever tell him, one, where to 27 deliver the items, or two, that your client will 28 assume the cost of representing the unit? Anywhere 12319 1 in all your verbiage, do you say anything about 2 either of those issues? 3 A. Yeah. I said once he complies with my 4 previous requests -- I don’t know if there’s a 5 problem. Is the microphone on? Maybe you’re not 6 hearing me. It says -- well, now it’s not. Oop, is 7 it on now? 8 It says that once he complies with my 9 previous requests made over a period of, let’s see, 10 March, April, May, almost two months, that I would 11 be happy to do what he wanted. 12 Again, my clients’ immediate concern was not 13 to get the items back from the vault. That was not 14 the big deal. 15 Q. And does your client care about who paid to 16 store them? 17 A. My client agreed subsequently to pick up the 18 tab once they knew where the items were, absolutely. 19 Q. Months later, correct? 20 A. I don’t believe so. 21 Q. Well, let’s keep going, okay? 22 A. Excuse me, just to complete the answer -- 23 Q. Sure. 24 A. -- the final paragraph of that May 15 letter 25 says, quote, “Finally, your blatant dishonesty 26 regrettably compels me to instruct you to act only 27 on my written authorization, instruction or 28 agreement.” 12320 1 Q. I understand all the words. 2 What I’m trying to find out is, two months 3 after your March 26th letter, you’ve never told him 4 where to deliver the items and you’ve never agreed 5 to have your client pay the costs of storage, true? 6 A. Well, he asked about the cost of storage 7 later on, and -- 8 Q. Can you answer my question? 9 A. Yeah, of course. 10 Q. Please do. 11 A. The letters say what they say. But to make 12 it sound like I was dodging -- 13 MR. ZONEN: I’m going to object as 14 nonresponsive to the question. 15 THE COURT: Sustained. 16 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Well, let’s go -- let’s 17 keep going and see if you ever tell him where to 18 deliver the material, okay? 19 We’ve got a letter that you sent him on 20 May 20th, 2003, right? Is that correct? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. That’s approximately two months since your 23 first letter of March 26th, 2003, right? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Have you still told him where to deliver 26 anything? 27 A. You’re referring to the letter in which I 28 say, “My clients are willing to assume payment for 12321 1 storage of their possessions”? 2 Q. Yes. 3 A. And the one where I say, “I ask that you 4 provide the precise location of all such property, 5 and the identity, address and phone number of each 6 person with access and/or a key to any place where 7 the property is located”? 8 Is this the letter that says, “You have 9 never responded to that more than reasonable 10 request”? And the one where I go on to say, “If my 11 clients are to,” quote, “assume payment on the two 12 storage lockers,” close quote, “as you requested 13 they do, they will obviously need that information, 14 as well as any agreements that are to be assumed. I 15 look forward to receiving all such information at 16 once.” 17 Q. It wasn’t until two months later that you 18 agreed to pay the costs on behalf of your client, 19 true? 20 A. Not two months after -- two months after 21 what? 22 Q. Well, from March 26th to May 20th, you went 23 back and forth with all this verbiage, and it wasn’t 24 till May 20th that you ever agreed to assume the 25 costs of the storage facility, true? 26 A. No, that’s false. And you know it’s false, 27 because there was no vault discussed by Mr. Geragos 28 or even acknowledged early on. So to say it’s two 12322 1 months from the date when I asked for items that 2 were never responded to, you know that’s false. 3 So, no, it was not two months. 4 Q. Did your client ever assume the costs of the 5 storage locker? 6 A. I don’t know whether they did or not. 7 Q. You don’t know till today? You don’t know 8 at all? 9 A. I understood that -- well, I know that they 10 told me that they would do so, and I transmitted 11 that information to -- it was either Geragos or 12 Miller, sure. 13 Q. Well, let’s look at Miller’s fax to you of 14 June 12th, 2003. Do you see that? 15 A. Yes. 16 Q. It’s the last document in this package, 17 right? 18 A. Right. 19 Q. Brad Miller sends you a message: “Dear Mr. 20 Dickerman: Sorry I was not able to get back to you 21 yesterday. My office manager, Karen, let me know 22 you called this morning.” 23 So, in fact, you’re not just reducing 24 everything to writing. You’re making phone calls, 25 aren’t you? 26 A. My comment about writing was to Geragos. I 27 have no understanding of a connection between 28 Geragos and Miller except that Miller’s doing 12323 1 something on his behalf. 2 Q. What does that mean? What does that mean? 3 A. I didn’t have a problem with Mr. Miller. 4 Q. Please explain what you mean by that. He’s 5 doing something on his behalf, but you don’t think 6 he has anything to do with him? 7 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Argumentative -- 8 THE WITNESS: I knew nothing about -- 9 MR. ZONEN: -- and exceeding the scope of 10 the direct examination. 11 THE COURT: Sustained. 12 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Let’s look further at Mr. 13 Miller’s fax to you, Mr. Dickerman, on June 12th. 14 It says, “Janet’s belongings were packed and loaded 15 by Dino’s Moving & Storage, 12641 Saticoy Street 16 South, North Hollywood, California. They then 17 placed the items in storage at their facility where 18 they have remained since, occupying, I believe, two 19 vaults. I just sent a check to Dino’s for storage 20 payment May and June. Please call John at Dino’s, 21 (818) 503-3999, and make whatever arrangements are 22 necessary to transfer the storage from myself to 23 either you or your client. Tell Dino’s they can fax 24 whatever paperwork is necessary for me to sign,” and 25 it gives the fax number. “Thank you, Brad,” with a 26 cc to Mark Geragos. 27 You didn’t know he had a connection with 28 Geragos when you got that fax? 12324 1 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Argumentative and 2 exceeding the scope of the direct. 3 THE COURT: Overruled. 4 THE WITNESS: Well, I don’t know exactly what 5 you mean by “connection.” Obviously they had 6 something to do with each other, yeah. But I had no 7 problem with Miller, when you talk about putting 8 things in writing. I -- 9 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Well, you got this fax of 10 June 12th, correct? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. What did you do about it on behalf of your 13 client, Janet Arvizo? 14 A. I’m pretty sure I called my client, and told 15 them that we had now located the items, and I 16 believe I asked them whether they wanted to assume 17 the cost, and I think Janet Arvizo said she did. 18 Q. Did she? 19 A. I don’t know. I don’t know what happened 20 after that. 21 MR. MESEREAU: No further questions. 22 23 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 24 BY MR. ZONEN: 25 Q. The last letter that Mr. Geragos -- that 26 Mr. Mesereau asked you about dated June 12th, 2003, 27 that identifies Dino’s Moving & Storage, is that the 28 first communication you had from anybody identifying 12325 1 where your clients’ property was stored? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. Did Mr. Geragos ever tell you where the 4 property was stored? 5 A. Never. 6 Q. Did Mr. Geragos ever tell you that he had 7 the passports that belonged to your client? 8 A. No. 9 Q. Let’s go back to the letter that’s dated 10 May 12th, 2003. That’s the one where you wanted to 11 move on a little bit, and let’s go back to the 12 beginning of this letter. 13 MR. MESEREAU: Objection; move to strike. 14 THE COURT: Stricken. 15 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: May 12th, 2003, your letter 16 to Mr. Geragos, do you have that in front of you? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. Read -- the first two sentences end with the 19 words “to be delivered.” If you’d read those out 20 loud, please. 21 A. “Dear Mr. Geragos: I thought I had 22 previously memorialized by letter your April 24th 23 stunt with the movers, but I find I did not. This 24 then will serve to confirm that on April 24, at 25 about 9:30 a.m., you sent purported movers to my 26 office laden with a huge amount of furniture and 27 possibly other items that the movers told the 28 receptionist and building service representatives I 12326 1 had directed and arranged to be delivered.” 2 Q. Stop right there. 3 That was the part that Mr. Geragos read to 4 you -- that Mr. Mesereau read to you; is that 5 correct? 6 A. Yeah. At least part of it, yeah. 7 Q. Go ahead, now, and read the next sentence 8 that you wrote. 9 A. “As you know, and knew then, and as my 10 correspondence reflected, there was no such 11 arrangement. In fact, much to the contrary, I asked 12 you on numerous occasions to deliver just the 13 passports and certain other documents and a few 14 items of Gavin Arvizo’s clothing. Not only did you 15 never deliver those items, you never even 16 acknowledged any intention or interest in doing so.” 17 Q. Now, this is actually another letter I had 18 not pointed out to you earlier where you refer to 19 the passports again; is that right? 20 A. That’s right. 21 Q. So this is the May 12th letter that refers 22 to your clients’ passports? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. And previously I identified five different 25 letters. That’s actually May 6th; is that correct? 26 A. I haven’t been counting. 27 Q. All right. Now, did you know in advance, at 28 the time of the delivery of the contents of your 12327 1 clients’ apartment to your office building, that Mr. 2 Geragos was going to do that? 3 A. I’m sorry, did I know whether -- did I have 4 any advance notice that he was going to do it? 5 Q. Yes. Yes. 6 A. None. 7 Q. Did he ever call you and say, “We’re going 8 to just go ahead and deliver your clients’ property 9 to your office”? 10 A. Never. 11 Q. Are you a sole practitioner? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. How large is your office? 14 A. One, sometimes two. 15 Q. All right. 16 A. Well, and sometimes other attorneys that I 17 associate in on cases. But as a regular matter, one 18 and a secretary. 19 Q. Okay. And do you have room to store a 20 refrigerator and possessions from even a small or 21 modest studio apartment? 22 A. I have no storage whatsoever except for some 23 files. I keep everything off site. I would 24 never -- I could never store anything in the 25 building. I have no agreement with them to do so. 26 Q. If you had been asked in advance to accept 27 possession of the Arvizo family residence at your 28 office, would you have agreed? 12328 1 A. No, I -- 2 MR. MESEREAU: Objection; calls for 3 speculation. 4 THE WITNESS: It doesn’t call for 5 speculation. I certainly wouldn’t have. I couldn’t 6 have. 7 THE COURT: Just -- 8 MR. ZONEN: Mr. Dickerman, you can’t do 9 that, okay? Please, just answer the question. 10 THE WITNESS: Sorry. 11 THE COURT: The objection is overruled. 12 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Would you have agreed to 13 that? 14 THE COURT: Read the question back. 15 (Record read.) 16 THE WITNESS: Absolutely not. 17 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: All right. And nobody 18 contacted you from Mr. Geragos’s office in advance; 19 is that correct? 20 A. That’s correct. 21 MR. ZONEN: No further questions. 22 23 RECROSS-EXAMINATION 24 BY MR. MESEREAU: 25 Q. Mr. Dickerman, isn’t it true that at one 26 point Mr. Geragos was so frustrated because you 27 would not let him know where to deliver -- 28 MR. ZONEN: I’m going to object as to 12329 1 whether or not Mr. Geragos -- 2 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: -- your client’s property 3 that -- 4 MR. ZONEN: -- was frustrated as exceeding 5 the scope, and -- 6 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: -- that he had to write 7 you a letter -- 8 THE COURT: Just a moment. 9 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: He wrote you a letter 10 threatening to auction it off if you didn’t tell him 11 where to deliver it or accept responsibility for 12 storage, right? 13 THE COURT: Just a moment. You’re going to 14 have to start over. The question is garbled by 15 interruption. 16 MR. MESEREAU: I’m sorry. 17 Q. Isn’t it true, Mr. Dickerman, that at one 18 point Mr. Geragos was so frustrated at your 19 unwillingness to tell him where to deliver the items 20 in storage, that he told you if you don’t tell him 21 where to deliver it, he’s going to possibly let it 22 be subject to auction by the owner of the storage 23 facility, right? 24 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object as speculative as to 25 whether or not he was frustrated. 26 THE COURT: Sustained. 27 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Do you have the May 17th 28 letter from Mr. Geragos to you? 12330 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. Let me just go through that letter with you. 3 “Dear Mr. Dickerman: Thank you for your 4 histrionic letter dated May 15, 2003. Beyond your 5 bluster and personal attacks, please remember that 6 you have a duty to resolve this matter in the most 7 efficient manner possible. In that regard, please 8 advise us as to whether your clients will accept our 9 offer that they assume payment on the two storage 10 lockers.” 11 Next paragraph: “As to your request for an 12 inventory of the property, our offer allows your 13 clients immediate possession of all their property,” 14 period. “We will waste no further time or resources 15 of our client. You have caused us the unnecessary 16 expense of one delivery attempt and we will not 17 waste additional funds for the sole purpose of 18 placating you.” 19 “Lastly, please be advised, in the event 20 your clients, one, refuse to assume the payments on 21 the storage lockers, or two, fail to promptly remove 22 the property therein, the property may ultimately be 23 subject to auction by the storage facility. Govern 24 yourself accordingly. Very truly yours, Mark 25 Geragos.” 26 You wrote him back and still didn’t tell him 27 where to deliver it, right? 28 A. You’re referring to the letter where I tell 12331 1 him that we’re willing to assume payment and take 2 delivery once he complies with the request I’ve been 3 making since March 26th, for almost two months. 4 Q. So your -- 5 A. Is that the one? 6 Q. -- your position was, “Give me what I want, 7 and you keep storing what I don’t want at your 8 expense”? 9 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Argumentative and 10 asked and answered. 11 THE COURT: Sustained. 12 MR. MESEREAU: No further questions. 13 MR. ZONEN: No further questions. 14 THE COURT: All right. You may step down. 15 We’ll take our break. 16 (Recess taken.) 17 18 (The following proceedings were held in 19 open court outside the presence and hearing of the 20 jury:) 21 22 THE COURT: Excuse me, I just stepped in 23 quickly because I understand there’s -- you want to 24 put a stipulation on the record; is that right? 25 MR. MESEREAU: Yes, please, Your Honor. 26 THE COURT: Okay. 27 MR. ZONEN: Do we already have this exhibit 28 identified? We do. We turned it in to the Court. 12332 1 THE COURT: Yes, I just handed it back to the 2 clerk. It’s 901. 3 MR. ZONEN: Thank you, Your Honor. 4 Exhibit 901 we’re going to stipulate can be 5 admitted into evidence subject to the stipulation 6 that these are from Brad Miller’s computer. They 7 are e-mail communications between Brad Miller and 8 Mark Geragos, and that the deletions that are in 9 here, the deletions are done with Court approval, 10 directed by Mr. Geragos, and they delete sections 11 that refer to other clients. 12 THE COURT: All right. Do you agree with 13 that stipulation? 14 MR. MESEREAU: Yes, Your Honor. 15 THE COURT: I’ll approve that stipulation, 16 and that relieves the necessity of Mr. Geragos’ 17 appearance tomorrow; is that correct? 18 MR. ZONEN: I believe so, yes. 19 MR. MESEREAU: Yes. My understanding is he 20 would like to fly out of town -- 21 THE BAILIFF: Microphone. 22 MR. MESEREAU: My understanding is Mark 23 Geragos would like to fly out of town tomorrow, and 24 we have no objection to that, but I would not want 25 to tell him to do so until the Court approves. 26 THE COURT: I’m asking you. Do either of 27 you -- do either of you have any need for Mr. 28 Geragos to appear tomorrow? 12333 1 MR. MESEREAU: No, Your Honor. 2 MR. ZONEN: No. 3 THE COURT: So we can release him to go 4 where he wants to go? 5 MR. ZONEN: Yes. 6 THE COURT: All right. That will be fine. 7 MR. MESEREAU: Thank you. 8 9 (The following proceedings were held in 10 open court in the presence and hearing of the 11 jury:) 12 13 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 14 table.) 15 MR. MESEREAU: Excuse me, Your Honor. 16 THE COURT: Would you face the clerk and 17 raise your right hand, please. 18 19 CHRISTINE CAUSER 20 Having been sworn, testified as follows: 21 22 THE WITNESS: I do. 23 THE CLERK: Please be seated. State and 24 spell your name for the record. 25 THE WITNESS: Christine -- 26 BAILIFF CORTEZ: Ma’am, be seated first. 27 THE WITNESS: Christine Causer. 28 C-h-r-i-s-t-i-n-e, C-a-u-s-e-r. 12334 1 THE CLERK: Thank you. 2 THE COURT: Counsel, before you ask a 3 question, there’s -- can you give us an indication 4 of -- I’m speaking to all of you -- are we going to 5 have a full day tomorrow on evidence? Does that 6 seem to be the situation? 7 MR. MESEREAU: I think we might, Your Honor. 8 THE COURT: Okay. Go ahead, Counsel. 9 MR. SNEDDON: Thank you. 10 11 DIRECT EXAMINATION 12 BY MR. SNEDDON: 13 Q. Mrs. Causer? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. Mrs. Causer, you’re going to have to lean 16 into the -- 17 A. Right here? 18 Q. The other one. 19 A. Oh. Okay. 20 Q. There we go. Thank you very much. 21 Mrs. Causer, you live in the Los Angeles 22 area? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. And what is your current occupation? 25 A. I work as a visitation -- visitation 26 services at a mortuary. 27 Q. That’s at Rose Hills? 28 A. Yes, it is. 12335 1 Q. Now, at one point in time, did you work as 2 an intern for the Mid Valley News? 3 A. Approximately four or five years ago. 4 Q. And was the person that you worked for 5 Connie Keenan? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. She was the editor at that time? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. And you’re familiar with Mrs. Keenan? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. And in connection with your work with Mrs. 12 Keenan, did you become involved in writing an 13 article for the Mid Valley News? 14 A. Yes, I did. 15 Q. Now, I want to ask you some questions, some 16 specific questions. Did you ever tell Mrs. Keenan 17 that you had delivered a cooked turkey to the Arvizo 18 family? 19 A. Not a cooked turkey. 20 Q. Okay. You delivered a turkey, did you not? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. And when you delivered that turkey to the 23 Arvizos, did you also give them some money? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. How much did you give them? 26 A. Five dollars. 27 Q. That was a lot of money to you at that time, 28 wasn’t it? 12336 1 A. It was -- it was somewhat -- not really a 2 lot, but it was a token amount, really. 3 Q. Did you tell Mrs. Keenan that you had done 4 that? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. And did you get in trouble for doing that 7 from her? 8 A. Yes, I did. 9 Q. Did you ever tell Mrs. Keenan that, when you 10 delivered the uncooked turkey to the Arvizo family, 11 that Mrs. Arvizo said to you, “That’s nice, but I’d 12 rather have money”? 13 A. No. 14 Q. You never made that statement to her? 15 A. No, I did not. 16 Q. Did you ever tell Mrs. Keenan that the 17 Arvizo family was going to lose their home as a 18 result of what -- the medical expenses connected 19 with their son Gavin? 20 A. I don’t believe so. 21 MR. SNEDDON: No further questions, Your 22 Honor. 23 24 CROSS-EXAMINATION 25 BY MR. MESEREAU: 26 Q. Good afternoon, Miss Causer. 27 A. Hello. 28 Q. Miss Causer, my name is Tom Mesereau. I 12337 1 speak for Mr. Jackson. 2 You did have a discussion with Miss Keenan 3 about Janet Arvizo’s reaction to your bringing the 4 turkey, did you not? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. And what did you tell her Janet Arvizo’s 7 reaction was? 8 A. I just felt that she rather discarded it. 9 She didn’t seem really pleased. 10 Q. And did Janet Arvizo proceed to tell you 11 anything about her financial condition? 12 A. Yes. She did mention the medical expenses 13 were uncovered by the insurance that they have -- 14 had at the time or didn’t have anymore. 15 Q. And did she tell you that her car had been 16 repossessed? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. Did she tell you that one chemotherapy 19 injection cost more than $12,000? 20 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I’m going to 21 object. This is beyond the scope of the direct 22 examination. I -- 23 MR. MESEREAU: I don’t believe so, Your 24 Honor. 25 MR. SNEDDON: I was specific as to her 26 conversation with Mrs. Keenan. 27 THE COURT: Sustained. It’s beyond the 28 scope. 12338 1 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Now, did you tell Miss 2 Keenan that Janet Arvizo told you that one 3 chemotherapy injection cost more than $12,000? 4 A. I don’t think I said “more.” I think I said 5 “12,000.” 6 Q. And did you tell Mrs. Keenan that Janet 7 Arvizo told you her car had been repossessed? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Did you tell Mrs. Keenan that Janet Arvizo 10 said they had a deteriorating financial condition? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. And did you tell Mrs. Keenan that Janet 13 Arvizo said they no longer had medical insurance? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. Did you tell Mrs. Keenan that Janet Arvizo 16 said the financial toll on the family has been 17 undescribable? 18 A. I don’t recall those words, actually. 19 Q. Would it refresh your recollection if I just 20 show you this article? 21 MR. SNEDDON: Well, which article? 22 MR. MESEREAU: The article written by Miss 23 Causer. 24 Q. Might that refresh your recollection on what 25 that word was? 26 A. Probably. 27 MR. MESEREAU: May I approach, Your Honor? 28 THE COURT: Yes. 12339 1 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Have you had a chance to 2 review that portion of the article? 3 A. Not recently. 4 Q. Okay. I mean just this second, did you have 5 a chance to look at that? 6 A. Just recently now, yes. 7 Q. Does it refresh your recollection about what 8 you told Miss Keenan? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. And did you tell Miss Keenan that Janet 11 Arvizo told you that the financial toll on the 12 family has been undescribable? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. Now, did you tell Miss Keenan that Janet 15 Arvizo told you that becoming a comedian is Gavin’s 16 dream? 17 A. Yes. 18 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, that’s double 19 hearsay. I’m sorry. Double hearsay. 20 THE COURT: Just a moment, please. 21 MR. MESEREAU: Sure. 22 THE COURT: It’s overruled. 23 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: I’m sorry, I didn’t hear 24 your answer, Miss Causer. 25 A. Yes. 26 Q. Okay. And did you tell Miss Keenan that 27 Janet Arvizo told you that before his illness, he, 28 meaning Gavin, attended Rush Hour and became friends 12340 1 with Chris Tucker, who has become a big brother to 2 him? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. And did you tell Miss Keenan that Janet 5 Arvizo told you that Suli McCullough, a stand-up 6 comic on The Jamie Fox Show, was also an important 7 support to Gavin? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Did you tape-record your interview with 10 Janet Arvizo? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. And at some point did you double-check to 13 see if the fact about the chemotherapy costing 14 $12,000 was correct? 15 A. Yes. 16 Q. That wasn’t a typographical error, was it? 17 A. I don’t believe so. 18 MR. MESEREAU: I have no further questions, 19 Your Honor. 20 MR. SNEDDON: No questions. 21 THE COURT: All right. Thank you. You may 22 step down. 23 Call your next witness. 24 MR. ZONEN: We’ll call Maria Ventura. Maria 25 Ventura. 26 We need an interpreter. 27 THE COURT: I’ll remind you that you’re still 28 under oath. You’re still under oath. And you may 12341 1 be seated. 2 MRS. VENTURA: Okay, of course. 3 4 MARIA VENTURA 5 Having been previously sworn, resumed the 6 stand and testified further as follows: 7 8 DIRECT EXAMINATION 9 BY MR. ZONEN: 10 Q. Miss Ventura, good afternoon. 11 A. Good afternoon. 12 Q. I’d like to direct your attention, please, 13 to the 27th of August of 1998. 14 A. That’s fine. 15 Q. All right. On that particular occasion, in 16 the evening hours, did you proceed to a shopping 17 mall in the West Covina area? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. Did you go there for purposes of picking up 20 your grandchildren? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. Was that the day your daughter Janet and her 23 then-husband David were arrested? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. When you got to the shopping mall, was 26 either David or Janet still there? Were either one 27 of them still there? 28 A. Janet was there, a police officer, a patrol 12342 1 car, and the kids. 2 Q. Okay. Did you -- which kids? 3 A. Gavin and Star. 4 Q. Did you take the children home with you? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. Was Janet taken by the police? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. How long did the children stay with you? 9 A. Till the next day. 10 Q. All right. 11 A. Because I called her. The kids were not 12 well. 13 Q. All right. What was the matter with the 14 children? 15 A. They complained all night. Star was 16 complaining about a headache, and Gavin, his arm. 17 And I gave them Tylenol. 18 Q. All right. The next day, did somebody take 19 them to the doctor? 20 A. Yes, both of them. 21 Q. Okay. 22 A. Janet and David. 23 Q. All right. Did David or Janet see either of 24 the boys from the time you picked them up? 25 MR. MESEREAU: Objection; foundation. 26 MR. ZONEN: Let me reask that question 27 again. 28 Q. You took the two boys from the shopping mall 12343 1 directly to your house; is that true? 2 A. No. I went to see if I could get my 3 daughter out. 4 Q. Okay. Where were the boys when you went to 5 get your daughter? 6 A. With me. 7 Q. In the car? 8 A. We walked over there to the police station. 9 Q. It’s not too far from the shopping mall? 10 A. No, the mall is right there, and then we 11 just came like that in the car, and then we got out 12 and went in. 13 Q. Was your husband with you? 14 A. He was driving. 15 Q. Okay. And were you able to get your 16 daughter out at that time? 17 A. No. 18 Q. And did you then go back to your home? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. And that’s your home in El Monte? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. All right. And did you stay at your home 23 that night with your two grandsons, Star and Gavin? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Do you know approximately what time it was 26 that Janet and her husband David arrived at your 27 house and took the boys? 28 A. The next day. 12344 1 Q. All right. Do you know approximately what 2 time the next day that was? 3 A. I don’t remember. 4 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. No further 5 questions. 6 MR. MESEREAU: No cross-examination. 7 THE COURT: All right. Thank you. You may 8 step down. 9 Call your next witness. 10 MR. SNEDDON: Re-call Detective Bonner, Your 11 Honor. 12 THE COURT: All right. Be seated. You’re 13 still under oath. 14 DETECTIVE BONNER: Thank you. 15 16 CRAIG BONNER 17 Having been previously sworn, resumed the 18 stand and testified further as follows: 19 20 MR. NICOLA: Your Honor, before I begin 21 questioning Detective Bonner again, I brought up the 22 issue of an SDT. I think we’ll need it admitted 23 into evidence. Mr. Sanger mentioned he needed to 24 get his reports. I believe he’s had time to do 25 that. 26 MR. SANGER: Well, that would assume facts 27 not in evidence, but if we’re talking about the Brad 28 Miller phone records, we can proceed with those. 12345 1 MR. NICOLA: Premarked as Exhibit 448. 2 MR. SANGER: We can proceed with those, Your 3 Honor. 4 THE COURT: So I’ll -- 5 MR. NICOLA: May I approach the clerk, Your 6 Honor? 7 THE COURT: You’re consenting to their 8 admission, Counsel? 9 MR. SANGER: Yes. In other words, they were 10 subpoenaed. 11 THE COURT: Okay. So 448 is admitted. 12 MR. SANGER: Well, the question -- all 13 right. They’re subpoenaed, and so I don’t know what 14 part he’s going to mark, so I’ll wait until I find 15 out. 16 THE COURT: Well, you’re not -- I 17 misunderstood. You’re not consenting to their 18 admission. You want him to proceed. I’m not sure 19 what you’re agreeing to. That’s all. 20 MR. SANGER: Okay. I had earlier indicated 21 to counsel that I needed time to look at this. I 22 don’t need any more time to look at them, but I 23 don’t know what he’s going to do with them. 24 THE COURT: You’re not agreeing to anything. 25 MR. SANGER: Assuming he’s not marking the 26 affidavit, if he wants to mark the phone records -- 27 just to make it easy, so we can get it done, if he 28 wants to mark the phone records as a particular 12346 1 document or a particular exhibit, I have no 2 objection to that. And I’ll agree that there is a 3 foundation laid, provided, pursuant to the subpoena. 4 MR. NICOLA: We actually marked the envelope 5 that all of those documents came in. We would 6 withdraw the actual affidavit of the custodian of 7 records prior to introducing them into evidence. 8 THE COURT: All right. 9 MR. NICOLA: I don’t believe there’s an 10 argument they’re the Brad Miller phone records for 11 January, February and March of 2003. And I would 12 ask just a couple of foundational questions prior to 13 moving them into evidence. 14 THE COURT: All right. Go ahead. 15 16 DIRECT EXAMINATION 17 BY MR. NICOLA: 18 Q. Detective Bonner, placed in front of you are 19 the contents of Exhibit 448; is that correct? 20 A. Correct. 21 Q. And the first page of those documents 22 appears to be the certification of the custodian of 23 records from Pay Less Cellular; is that true? 24 A. That’s true. 25 Q. And have you examined a copy of these 26 documents and ascertained what they are? 27 A. Yes, I have. And they are the cellular 28 telephone records for an account belonging to 12347 1 Bradley Miller. 2 Q. Do they cover a period of January through 3 March of the year 2003? 4 A. They do. 5 MR. NICOLA: We’d move Exhibit 448 into 6 evidence at this time, Your Honor, save the 7 certificate of authenticity. 8 MR. SANGER: All right. And I have no 9 objection. 10 THE COURT: Well, they’re admitted. 11 MR. NICOLA: Thank you. 12 THE COURT: And let’s mark the certificate 13 of -- or let’s just lodge the certificate. 14 MR. NICOLA: We can also mark it as Exhibit 447, 15 if that works. 16 THE COURT: All right. All right. Mark it 17 447, but it does not go in evidence. 18 MR. NICOLA: Madam Clerk? 19 Q. Detective Bonner, I’ve handed you Exhibit 20 449, and do you recognize those cellular telephone 21 records for Mark Geragos and the firm Geragos & 22 Geragos? 23 A. That’s correct. 24 Q. And do they cover a period of January 25 through March of the year 2003? 26 A. I believe February through March of 2003. 27 MR. NICOLA: Okay. And I believe, Your 28 Honor, counsel agreed to a stipulated foundation on 12348 1 those records, and we move those into evidence, if 2 I’m accurately representing the stipulation. 3 THE COURT: Just offer them in. 4 MR. SANGER: It’s a little bit confusing 5 because counsel’s got different numbers than we had 6 before. Let me just look. 7 I had 460. Is 460 just the diagram? 8 MR. NICOLA: 449 are the actual -- 9 MR. SANGER: Is this 449? No. That’s all 10 460. All right. Let me take a look at 449. 11 Just a moment, please. 12 If I may approach for that. 13 THE COURT: Yes. 14 MR. SANGER: With regard to 449, I’ve 15 decided to say I don’t have a horse in this arena, 16 but -- if I can, but 449 does have apparently the 17 other -- what would be sensitive, confidential 18 attorney-client phone numbers, I would suppose, from 19 a law firm. And I think, as an officer of the 20 court, as I said before, we should be cautious with 21 that. If it’s being admitted, there’s -- unless 22 there’s some protective order, it would be open to 23 the public. 24 I don’t want to make a big thing out it, but 25 I think I should make that point to the Court. 26 MR. NICOLA: May I respond, Your Honor? 27 THE COURT: Yes. 28 MR. NICOLA: With respect to all the phone 12349 1 numbers, all the phone records that were exhibit -- 2 that were introduced throughout this trial, we’d 3 make a motion that they be sealed from public view 4 at the end of the case, and that they only be shown 5 to court personnel, the attorneys and the jury. 6 THE COURT: You’ll have to file a formal 7 written motion. 8 MR. NICOLA: We will. 9 THE COURT: But assuming you’re going to do 10 that, I’ll admit the records with that 11 understanding. 12 MR. NICOLA: Thank you, Your Honor. 13 And finally, if I may approach the witness 14 with Exhibit 460. That’s -- 15 MR. SANGER: Yeah, 460 I’ve got. 16 Q. BY MR. NICOLA: Detective Bonner, is Exhibit 17 460 a series of telephone link charts and supporting 18 documentation that you created for the rebuttal 19 portion of this case? 20 A. That is correct. 21 Q. And with respect to Exhibit No. 449 and 22 Exhibit No. 448, did you examine the contents of 23 those telephone tolls for Mr. Miller and Mr. Geragos 24 in coming up with your charts -- 25 A. I did. 26 Q. -- as exhibited in Exhibit 460? 27 A. That’s correct. 28 Q. And does the period of time of Exhibit No. 12350 1 460 cover the months of February and March of 2003? 2 A. That is correct. 3 Q. Okay. If you could turn your attention to 4 the first two pages, 2-4 and 2-5. 5 A. 2-4 and 2-6? 6 Q. Excuse me, 2-4 and 2-6. You put the year 7 ‘05 on that? 8 A. That is incorrect. 9 Q. It is ‘03? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. Do the rest of the charts show the proper 12 year of 2003? 13 A. They do. 14 Q. Now, with respect to the link charts in 15 Exhibit 460, did you try to show the communications 16 between telephones registered to Mr. Geragos, 17 Mr. Miller and the other unindicted co-conspirators 18 in this case? 19 A. That is correct. 20 MR. SANGER: I’m going to object to the 21 characterization by counsel and move to strike. My 22 point being it should be, at the very least, 23 “alleged.” 24 THE COURT: All right. Use the word 25 “alleged,” at least. 26 MR. NICOLA: I would substitute the word 27 “other” with “alleged.” 28 THE COURT: All right. 12351 1 THE WITNESS: That’s correct. 2 Q. BY MR. NICOLA: Okay. With the alleged 3 co-conspirators in this case. 4 Can you quantify for the jury, please, 5 generally, approximately how many communications 6 within that period of time occurred between the 7 phone -- the cell phone registered to Mr. Geragos 8 and the cell phone registered to Mr. Miller? 9 A. A minimum of 50 telephone calls. 10 Q. And the cell phone belonging to Mr. Geragos 11 and the cell phone belonging to Mr. Schaffel? 12 A. In excess of 15 telephone calls. 13 THE REPORTER: 15? 14 THE WITNESS: 15. 15 Q. BY MR. NICOLA: Did you note any 16 communication between the cell phone registered to 17 Mr. Miller and Mr. Frank Cascio? 18 A. Yes, I did. There were in excess of 60 19 telephone calls between those two telephones. 20 Q. Generally, without going into each exhibit 21 in there -- 22 If I could please have “Input 4,” Your 23 Honor, please. 24 I’d like to show you the chart you’ve 25 created for February 12th of 2003. 26 THE COURT: Should it be “Input 4”? 27 MR. NICOLA: “Input 4.” 28 THE COURT: That’s “Input 4.” 12352 1 MR. NICOLA: Ahh. Thank you, Mr. 2 Auchincloss. 3 Q. Now, this appears to resemble the charts you 4 previously testified about, with the exception of a 5 number of links. If you could explain the 6 differences to the jury, please. 7 A. Absolutely. 8 Basically what we did here is, in reviewing 9 the records of Brad Miller and the Geragos records, 10 we found that there were links between Geragos, Brad 11 Miller, Marc Schaffel and Cascio, and because of 12 that, we also included the existing phone analysis 13 involving the alleged co-conspirators as well as 14 Neverland Ranch. 15 Q. Did you find any three-way calls between the 16 phones of Geragos & Geragos, Brad Miller and Marc 17 Schaffel? 18 A. On the 12th, there was one three-way call 19 between Mr. Geragos, Mr. Miller and Mr. Schaffel. 20 Q. And do your records indicate whether or not 21 Mr. Geragos, or the phone registered to Mr. Geragos, 22 was the initiating party in that three-way 23 conversation between those three phones? 24 A. My recollection is that it was, yes. 25 Q. Okay. If you could turn your attention to 26 the chart for February 19th, please, of 2003. 27 Once again, if you could explain to the jury 28 the difference in this chart compared to the chart 12353 1 you testified to in the People’s case-in-chief. 2 A. In the original charts, we did not have the 3 Brad Miller or Geragos & Geragos records. Upon 4 including these records, we found connections 5 between Geragos and Miller, and Miller and several 6 of the co-conspirators. Because of that, we have 7 included them within this graphic. 8 MR. SANGER: Objection and move to strike 9 the answer. 10 MR. NICOLA: Can we try to refer to the 11 “alleged co-conspirators,” Sergeant? 12 THE WITNESS: I thought I did, but -- 13 MR. NICOLA: Okay. 14 THE COURT: Is that the objection, Counsel? 15 MR. SANGER: That was the objection, Your 16 Honor. 17 THE COURT: All right. 18 Q. BY MR. NICOLA: With respect to the chart 19 and your spreadsheet, which is I believe the last 20 part of Exhibit 460, did you try to capture all of 21 the calls on the spreadsheet on these diagrams? 22 A. Yes, I did. 23 Q. And there were a few that you didn’t put on 24 here for one reason or another? 25 A. Correct. 26 Q. Is there a link on February 19th between the 27 Marc Schaffel phone and the Geragos & Geragos phone 28 directly? 12354 1 A. That’s correct. There should have been one. 2 Q. Okay. And were there any three-way calls on 3 the 15th? 4 A. Again, I believe there was one three-way 5 call involving Mr. Schaffel’s phone, Mr. Miller’s 6 phone and Mr. Geragos’s phone. 7 Q. Okay. And when did the toll records become 8 available to you for the Geragos & Geragos phones? 9 A. I believe that was on Tuesday of this week. 10 Q. And that was pursuant to a court order? 11 A. I believe so. 12 Q. If you could turn your attention, please, to 13 the February 20th, 2003, chart. Once again, you 14 just added the Brad Miller tolls, the Geragos and 15 Geragos tolls to the alleged co-conspirators? 16 A. That’s correct. 17 Q. Do your records reflect whether any 18 three-way calls between the Brad Miller phone, 19 Geragos phone and the Schaffel phone occurred on 20 Thursday, February 20th of 2003? 21 A. I believe there was one call, yes. 22 Q. And with respect to the telephone calls 23 between the Miller phone and the Cascio phone, were 24 those predominantly one direction or both 25 directions? 26 A. My recollection is both directions. 27 Q. In analyzing the records for the entire 28 period between February 1st and the end of March of 12355 1 2003, did you find daily or nearly daily contact 2 between the Brad Miller phone and the Geragos & 3 Geragos phone? 4 A. “Nearly daily” would probably be the better 5 terminology. 6 Q. And if I asked you the same question with 7 respect to the Brad Miller phone and the Frank 8 Cascio phone, how would you answer that? 9 A. “Nearly daily” again. 10 Q. Was there also a substantial amount of 11 contact between Mr. Amen and Mr. Schaffel during 12 that period of time? 13 A. Yes, there was. 14 Q. Or at least the phones registered to them? 15 A. Correct. 16 MR. NICOLA: If I may have just a moment, 17 Your Honor. 18 Q. Sergeant Bonner, if you would turn to the 19 next chart. Not the next chart, the chart for 20 Saturday, February 22nd of 2003. 21 I’m sorry, I misled you. I do want to go to 22 the 21st. I apologize. 23 And does the chart for February 21st of 2003 24 accurately reflect the phone records that you 25 analyzed for the individuals seen up there on the 26 chart? 27 A. That is correct. 28 Q. Okay. I only want to ask you specifically 12356 1 about the call between the Geragos phone and the 2 Schaffel phone, and calls between the Geragos phone 3 and the Brad Miller phone. 4 Do your records show that the call from the 5 Geragos phone to the Schaffel phone was one placed 6 by the Geragos phone? 7 A. The Geragos and Schaffel connection was from 8 Geragos’s phone to Schaffel’s phone. 9 Q. Okay. With respect to the calls between the 10 Geragos phone and the Miller phone, were those one 11 directional or both directions? 12 A. Both directions. 13 Q. Okay. Generally, with respect to the phone 14 calls between the Geragos phone and the Schaffel 15 phone, were those conversations longer than one or 16 two minutes? I’m asking about the whole volume. 17 A. In general, usually they were longer. They 18 were usually 10- to 13-minute telephone calls. 19 Q. Okay. If I asked you the same question with 20 respect to the Geragos phone and the Miller phone, 21 what would your answer be? 22 A. Again, usually more than one to two minutes. 23 But in this case, more like the four- to six-minute 24 time frame. 25 Q. If you could turn to the chart for February 26 22nd, 2003, a Saturday. And with respect to the 27 calls between the Geragos phone and the Brad Miller 28 phone, were those generally over one minute in 12357 1 length? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. And can you tell us what time of day those 4 calls began? 5 A. The first telephone call I have is at about 6 9:26 a.m. for five minutes. 7 Q. And that’s from the Miller end to the 8 Geragos end? 9 A. I believe that’s actually the Geragos phone 10 calling the Miller phone. 11 Q. Oh, I apologize. 12 And if you could tell us when those calls 13 last came in on the 22nd. 14 A. The last call I have is at 5:23 p.m. for 15 three minutes. Again, a call from Geragos’s phone 16 to Miller’s phone. 17 MR. NICOLA: If I may yield the questioning 18 to the District Attorney, Your Honor. 19 MR. SNEDDON: Could I have the lights, 20 please? 21 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 22 table.) 23 MR. NICOLA: While they’re talking, may I 24 offer Exhibit 460 into evidence, Your Honor? 25 MR. SANGER: I think before it’s admitted, I 26 do have a reason to ask some questions. 27 THE COURT: All right. 28 MR. SANGER: I’d like to do that. Thank 12358 1 you. I can wait until cross-examination, unless the 2 Court wants me to do it on voir dire. 3 MR. SNEDDON: All right. We’ll just wait. 4 I’m sorry. 5 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 6 table.) 7 MR. SNEDDON: All right. We’re just going 8 to go ahead. 9 I gave you a copy of this this morning, 10 right? 11 MR. SANGER: Yes. 12 13 DIRECT EXAMINATION (Continued) 14 BY MR. SNEDDON: 15 Q. Sergeant Bonner, I think you previously 16 testified in this case that you were present at the 17 Neverland Valley Ranch on November 18th, 2003, 18 during a portion of the execution of the search 19 warrant, correct? 20 A. That is correct. 21 Q. And during the course of the execution of 22 that search warrant, you had occasion to go into 23 what we call the master suite or master bedroom of 24 the defendant in this case, Mr. Jackson, correct? 25 A. That’s correct. 26 Q. And during the time that you were in Mr. 27 Jackson’s room, the master suite, let’s just call it 28 that for right now, master bedroom, did you hear the 12359 1 chimes go off in that area? 2 A. Yes, I did. 3 Q. Now, did you at that time have occasion to 4 examine the mechanism by which the chimes were 5 activated? 6 A. No. 7 Q. Now, did you go back on December the 4th of 8 2004? 9 A. Correct. 10 Q. And you were on the premises at that time; 11 is that correct? 12 A. Yes, I was. 13 Q. Did you have occasion at that time -- and 14 you were in the bedroom, Mr. Jackson’s bedroom, 15 correct? 16 A. I was, yes. 17 Q. Both upstairs and downstairs, correct? 18 A. Correct. 19 Q. Did you have occasion at that time to 20 examine the mechanism by which those chimes were 21 activated? 22 A. I did. I was present, along with the 23 security personnel who was examining it and 24 explaining the workings to us. 25 Q. And were you present when the chimes were 26 actually activated during the time that you were in 27 the bedroom suite on that particular occasion? 28 A. I was. 12360 1 Q. Were you also present in the bedroom on the 2 18th of November of 2003 when the chimes were 3 activated? 4 A. Yes, I was. 5 Q. Now, I want to show you some photographs. 6 (Off-the-record discussion held at counsel 7 table.) 8 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I’ve had three 9 photographs -- they’ve been marked for 10 identification purposes and I’ve shown them to 11 counsel. They’re marked as 157, 159 and 160 for 12 identification purposes. 13 May I approach the witness, Your Honor? 14 THE COURT: Yes. 15 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Detective Bonner, let’s 16 start with the photograph that’s marked as 157 for 17 identification purposes, okay? Do you recognize 18 that photograph? 19 A. Yes, I do. 20 Q. Do you recognize what’s depicted in that 21 photograph? 22 A. This is a picture -- 23 Q. Before you tell me what it is, just tell me, 24 do you recognize what’s depicted? 25 A. Yes, I do. 26 Q. And is it an accurate depiction of what it 27 purports to represent? 28 A. Yes, it is. 12361 1 Q. Let’s turn to 159. And do you recognize 2 what’s depicted in the exhibit People’s 159? 3 A. Yes, I do. 4 Q. And is that an accurate depiction of what it 5 purports to represent? 6 A. Yes, it is. 7 Q. All right. And let’s go to 160. All right. 8 Now, with regard to 160, do you recognize what’s 9 depicted in that photograph? 10 A. Yes, I do. 11 Q. Is that an accurate depiction of what it 12 purports to represent? 13 A. Yes, it is. 14 MR. SNEDDON: All right. I move that 157 15 and 159 and 160 be admitted into evidence, Your 16 Honor. 17 MR. SANGER: Could I voir dire briefly on 18 that, please? 19 THE COURT: Yes. 20 21 VOIR DIRE EXAMINATION 22 BY MR. SANGER: 23 Q. Did you take those photographs? 24 A. No, I did not. 25 Q. Do you know who took them? 26 A. I know -- I do not specifically know who 27 took these exact photographs, no. 28 Q. Do you know what date those particular 12362 1 photographs were taken on? 2 A. I do not, other than one of the two days 3 that we were out there. 4 Q. Do you believe that because you believe that 5 would be the two days that somebody might have had 6 access to take those sorts of photos? 7 A. And because I know -- I have reviewed these 8 and I know that it came out of the photographs that 9 our forensics people took during the service of our 10 warrants. 11 MR. SANGER: I don’t think that’s an 12 adequate foundation, but I don’t know if the Court 13 can understand the basis without looking at the 14 photographs and perhaps having us approach for a 15 moment. 16 THE COURT: All right. Do you want to bring 17 the photographs over? 18 MR. SANGER: Yes. 19 Thank you. 20 And may we approach? 21 THE COURT: Yes. 22 (Discussion held off the record at sidebar.) 23 THE COURT: Let’s see. Did you offer those? 24 MR. SNEDDON: They’re admitted. I’m sorry, 25 I’m taking your job over. I think I asked that they 26 be admitted. 27 THE COURT: All right. They’re admitted. 28 (Laughter.) 12363 1 MR. SNEDDON: I’m sure no offense was taken 2 at that, Your Honor. 3 THE COURT: I was almost ready to hand it 4 over to you. 5 MR. SNEDDON: That would be a big mistake. 6 THE BAILIFF: You need to turn your 7 microphone on so they can hear you. 8 MR. SNEDDON: It’s on. 9 THE BAILIFF: No, him. 10 MR. SNEDDON: Judge, I don’t think your mike 11 is working. 12 THE COURT: My mind is -- oh, my mike. 13 (Laughter.) 14 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Detective Bonner -- excuse 15 me. Detective Bonner, with regard to the chimes 16 system at the Neverland Valley Ranch connected with 17 the defendant’s bedroom - okay? - did you actually 18 have occasion to be present when the chimes were 19 activated on November 18th, 2003? 20 MR. SANGER: Asked and answered, twice. 21 MR. SNEDDON: I’m trying to go back and 22 satisfy your -- 23 MR. SANGER: The objection is asked and 24 answered. 25 THE COURT: Overruled. Go ahead. 26 THE WITNESS: Yes, I was. 27 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: And did you also -- were 28 you present on the 12th -- I mean, on the 4th of 12364 1 December of 2004 during the time that you were out 2 there when the chimes were activated? 3 A. Yes, I was. 4 Q. And did you personally participate in 5 experiments to determine how the various chimes were 6 activated? 7 A. Yes, I did. 8 Q. And did you personally observe the sensors 9 that activated certain portions of the chimes? 10 A. Yes, I did. 11 Q. And did you personally hear those chimes 12 when they were activated? 13 A. Yes, I did. 14 Q. Now, with regard to -- we’re going to put 15 some photographs up on the board. 16 Are you also familiar with the mechanism by 17 which the door -- by which entry into the door of 18 the suite to Mr. Jackson’s bedroom can be accessed? 19 A. Yes, I am. 20 Q. All right. Now, let’s put some photographs 21 up on the board. And let’s begin with 160. 22 All right. Do you recognize what’s depicted 23 in the photograph People’s Exhibit 160 in evidence? 24 A. Yes, I do. 25 Q. Would you tell the jury what that is? 26 A. That is a curtain motion sensor. It is 27 mounted on the ceiling and it sends down what can 28 probably be best described as a blanket of the 12365 1 sensor, and as soon as you walk into that blanket, 2 it would then set off whatever it’s supposed to set 3 off. 4 Q. And in this case -- 5 MR. SANGER: Excuse me, I’m sorry. I’m 6 going to move to strike the answer as being an 7 opinion without a foundation. 8 THE COURT: Sustained. 9 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: In this particular case, 10 did you actually conduct experiments with regard to 11 this particular sensor as depicted in the 12 photograph, Exhibit 160? 13 A. Yes, I did. 14 Q. As you walked past the sensor, what 15 happened? 16 A. As I walked underneath the sensor, the alarm 17 sounded within the living space of the master 18 bedroom suite. 19 Q. And could you tell the jury where this 20 particular sensor is located in the hallway to Mr. 21 Jackson’s bedroom? 22 A. That sensor is located just outside of the 23 door that leads into the living space of Michael 24 Jackson’s master bedroom suite. 25 Q. All right. Now, let’s -- let’s turn to 157. 26 Do you recognize what’s depicted in the 27 photograph 157? 28 A. Yes, I do. 12366 1 Q. In particular, do you recognize what’s 2 depicted, the little white -- what appears to be a 3 white rectangular box in the middle -- in the center 4 of the photograph? 5 A. Yes, I do. 6 Q. And what is that? 7 A. That is the alarm enunciator, which was set 8 off when you broke the plane of the curtain sensor 9 that was on the ceiling outside of his bedroom. 10 Q. Now, was there more than one curtain sensor 11 outside of Mr. Jackson’s bedroom? 12 A. Yes, there was. 13 Q. Was there a second sensor? 14 A. There was a second sensor that was located 15 down the hallway, just prior, at the doorway leading 16 into what I guess could be called a foyer or 17 entryway to the house. 18 Q. So that if you’re in the foyer and you open 19 the doors and walk through those doors down the 20 hallway to Mr. Jackson’s bedroom, there’s a sensor 21 up by those doors? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. And do they activate a chime within the 24 room? 25 A. During the -- on both November 18th, 2003, 26 and December 4th, 2004, there was no activation of 27 an enunciator within the room when you walked under 28 those -- the curtain sensor that was closest to the 12367 1 foyer. 2 Q. Now, you had occasion to review the defense 3 exhibit that was admitted in this case with regard 4 to the three scenes where the maid was asked to walk 5 out the door and down the hallway, correct? 6 A. That’s correct. 7 Q. In those particular scenes that you 8 observed, the sensor at the far end of the hallway 9 near where the doors from the foyer are was working 10 during the course of those videos, correct? 11 A. I believe -- 12 MR. SANGER: Objection. Move to strike the 13 answer for the purpose of objecting. There’s no 14 foundation for this opinion. 15 THE COURT: Well, sustained, the foundation 16 objection. 17 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Were you present on the 18 18th of November of 2003 where you saw people walk 19 through the entryway, through those doors from the 20 foyer into the hallway, to begin to walk down to Mr. 21 Jackson’s bedroom? Were you present and did you 22 hear any alarm go off when they did that? 23 A. No. 24 MR. SANGER: Objection. Wait, excuse me. 25 Objection. That’s compound. And I move to strike 26 the answer, because it would be without foundation 27 as to at least one of those two parts. 28 MR. SNEDDON: Judge, I asked him if he was 12368 1 present. 2 THE COURT: All right. I’ll overrule the 3 objection. The question is basically whether he 4 heard an alarm go off on that date when someone 5 walked under the sensor, right? 6 MR. SNEDDON: That’s basically it, when he 7 was present. 8 MR. SANGER: And the objection is -- yeah, 9 the objection is no foundation that he was present 10 while somebody was walking under that sensor. 11 THE COURT: All right. The objection is 12 overruled. 13 Do you understand the question? 14 THE WITNESS: I do. 15 And the answer is that, yes, I was there, 16 and, no, it did not activate anything when somebody 17 walked under the sensor. 18 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Was that the same situation 19 in December when you went -- December of 2004 when 20 you went back? 21 A. That’s correct. 22 Q. Now, so we could probably orient this for 23 the ladies and gentlemen, the exhibit that’s on the 24 board there, which is 160, I believe. 25 MR. NICOLA: 157. 26 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: 157, the one with the white 27 box in the middle, can you tell the ladies and 28 gentlemen of the jury, where is that located in Mr. 12369 1 Jackson’s bedroom? Is it on -- let’s start, first 2 of all, is it on the first floor or on the second 3 floor? 4 A. It’s on the first floor in the living area 5 of the master bedroom suite. 6 Q. Where in the living area of the suite? 7 A. It was located underneath a bookcase/cabinet 8 that was backed against a wall nearest the -- as 9 you’re walking into the room, the left bathroom. 10 Q. Would that be the bathroom where the Jacuzzi 11 is? 12 A. That’s correct. 13 Q. All right. Now, did you determine that -- 14 that there was another one of these devices that’s 15 depicted in the photograph, 157, within the room? 16 A. That’s correct. 17 Q. Where was the second device located? 18 A. It was located on the ground, underneath a 19 red and gold chair, also could be considered a 20 throne, I suppose. 21 Q. Where was that located in Mr. Jackson’s 22 bedroom? 23 A. That was located against the same wall, but 24 this chair was located immediately next to the 25 doorway that led into the right bathroom where -- 26 the bathroom that had the stairwell leading to the 27 upstairs sleeping quarters. 28 Q. Now, on -- in December of 2004 when you were 12370 1 out there, did you participate in some -- did you 2 personally participate in some experiments to 3 determine whether or not the device located under 4 the throne chair, that’s similar to the one depicted 5 in 157, was working? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. Did you determine whether or not it was 8 working? 9 A. There was at no point in time, in walking 10 under any of the sensors, that that enunciator was 11 activated. 12 Q. So you call it an enunciator; is that 13 correct? 14 A. That’s the correct terminology. 15 Q. But the one depicted in 157, over by the 16 entrance to the bathroom where the Jacuzzi is, was 17 working? 18 A. It was working, correct. 19 Q. Now, on November the 18th of 2003, when you 20 went out to execute the search warrant - okay? - on 21 that particular occasion, did you personally 22 determine whether or not the enunciator that was 23 located under the throne seat, as you referred to 24 it, was working on that date? 25 MR. SANGER: That would be a “yes” or “no.” 26 Otherwise, I have an objection. 27 THE COURT: Okay. Answer “yes” or “no” only. 28 THE WITNESS: Yes. 12371 1 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: You were able to make a 2 determination? “Yes” or “no.” 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. And what was it? 5 MR. SANGER: I’m going to object. No 6 foundation. 7 THE COURT: Overruled. 8 You may answer. 9 THE WITNESS: It was not working. 10 Q. All right. Let’s show the last photograph. 11 That should get us through the rest of the day. 12 This is 159 in evidence, and particularly I want to 13 direct your attention to the small white device that 14 is located by the doorway. 15 First of all, do you know what that is? 16 A. Yes, I do. 17 Q. And how do you know what it is? 18 A. Because I was present when the security 19 personnel analyzed it, and I also tested that 20 object. 21 Q. Yourself? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. All right. And what is that? What function 24 does it serve? 25 MR. SANGER: I’m going to object. 26 THE WITNESS: It’s a motion sensor. 27 MR. SANGER: I’m going to object. It calls 28 for hearsay. 12372 1 THE COURT: Overruled. 2 You may answer. 3 THE WITNESS: It is a motion sensor that, 4 when activated, unlocks the entry/exit doors to 5 Mr. Jackson’s personal bedroom, allowing a person to 6 walk out without needing a key. 7 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Okay. So, the view that 8 the jury has of this particular exhibit, and let’s 9 direct your attention directly to the door itself, 10 where would you be standing if you were looking at 11 that door? 12 A. You are inside Mr. Jackson’s living area of 13 his personal bedroom, looking out into the hallway 14 which leads to the foyer. 15 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I think this would 16 be an appropriate time to -- 17 THE COURT: All right. We’ll take our 18 recess. See you tomorrow, 8:30. Remember the 19 admonition. 20 (The proceedings adjourned at 2:30 p.m.) 21 --o0o-- 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 12373 1 REPORTER’S CERTIFICATE 2 3 4 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ) 5 CALIFORNIA, ) 6 Plaintiff, ) 7 -vs- ) No. 1133603 8 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 9 Defendant. ) 10 11 12 I, MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR 13 #3304, Official Court Reporter, do hereby certify: 14 That the foregoing pages 12213 through 12373 15 contain a true and correct transcript of the 16 proceedings had in the within and above-entitled 17 matter as by me taken down in shorthand writing at 18 said proceedings on May 26, 2005, and thereafter 19 reduced to typewriting by computer-aided 20 transcription under my direction. 21 DATED: Santa Maria, California, 22 May 26, 2005. 23 24 25 26 27 MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 12374