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Prosecutor, Phil Spector's attorneys spar over defense expert's testimony in murder trial

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LINDA DEUTSCH
About 2 pages (658 words)

AP Features, August 16th, 2007

A prosecutor in Phil Spector's murder trial sought to show that conclusions of a leading forensic expert were compromised because his wife is a defense attorney in the case.

Deputy District Attorney Alan Jackson, focusing much of his cross-examination Wednesday on the relationship between Dr. Michael Baden and his wife, Linda Kenney-Baden, has suggested to jurors they cannot trust his opinions because he has a conflict of interest.

Baden adamantly denied the implication and indicated he had largely formed his opinions in the case before his wife was hired to join Spector's defense team. At the time she signed on, he said, she met with Spector to make sure he would be comfortable with both Badens being involved.

Jackson also challenged Baden on a conclusion he reached only recently: That the spinal cord of the actress Spector is accused of killing was not completely severed when a bullet tore through her mouth on Feb. 3, 2003. The opinion supports defense claims that Lana Clarkson could have spewed blood onto Spector's jacket with her dying gasps.

Jackson angrily accused Baden of inventing the theory to bolster the defense case, which Baden said was "completely untrue."

"And you just came up with this epiphany on Sunday?" Jackson asked.

"Yes," Baden said.

Spector, 67, is accused of shooting Clarkson, 40, to death at his suburban Alhambra mansion 4 1/2 years ago, hours after she went home with him from her job as a House of Blues hostess.

When police arrived in response to an early morning emergency call from Spector's chauffeur, Clarkson's body was slumped in a chair in the foyer, a purse strap over one shoulder. The gun was on the floor below her.

Throughout the trial, the prosecution has attacked all the defense experts as hired guns paid high prices to deliver opinions favorable to Spector. The experts have denied this, noting that they frequently testify for prosecutors in other cases.

Baden noted Wednesday that his wife has been seriously ill for several weeks and unable to participate in the trial. She did not influence his testimony, he said.

Baden said there was an agreement from the beginning that his wife would not question him if and when he took the witness stand.

"And the reason your wife would never take you on direct (examination) is because the conflict would be so glaring," Jackson said.

"No," said Baden. "It's because someone like you would make it appear dirty and it would harm the client."

Baden, a forensic pathologist, also denied he had any influence on other experts who have testified on gunshots and blood spatter. He said others were far more expert than he in those areas.

Baden first mentioned his theory about Clarkson's spinal cord in testimony Tuesday, leading to a heated session outside the jury's presence. Prosecutors accused defense attorneys of withholding information from them, and Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler agreed, saying the defense had violated discovery laws.

Baden's theory offers an explanation of how Spector could have gotten specks of blood on his jacket if he did not shoot her, which prosecutors contend he did.

A prosecution expert has testified that Spector had to be within 2 or 3 feet (60 or 90 centimeters) for blood backspatter to land on his jacket, and the coroner who performed the autopsy told the jury that Clarkson's severed spine would have caused almost instantaneous death and she would not have exhaled or expelled blood forcefully.

Spector's lawyers say Clarkson was depressed and shot herself.

Baden, like other defense pathologists, said he believed Clarkson died of a self-inflicted gunshot.

"I think she may have been playing with the weapon or looking at it or being reckless with it. I would not say suicide. I would say self-inflicted," he said. He also testified she was under the influence of alcohol and Vicodin which may have impaired her judgment and she may not have known that the gun was loaded.

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LINDA DEUTSCH. Prosecutor, Phil Spector's attorneys spar over defense expert's testimony in murder trial. Copyright 2007  AP Features.

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