Robert Allen Stratbucker, M.D - Wolf Case - May 30, 2002

Discussion in 'Transcripts: Ramsey murder case' started by Moab, Sep 14, 2010.

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  1. Moab

    Moab Admin Staff Member

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    1 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA
    2 ATLANTA DIVISION
    3
    ROBERT CHRISTIAN WOLF,
    4 Plaintiff,
    5 CIVIL ACTION FILE
    vs.
    6 NO. 00-CIV-1187(JEC)
    7 JOHN BENNETT RAMSEY and
    PATRICIA PAUGH RAMSEY,
    8 Defendants.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    9
    10
    VIDEOTAPED DEPOSITION OF
    11
    ROBERT ALLEN STRATBUCKER, M.D.
    12
    13 May 30, 2002
    11:02 a.m.
    14
    1025 Howard Street
    15 Omaha, Nebraska
    16
    Alexander J. Gallo, CCR-B-1332, CRR
    17
    18
    19
    20
    21
    22
    23
    24
    25
    00002
    1 APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL
    2 On behalf of the Plaintiff:
    3 (via telephonic means)
    4 DARNAY HOFFMAN, Esq.
    5 Law Offices of Darnay Hoffman
    6 Suite 209
    7 210 West 70th Street
    8 New York, New York 10023
    9 (212) 712-2766
    10 On behalf of the Defendants:
    11 JAMES C. RAWLS, Esq.
    12 ERIC P. SCHROEDER, Esq.
    13 Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy, L.L.P.
    14 Sixteenth Floor
    15 191 Peachtree Street, N.E.
    16 Atlanta, Georgia 30303
    17 (404) 572-6600
    18 L. LIN WOOD, Esq.
    19 MATTHEW WOOD
    20 L. Lin Wood, P.C.
    21 2140 The Equitable Building
    22 100 Peachtree Street
    23 Atlanta, Georgia 30303
    24 (404) 522-1713
    25 Also Present: J. Rollins, Videographer
    00003
    1 Deposition Robert A. Stratbucker, M.D.
    2 May 30, 2002
    3 (Defendants' Exhibit-1, Exhibit-2 and
    4 Exhibit-3 were marked for identification.)
    5 THE VIDEOGRAPHER: This is the
    6 beginning of videotape No. 1 of the deposition
    7 of Robert A. Stratbucker, M.D., M.S., Ph.D.,
    8 P.E., being taken on May 30 of the year 2002
    9 in Omaha, Nebraska.
    10 Counsel will now introduce themselves.
    11 MR. WOOD: My name is Lin Wood. I
    12 am one of the attorneys for the defendants John
    13 and Patsy Ramsey. With me from my office is
    14 Matthew Wood, legal assistant.
    15 Go ahead, Derek.
    16 MR. BAUER: Derek Bauer with the law
    17 offices of Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy in
    18 Atlanta, also on behalf of Patsy and John
    19 Ramsey.
    20 MR. RAWLS: Jim Rawls from Powell,
    21 Goldstein in Atlanta on behalf of John and Patsy
    22 Ramsey.
    23 MR. HOFFMAN: I am Darnay Hoffman
    24 appearing on behalf of Chris Wolf by
    25 teleconference phone in New York City.
    00004
    1 MR. WOOD: Everybody good to go?
    2 MR. HOFFMAN: Ready to go.
    3 MR. WOOD: This will, in fact, be
    4 the deposition of Dr. Robert A. Stratbucker, an
    5 individual who has been identified as an expert
    6 witness for the plaintiff Chris Wolf in this
    7 case and who has submitted a Rule 26 Expert
    8 Witness Report.
    9 The deposition is being taken
    10 pursuant to agreement of counsel and pursuant to
    11 an amended notice of deposition which is dated
    12 May 16, 2002, which I have marked for purposes
    13 of identification, Darnay, as Defendants' Exhibit
    14 1.
    15 MR. HOFFMAN: Thank you, Lin.
    16 MR. WOOD: And the deposition will
    17 be taken for all permissible purposes under the
    18 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, including
    19 discovery, cross-examination and, if appropriate,
    20 use as evidence at trial.
    21 All objections except as to the form
    22 of the question or the responsiveness of the
    23 answer will be reserved until the time of trial,
    24 hearing, or other formal use of the deposition.
    25 Are those stipulations agreeable with
    00005
    1 you, Darnay?
    2 MR. HOFFMAN: Yes, Lin, thank you.
    3 They are agreeable to me.
    4 ROBERT A. STRATBUCKER, having been
    5 first duly sworn, was examined and testified as
    6 follows:
    7 EXAMINATION
    8 BY-MR.WOOD:
    9 Q. For the record would you state your
    10 full name for the record, please, sir?
    11 A. Robert Allen Stratbucker.
    12 Q. And there are a host of appropriate
    13 initials after your name. You are a medical
    14 doctor among other degrees that you hold; am I
    15 right?
    16 A. Yes.
    17 Q. And I will address you as Dr.
    18 Stratbucker, which is appropriate.
    19 Dr. Stratbucker, I've introduced
    20 myself to you. I'm Lin Wood and along with
    21 Mr. Rawls and Derek Bauer, we represent John and
    22 Patsy Ramsey, the parents of JonBenet Ramsey who
    23 was murdered in December of 1996 in Boulder,
    24 Colorado. You understand that, don't you?
    25 A. Yes.
    00006
    1 Q. And you understand that you have
    2 been retained as an expert witness for an
    3 individual named Chris Wolf, who is the
    4 plaintiff in a lawsuit alleging libel filed
    5 against Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey that pends in the
    6 federal court in Atlanta, Georgia. Do you
    7 understand that?
    8 A. Yes, I do.
    9 Q. When were you retained in this case,
    10 sir?
    11 A. About eight months ago.
    12 Q. Can you date that for me with --
    13 A. Well, I would have to check my
    14 record to be precise about it.
    15 Q. If you would do that, I would
    16 appreciate it. I would like a precise date.
    17 A. Well, the most precise date I can
    18 give you is February 26 of this year, 2002,
    19 which is the date of my report; however, I was
    20 engaged prior to that. And the precise date of
    21 that I can only estimate. I would say it was
    22 about two months prior to that. It would be
    23 about eight months ago.
    24 Q. So you dated -- your best date, it
    25 would be December 2001 or January 2002?
    00007
    1 A. Yes.
    2 Q. Do you recall the manner in which
    3 you were first contacted?
    4 A. I was contacted by telephone by Mr.
    5 Hoffman.
    6 Q. Let me tell you that I understand
    7 that you are an extremely busy expert for Mr.
    8 Hoffman, and I understand that you had to do a
    9 fair amount of juggling of your schedule to
    10 change this deposition from the date of the
    11 28th, I believe, to today, the 30th to
    12 accommodate my desire to do some family things
    13 over the weekend. I appreciate that.
    14 How many depositions have you given
    15 this month?
    16 A. This month I have not given any.
    17 Q. How many court appearances have you
    18 made this month?
    19 A. None this month.
    20 Q. How many active cases are you
    21 presently engaged in as an expert witness?
    22 A. Probably four.
    23 Q. And what do you do with your time
    24 other than your consultant work as an expert
    25 witness?
    00008
    1 A. Well, I maintain a part-time medical
    2 practice. I am retired from full-time medical
    3 practice at this point. And I have a number
    4 of other biomedical engineering type enterprises
    5 that I am involved in, principally a
    6 development, research and development company of
    7 my own which does development of medical
    8 devices, diagnostic and therapeutic medical
    9 devices.
    10 And, for example, over the last
    11 month, I have had occasion to be in Mainland
    12 China for probably three weeks and other travel
    13 related to that activity.
    14 Q. What type of diagnostic and
    15 therapeutic medical devices have been developed
    16 by your company?
    17 A. Cardiologic, primarily.
    18 Q. So there is no misunderstanding, what
    19 do you mean in lay terms when you say
    20 cardiologic?
    21 A. Devices that relate to the diagnosis
    22 of heart disease and therapeutic devices that
    23 relate to the treatment of heart disease.
    24 Q. You have served as an expert witness
    25 in civil litigation in the past as well as
    00009
    1 criminal matters; is that true?
    2 A. Yes, I have.
    3 Q. Give me your best estimate, Dr.
    4 Stratbucker, I am not trying to hold you to a
    5 precise figure, but give me your best estimate
    6 as to the amount of money, gross revenue that
    7 you received in the year 2001 in your capacity
    8 as a consultant/expert witness in civil or
    9 criminal litigation.
    10 A. I would say $75,000.
    11 Q. How are we doing this year, 2002?
    12 A. About on -- about average, about the
    13 same.
    14 Q. How long has that figure been about
    15 the average, $75,000 a year?
    16 A. I would say it is higher now. It
    17 has been increasing over the years; but as an
    18 average, I would say for a good ten years,
    19 probably.
    20 Q. Are you on a regular retainer as a
    21 consultant/expert for any company?
    22 A. I have been with some companies and
    23 now with different companies.
    24 Companies are acquired, and those
    25 things change from time to time; but it has
    00010
    1 been a relatively constant average.
    2 Q. As we sit here today, what company,
    3 or companies, pays you a regular retainer to
    4 serve as a consultant/expert witness?
    5 A. Within this last month, we have
    6 managed to negotiate a contract with the
    7 Department of Defense, which is actually
    8 channeled through TASER International in Phoenix,
    9 Arizona, a research project for the Marine
    10 Corps. And that is a sizable research program
    11 that I am very much involved in and one of the
    12 reasons I have been so tied up this month.
    13 Q. Are you paid by check from the
    14 United States Treasury or are you paid by check
    15 from TASER International?
    16 A. I am paid by check from TASER
    17 International. They are the fiscal repository
    18 for the grant funds.
    19 Q. And that only came up within the
    20 last month?
    21 A. Yes.
    22 Q. Let me hand you what has been marked
    23 for purposes of identification to your deposition
    24 as Defendants' Exhibit-2.
    25 And also while you are looking at
    00011
    1 that, let me hand you what has been marked for
    2 purposes of identification as Defendants'
    3 Exhibit-3 and ask you to just look through
    4 those. A couple of quick questions to ask you
    5 about them.
    6 A. All right.
    7 Q. In fact, Defendants' Exhibit 2, that
    8 is a true and correct and complete copy of the
    9 Rule 26 expert report that you have prepared,
    10 signed, and submitted in this lawsuit, true?
    11 A. It is nearly complete. I noted in
    12 one of the copies that's here that there was a
    13 page missing out of the autopsy report that is
    14 contained in this. And I have supplemented that
    15 with a page from another source.
    16 Q. Page 4 was missing from your report?
    17 A. Page 4 was missing, yes.
    18 Q. With the addition of page 4 of the
    19 autopsy report on JonBenet Ramsey, does, in
    20 fact, Defendants' Exhibit 2 represent a true and
    21 correct and complete copy of your Rule 26 Expert
    22 Witness Report?
    23 A. Yes, it does.
    24 Q. And you stand by your report; do you
    25 not, sir?
    00012
    1 A. Yes, I do.
    2 Q. Is there anything that you would
    3 like to change in that report before we question
    4 you about it today?
    5 A. No.
    6 Q. You also, as part of that report,
    7 have supplied us with a copy of your most
    8 recent CV, your curriculum vitae; have you not?
    9 A. Yes.
    10 Q. And it is a true and -- I was
    11 impressed with the thoroughness of it. You even
    12 went back to age 19 when you were working at
    13 WOW TV or radio, the Johnny Carson Show. It's
    14 very thorough in terms of describing your
    15 professional endeavors and work experience; is it
    16 not, sir?
    17 A. I hope it is, yes.
    18 Q. And you intended it to be; did you
    19 not?
    20 A. Yes.
    21 Q. So that we can go there and we can
    22 find out where you worked professionally, right?
    23 A. Yes.
    24 Q. We can find out who you worked for
    25 in terms of your professional endeavors; can we
    00013
    1 not, sir?
    2 A. I think you can, yes.
    3 Q. Do you stand by that CV as being
    4 complete and accurate?
    5 A. It might have a typographical error
    6 here and there, but --
    7 Q. We will forgive that.
    8 A. -- for the most part, it is accurate
    9 and complete.
    10 Q. Well, you say for the most part.
    11 Is there any part, other than typographical
    12 errors, that you have some concerns about in
    13 terms of it being accurate and complete?
    14 A. Only that I think it has not been
    15 updated for about -- I had it retyped, but I
    16 didn't update it in preparation for this
    17 deposition because of some requirements of the
    18 type of display, the font size and so forth.
    19 When I did that, it changed the pagination and
    20 so forth of the thing. It is different than
    21 it was. But I did not update it to include,
    22 for example, the items that I've just testified
    23 to in connection with the Marine Corps and some
    24 of the things that have happened within the last
    25 few months.
    00014
    1 Q. I want to get those updated. So
    2 tell me, other than -- and you say the Marine
    3 Corps. Is that the Department of Defense
    4 deal --
    5 A. Yes.
    6 Q. -- that's channeled through TASER
    7 International?
    8 A. That is correct.
    9 Q. And that has been only in the last
    10 month, right?
    11 A. Well, it has been in preparation for
    12 a long time. But, I mean, it is a research
    13 and development contract that has been in
    14 preparation for well over a year, but the award
    15 had only been made within the last month.
    16 Q. Anything else that you want to add
    17 to your CV in terms of updating it other than
    18 the Marine Corps, Department of Defense, TASER
    19 International contract that you've just described
    20 for me?
    21 A. Well, there are a number of other
    22 items that I referred to in connection with my
    23 travels and so on. I am actively pursuing
    24 those. Those are -- for example, there is a
    25 proposition outstanding with a major Chinese
    00015
    1 company to take on the manufacturing of a device
    2 that I have developed here in Nebraska and have
    3 got patent coverage and trademark coverage on
    4 and so forth which lends itself to manufacturing
    5 in the Chinese economy. And I have been very
    6 active in the development of that line of
    7 activity.
    8 Q. What is that device?
    9 A. It is the -- the trade name of it
    10 is an Omnitrode, O-M-N-I-T-R-O-D-E. It is a
    11 specialized piece of actual apparatus that a
    12 patient wears in order to supply a very
    13 comprehensive and complete line of cardiac data
    14 to a computer system that in turn does various
    15 kinds of pattern recognition, data compression
    16 and so forth on the signal. It is integrated
    17 into a complete system.
    18 My colleagues in Houston have been
    19 working primarily on the electronic aspects of
    20 it, and I have been working on the front end
    21 or data acquisition aspects of it for a number
    22 of years, and I am very actively involved in
    23 that.
    24 Q. So we have the Omnitrode and we have
    25 got the contract with the government through
    00016
    1 TASER International. Any other things that you
    2 need to give me to make sure that we have
    3 updated your CV before we leave here today?
    4 A. Those are the principal technical
    5 aspects of things, and I still maintain a number
    6 of local business enterprises that take up a
    7 significant amount of my time. We happen to be
    8 sitting in one right now.
    9 Q. The bank?
    10 A. Well, the building.
    11 Q. You own this building?
    12 A. Not the bank, but the building that
    13 the bank is in is a building where I rent
    14 space and operate some commercial enterprises.
    15 Q. You do your fruit and vegetables
    16 deal on Saturday, still?
    17 A. That's right.
    18 Q. Your dad Herman, right?
    19 A. Exactly right. Thank you for being
    20 so perceptive.
    21 Q. You still work in the land? I know
    22 you went back in, what, '91, to help him out?
    23 A. That is correct, yes.
    24 Q. And do you still do that?
    25 A. Very much so.
    00017
    1 Q. Still do the corn, half yellow, half
    2 white?
    3 A. Yes. Still deal with people in
    4 Georgia for plants and so on.
    5 Q. Good for you.
    6 You recognize, Dr. Stratbucker, from
    7 your involvement as an expert witness what your
    8 role is; do you not?
    9 A. Yes.
    10 Q. How would you describe your role as
    11 an expert witness in the litigation?
    12 A. Well, I describe my role as being
    13 somewhat similar to my role as a teacher for
    14 most of my professional life. And the purpose
    15 of an expert witness is to teach the judge
    16 and/or jury, the court, on matters which may be
    17 unfamiliar with them and to make it possible to
    18 properly assess evidence and so forth in the
    19 face of unfamiliar, particularly high technology
    20 sorts of things.
    21 Q. Areas of expertise that are generally
    22 considered to be beyond that of the knowledge of
    23 a lay person?
    24 A. Yes.
    25 Q. And one of your roles, and I think
    00018
    1 you view it as an important one, is to educate
    2 the court, the jury, on scientific information?
    3 A. Correct.
    4 Q. You also are called on, you
    5 recognize, to take a certain set of facts and
    6 to render opinions from those facts, true?
    7 A. Yes.
    8 Q. And you recognize that as an expert
    9 witness it is not your role to create facts; am
    10 I right?
    11 A. Yes.
    12 Q. You are not and would not
    13 misrepresent facts or mislead anyone with respect
    14 to the facts upon which you give your opinions,
    15 true?
    16 A. That is very true.
    17 Q. And you are not taking sides here;
    18 are you, sir?
    19 A. No.
    20 Q. I mean, you come into this dedicated
    21 to the concept of your role is to be fair,
    22 right?
    23 A. Yes.
    24 Q. To be honest, right?
    25 A. Correct.
    00019
    1 Q. To be unbiased and objective, true?
    2 A. Yes.
    3 Q. And if I were to present you with
    4 factual information, photographic or otherwise,
    5 and you felt like the information that I have
    6 presented you with established that JonBenet
    7 Ramsey had marks on her body that are consistent
    8 with the application of a stun gun, you wouldn't
    9 hesitate to say that; would you, sir?
    10 A. If I -- if it is all as you just
    11 represented, that is correct. If all of the
    12 evidence that you are referring to is
    13 scientifically defensible, I would not have any
    14 reservations about it, no.
    15 Q. You do not have any agenda here,
    16 hidden or otherwise; do you, sir?
    17 A. No, sir, I do not.
    18 Q. How much money does TASER
    19 International pay you each month?
    20 A. It's difficult to say because we are
    21 just embarking on this now for the first time;
    22 and I bill my time at a hourly rate, which
    23 happens to be $125 an hour. And I have yet
    24 actually to submit a bill. I need to do that
    25 in the next probably day or two to finish out
    00020
    1 this month, which is the first active month of
    2 this program.
    3 Q. So you have never received any money
    4 from TASER International?
    5 A. No.
    6 Q. They don't pay you in your job as
    7 medical director for TASER International?
    8 A. Well, that is a very recent
    9 description or title. And, in fact, I have not
    10 been paid a cent for that up to this point.
    11 Now, I have some anticipation that that will
    12 change, particularly since the Marine Corps grant
    13 or contract, actually, was approved.
    14 Q. How recent has that title been
    15 bestowed upon you, Medical Director for TASER
    16 International, Inc.?
    17 A. Well, I think it has been talked
    18 about now for a couple of months. As to
    19 whether it was a proper designation of the kind
    20 of activity that I will be involved in, I have
    21 actually commenced over the last probably 60
    22 days to take on the role of an on-call medical
    23 advisor, medical director, if you will, to
    24 handle problems that come up in the field
    25 related to their devices that they market, the
    00021
    1 TASER in particular.
    2 And because I have -- I thought when
    3 I finished and retired from medical practice
    4 that my on-call days and weekends and nights and
    5 so forth were going to be freed up some, but I
    6 have now jumped right back into the fire from
    7 the frying pan, I think, carrying a full-time
    8 pager so that I can be reached at a moment's
    9 notice and that sort of thing.
    10 Q. By TASER International?
    11 A. Yes. Well, by -- and by -- and
    12 their customers.
    13 Q. Well, let me, because you indicated
    14 that you had talked about the title for a
    15 couple of months and as to whether it was a
    16 proper designation that you will be involved in
    17 or not.
    18 Just plain and simple, do you hold
    19 the position as the medical director for TASER
    20 International, Inc., the manufacturer of the Air
    21 TASER stun gun?
    22 A. Yes, I do.
    23 Q. How long have you held that
    24 position, sir?
    25 A. I would say, to be precise about it,
    00022
    1 it was formally announced at a meeting in Las
    2 Vegas two weeks ago.
    3 Q. Is that when you took on the role,
    4 two weeks ago?
    5 A. Well, I haven't been paid yet, so I
    6 don't know whether -- if it means I got a
    7 check from them, I haven't got a check from
    8 them.
    9 Q. Sir, it doesn't mean whether you got
    10 a check from them or not. You have a number
    11 of degrees. You are an educated man. You
    12 have been a businessman all of your life. It
    13 is a simple question.
    14 When did you become the medical
    15 director for TASER International, Inc.? Two
    16 weeks ago, two months ago? Tell me.
    17 A. Oh, I am not sure that I can say
    18 that I am even yet because I don't have cards.
    19 I don't have any -- I don't have an official
    20 statement from them. I don't have a letter.
    21 I don't have anything other than the
    22 presentation of myself as the newly appointed
    23 medical director of TASER International at their
    24 big annual meeting here a few weeks ago in Las
    25 Vegas.
    00023
    1 Q. So you would not have --
    2 MR. HOFFMAN: Lin, may I ask you a
    3 question?
    4 MR. WOOD: No. Ask me a question?
    5 MR. HOFFMAN: Yes. Are you asking
    6 him when he actually began performing any duties
    7 as a medical director for TASER?
    8 MR. WOOD: I am not. I am asking
    9 him when he became the medical director for
    10 TASER International, Inc., period. That's my
    11 question.
    12 MR. HOFFMAN: Okay. Thank you.
    13 Q. (By Mr. Wood) So you would not
    14 have represented yourself as a medical director
    15 for TASER International, Inc. until two weeks
    16 ago when the announcement was made in Las Vegas,
    17 right?
    18 A. It certainly would have been an
    19 unofficial or in the context of being that that
    20 was a discussion that was ongoing and it was
    21 highly likely that it would occur.
    22 Q. But it had not occurred prior to two
    23 weeks ago?
    24 A. Prior to two weeks ago, it had not
    25 occurred.
    00024
    1 Q. And you had not, as Mr. Hoffman
    2 suggested a good question, you had not taken on
    3 any actual job responsibilities as the medical
    4 director until two weeks ago; is that true?
    5 A. The job responsibility --
    6 Q. Is that true?
    7 A. That is true, yes.
    8 Q. And you don't know how much they are
    9 going to pay you for that job; do you?
    10 A. Yes.
    11 Q. How much?
    12 A. They proposed to pay me $1,000 a
    13 month as a retainer. The other activities will
    14 be over and above that.
    15 Q. And what about stock options, do you
    16 have any stock options in TASER International,
    17 Inc.?
    18 A. No, I don't.
    19 Q. Do you own any stock in that
    20 company?
    21 A. No.
    22 Q. Have you been made any promises that
    23 you would receive any such benefits --
    24 A. No.
    25 Q. -- from being associated with them?
    00025
    1 A. No, I have not.
    2 Q. Have you ever had any stock options?
    3 A. Yes.
    4 Q. In TASER International, Inc.?
    5 A. Yes.
    6 Q. Tell me about those.
    7 A. I was compensated by stock option
    8 exclusively for work that I did for them several
    9 years ago on animal studies for their device.
    10 Those options matured and were executed.
    11 Q. You purchased the stock?
    12 A. Yeah. And I purchased the stock,
    13 and I sold the stock. Actually I divided it
    14 up amongst my relatives is what I did with it.
    15 Q. How many shares of stock are we
    16 talking about?
    17 A. About 3,000.
    18 Q. How much profit did you make on that
    19 sale, gross?
    20 A. About $40,000.
    21 Q. $40,000 gross profit on the sale of
    22 the stock of TASER International, Inc.?
    23 A. Over the exercise price, yes.
    24 Q. Over the exercise price. TASER
    25 International, Inc. stock, right?
    00026
    1 A. Right.
    2 (Defendants' Exhibit-4 was marked for
    3 identification.)
    4 Q. (By Mr. Wood) Defendants' Exhibit-3.
    5 Let me have back No. 2.
    6 A. You want three?
    7 Q. I want No. 2. I want you to look
    8 at No. 3.
    9 In your Rule 26 report, you
    10 indicated that you had examined the nine-page
    11 autopsy report, correct?
    12 A. Correct.
    13 Q. And you had also examined four
    14 monochrome laser printer images, correct?
    15 A. Yes.
    16 Q. The four monochrome laser printer
    17 images you refer to in your report, Rule 26
    18 report, are the four monochrome laser images
    19 that have been marked for purposes of
    20 identification as Defendants' Exhibit 3; am I
    21 right?
    22 A. Yes. I think that is correct.
    23 Q. Let me hand you what has been marked
    24 for purposes of identification to your deposition
    25 as Defendants' Exhibit-4 and ask you to take a
    00027
    1 moment, Dr. Stratbucker, and ask you to review
    2 that letter, and I have some questions for you
    3 about that letter.
    4 A. All right.
    5 Q. Are you familiar with that letter,
    6 sir?
    7 A. Yes.
    8 Q. What is the date on the letter?
    9 A. January 16, 2002.
    10 Q. Five months ago?
    11 A. Yes.
    12 Q. Flip to the signature page, sir. Is
    13 that, in fact, your signature?
    14 A. Yes, it is.
    15 Q. And you wrote that letter, as
    16 indicated on it, in your capacity of being the
    17 medical director for TASER International, Inc.;
    18 did you not?
    19 A. Yes, I did.
    20 Q. Dr. Stratbucker, would you like to
    21 take a moment and reflect on your testimony
    22 given today under oath and give me the truth
    23 about your involvement as the medical director
    24 for TASER International, Inc., please, sir?
    25 Straightforward, without equivocation. Because
    00028
    1 we have got some explaining to do; do we not?
    2 A. I don't think so.
    3 Q. Well, why don't you clear it up
    4 because I've heard you earlier testify under
    5 oath that you have never represented yourself
    6 out to be the medical director of TASER
    7 International, Inc. prior to two weeks ago; and
    8 I have that letter where you have, in fact,
    9 represented yourself as such five months ago.
    10 And I would like to find out how I am not
    11 either understanding you or whether you have
    12 been candid with me about your role, financially
    13 and otherwise, with TASER International, Inc.,
    14 who just happens to be the manufacturer of the
    15 Air TASER stun gun which is one of the issues
    16 in this case. So why don't you explain that to
    17 me, please.
    18 A. I will be happy to, and I won't say
    19 anything different than I've already said. And
    20 that is that the official pronouncement of the
    21 company that I was the medical director of TASER
    22 International did not occur until two weeks ago.
    23 There had been discussions about it
    24 prior to that. And because of the urgency of
    25 this particular case in having a resolution, I
    00029
    1 think I authored this thing and put my name on
    2 it as medical director. But I have not
    3 received any money as medical director, and I
    4 have not received a notification by the company
    5 that I am, in fact, a medical director. So I
    6 would have to say that this letter represents a
    7 kind of an interim activity.
    8 And I don't know that I would have
    9 accomplished anything by having said I am the
    10 medical director pro tem or something of the
    11 sort to author this letter and give it an air
    12 of officiality.
    13 I am not making any cover-up or
    14 anything of the sort. What I told you is
    15 exactly the state of affairs of my association
    16 with TASER.
    17 Q. Well, where did you get -- I mean,
    18 this isn't an interim letterhead; is it? This
    19 letter is written on the letterhead, both a
    20 cover, first page with full address, and the
    21 other pages --
    22 A. Yeah.
    23 Q. Excuse me.
    24 -- with the TASER International logo
    25 and address. Where did you get that stationery?
    00030
    1 A. Well, as you well know surrounded by
    2 computers as you are here today, you can make
    3 letterhead at the drop of a hat. So I think
    4 that letterhead actually came from an e-mail
    5 file that I then amended or added to in order
    6 to make a letter out of it.
    7 Q. You came up with this letterhead for
    8 TASER International on this letter?
    9 A. Yes, I have that letterhead on my
    10 computer. I can turn out a --
    11 Q. I am sorry?
    12 A. I can turn out a letter with
    13 letterhead under my own resources.
    14 Q. Is that the TASER International logo?
    15 A. Yes.
    16 Q. How did you get that?
    17 A. The same way I have all these
    18 photographs on my computer. That is --
    19 Q. Well, who sent it to you? Somebody
    20 had to send you the logo.
    21 A. I am sure that TASER sent it to me.
    22 Q. When?
    23 A. I couldn't tell you right now. I
    24 could check my computer to find out when.
    25 Q. Sir, you gave this report in federal
    00031
    1 court in Atlanta, Georgia, and you knew at the
    2 time that there were contentions that you were
    3 going to be addressing that involved the Air
    4 TASER stun gun manufactured by TASER
    5 International, true?
    6 A. No, I don't think that is true at
    7 all. I didn't -- there has been no evidence
    8 produced, to my knowledge, that there ever was
    9 an Air TASER involved in this case at all.
    10 Q. Listen very carefully.
    11 A. That's is somebody's imagination,
    12 maybe; but it is not any evidence available.
    13 Q. We will talk about people's
    14 imagination a little bit later on, but I didn't
    15 ask you that. Let me go back and restate my
    16 question.
    17 At the time that you submitted this
    18 report in federal court in Atlanta, Georgia, you
    19 knew at that time that there were contentions in
    20 this case that you were going to be addressing
    21 that involve the Air TASER stun gun manufactured
    22 by TASER International, true?
    23 A. No, not true.
    24 Q. You didn't believe that there was
    25 any contention made by the Ramseys that an Air
    00032
    1 TASER stun gun might have been used on their
    2 daughter? You didn't know that at the time you
    3 gave this report; did you?
    4 A. Yes, I knew that there was talk
    5 about that. There has been talk about it on
    6 national television, for heaven's sake. You
    7 would be hard pressed to not know that.
    8 Q. So you did, in fact, know at the
    9 time that you submitted this report in federal
    10 court that there were issues in this case
    11 involving the possible application of an Air
    12 TASER stun gun to JonBenet Ramsey, which stun
    13 gun was manufactured by TASER International,
    14 true?
    15 A. I have known that there was a
    16 contention that an Air TASER, because of its
    17 geometry, met some of the requirements of
    18 spacing and so forth; but I also know that no
    19 such Air TASER has ever been found other than
    20 by purchase by somebody who had maybe even a
    21 vested interest in all of this to cause the Air
    22 TASER to be implicated. But the Air TASER was
    23 not implicated by being a piece of evidence in
    24 this case.
    25 Q. Sir, I am going to get to your
    00033
    1 opinions. But I am going to get an answer, if
    2 I could, please, to my question whether it is
    3 true or not.
    4 Isn't it true, sir, that at the time
    5 you submitted your Rule 26 report in federal
    6 court in Atlanta, Georgia you knew that there
    7 were issues in this civil litigation involving
    8 the Air TASER stun gun manufactured by TASER
    9 International? Is that true or not?
    10 A. Well, it is true that I had heard
    11 such stories, but it is not true that I used
    12 the Air TASER as any foundation for my report.
    13 Q. You did not use the Air TASER stun
    14 gun as any foundation for your report; is that
    15 your testimony?
    16 A. I did not use the Air TASER as any
    17 evidential foundation for my report.
    18 Q. But you knew that there were issues
    19 raised about the Air TASER?
    20 A. Yes, I did.
    21 Q. Don't you think, sir, that you had
    22 an obligation and a responsibility in your
    23 report or in your curriculum vitae to inform the
    24 court and inform the jury about your connection
    25 with TASER International, Inc.?
    00034
    1 A. Well, I think if you look through my
    2 curriculum vitae, you will see references to
    3 TASER International in my vitae that has been
    4 around for a long time.
    5 Q. I am going to give you an
    6 opportunity in a moment to look through there
    7 and show me where there is any indication in
    8 that curriculum vitae about your involvement or
    9 employment or consultant's role with TASER
    10 International, Inc. But before we do that,
    11 don't you agree with me, sir, that that should
    12 have been clearly disclosed to the judge,
    13 ultimately if necessary to the jury and to the
    14 involved lawyers in this case?
    15 A. No, I don't think it should be.
    16 Q. Why not?
    17 A. Well, because it is all -- its
    18 involvement is all hypothetical and imaginary.
    19 It is not -- it's not -- there never has been
    20 a TASER involved in this case to anybody's
    21 knowledge that is other than just a supposition
    22 or an invention.
    23 Q. Or an opinion by an expert?
    24 A. Or an opinion.
    25 Q. By an expert, right?
    00035
    1 A. Which expert might you be referring
    2 to?
    3 Q. Well, maybe I am referring to the
    4 one that Mr. Hoffman referred to when he said
    5 that we were going to have one of your former
    6 colleagues and coauthors rebut your opinion in
    7 this case. You know Michael Doberson; do you
    8 not, sir?
    9 A. Indeed I do, yes.
    10 Q. Yes, sir. And you have respect for
    11 him; do you not, sir?
    12 A. I certainly do, yes, sir.
    13 Q. And have you been supplied by Mr.
    14 Hoffman with the Rule 26 report of Dr. Michael
    15 Doberson, a forensic pathologist and the coroner
    16 and medical examiner for Arapahoe County,
    17 Colorado?
    18 A. I only recently received it, but I
    19 do have that in my possession.
    20 Q. When did you recently receive it?
    21 A. I would say maybe a month or two
    22 ago. A month ago probably.
    23 Q. From Mr. Hoffman?
    24 A. Yes.
    25 Q. Why is it not in your file materials
    00036
    1 here this morning?
    2 A. Well, I think it is.
    3 Q. Well, I haven't been shown it.
    4 A. I have no reason to not -- the only
    5 copy I have is a fax copy, which is not a very
    6 legible one.
    7 Q. So if I understand -- is that
    8 something you can find for us during a break,
    9 perhaps?
    10 A. Yes.
    11 Q. Am I hearing you, sir, that you are
    12 telling me that you don't think that in all
    13 candor you should have disclosed your
    14 relationship with TASER International because it
    15 is your opinion that an Air TASER stun gun was
    16 not used on JonBenet Ramsey? Is that what you
    17 are telling me, sir?
    18 A. Could you ask that question again,
    19 please?
    20 Q. Yes, I will be glad to restate it.
    21 Are you telling me that you do not
    22 believe that candor and full disclosure required
    23 that you inform the court of your relationship
    24 with TASER International because in your opinion,
    25 an Air TASER stun gun was not used on JonBenet
    00037
    1 Ramsey? Is that your explanation as to why you
    2 didn't have to disclose that to the court?
    3 A. Well, it is not the explanation I --
    4 I can't imagine anything that I have ever done
    5 that could be construed as trying to hide the
    6 fact that I have no connection with the Air
    7 TASER company.
    8 And I have testified as an expert in
    9 many court proceedings in which the issue of
    10 whether or not I had any business connection
    11 with Air TASER had -- could have colored my
    12 opinion in any way, shape or form. That is a
    13 subject which, you know, all lawyers would love
    14 to dance on. And it is certainly, if anything,
    15 it may be a slight oversight on my part; but
    16 it is by no means a subterfuge or cover-up or
    17 anything of the kind. I am happy to tell you
    18 anything and everything that you wish to know
    19 about my association with Air TASER.
    20 Q. Well, we are going to get all that
    21 out today.
    22 A. All right.
    23 Q. Do you know Mr. Tuttle?
    24 A. Yes, I do.
    25 Q. Air TASER, TASER International?
    00038
    1 A. Yes.
    2 Q. Was TASER International formerly known
    3 as Air TASER?
    4 A. Yes, it was.
    5 Q. And you were back and forth with Mr.
    6 Tuttle by e-mails in 2001, I believe, with
    7 respect to Lou Smit's, former Homicide Detective
    8 Lou Smit's presentation on the NBC series; were
    9 you not?
    10 A. I think I did correspond with him,
    11 not because he arranged it, but because of this
    12 connection with Air TASER came up quite
    13 spontaneously. I had no idea where it came
    14 from with -- between myself and NBC.
    15 Q. You think you corresponded with, sir,
    16 or did you correspond with him?
    17 A. Well, I did correspond with him.
    18 Q. Thank you.
    19 A. I did correspond with him.
    20 Q. And you were corresponding with him
    21 on the question of whether or not Mr. Smit was
    22 right, scientifically or otherwise, about his
    23 belief that there were marks on JonBenet's body
    24 that were consistent with the application of an
    25 Air TASER stun gun, right?
    00039
    1 A. I -- I am sure there must be some
    2 wording in there in some correspondence or
    3 e-mail or whatever about that -- on that matter,
    4 yes.
    5 Q. And the reason that you are sure is
    6 because it is there, you remember doing it, in
    7 2001, right?
    8 A. Yes. Uh-huh (affirmative).
    9 Q. So in 2001, you are getting back and
    10 forth e-mails and discussions with Mr. Tuttle at
    11 Air TASER or TASER International, Inc. about
    12 whether one of that company's stun guns might
    13 have been used on JonBenet Ramsey; and then you
    14 represent in January of 2002 that are you the
    15 medical director for TASER International, Inc.;
    16 and you have previously done work that at least
    17 enriched you by some $40,000 from stock options
    18 that were exercised and subsequently sold. And
    19 you don't think that coming into this case to
    20 give a Rule 26 report as an expert witness in
    21 federal court that you had any responsibility,
    22 an obligation professionally to disclose your
    23 relationship with Air TASER or TASER
    24 International, Inc.; is that your testimony, sir?
    25 A. No, that is not my testimony.
    00040
    1 Q. Well, what is your testimony?
    2 A. My testimony is that I did not and
    3 still do not view it as a requirement anymore
    4 than I would have to disclose the fact that I
    5 have had associations with other stun gun
    6 companies over the years and done practically
    7 the same kind of thing for them that I have
    8 done for Air TASER.
    9 If, for example, this one, which is
    10 made in Taiwan and is prominently displayed in
    11 the work that Dr. Doberson and I did in
    12 Colorado several years ago, I didn't disclose
    13 the fact that I did a test for this company on
    14 their stun gun to determine its electrical
    15 characteristics.
    16 Q. Did you get involved in some civil
    17 litigation as an expert witness that involved
    18 that particular stun gun?
    19 A. Yes, I did.
    20 Q. And you didn't disclose in that
    21 litigation that you had worked for this company
    22 in the past?
    23 A. I did not disclose -- I probably
    24 presented the report that I did for them as the
    25 kind of evidence that usually is required in
    00041
    1 those cases.
    2 Q. Sir, you have a history of not
    3 disclosing information about your relationship
    4 with certain electronic firms?
    5 A. No, I don't have a history of any
    6 such a thing.
    7 Q. Well, you were -- there were two
    8 attempts to fire you from the faculty at the
    9 University of Nebraska Medical School because you
    10 refused to disclose your relationship as a
    11 consultant with Marquette Electronics, true?
    12 Is that true --
    13 A. Attempts.
    14 Q. -- or not, sir?
    15 A. Yes, sir.
    16 Q. Is that the truth?
    17 A. Right. That is the truth, yes, sir.
    18 Q. Yes, sir. And ultimately you --
    19 A. They didn't succeed, but it was the
    20 truth.
    21 Q. Well, they didn't succeed, if you
    22 want to be technical --
    23 A. Because they were wrong. They
    24 didn't succeed because they were wrong.
    25 Q. Let's talk about why they didn't
    00042
    1 succeed. They didn't succeed because they were
    2 not allowed to fire you for one year after you
    3 had been called back on active duty to take the
    4 place of a doctor here at the base who had
    5 gone over in Desert Storm --
    6 A. Uh-huh (affirmative).
    7 Q. -- and there was a law that said
    8 you can't fire somebody within a year of their
    9 being called up for active duty. That's why
    10 they didn't succeed; isn't that the truth, sir?
    11 A. That's a pretty good reason; isn't
    12 it, sir?
    13 Q. It's not because you acted properly
    14 in refusing to disclose your consultant
    15 relationship with Marquette Electronics?
    16 A. It turns out that my consultant
    17 arrangement with Marquette Electronics was, in
    18 fact, totally legitimate and totally sanctioned
    19 by the University.
    20 Q. Who tried to fire you twice because
    21 you wouldn't tell them what you were doing?
    22 A. No. They tried to fire me for a
    23 totally -- totally other reasons but --
    24 Q. What were the reasons?
    25 A. -- used that reason mistakenly and
    00043
    1 erroneously as an acceptable reason.
    2 Q. Why did they want to fire you, then?
    3 Why don't you tell us that?
    4 A. Well, I will be glad to tell you
    5 that.
    6 Q. Please do.
    7 A. The department chairman of the
    8 Radiology Department, University of Nebraska
    9 College of Medicine, was under the gun from the
    10 dean to perform in research and development.
    11 The Radiology Department had, over the years,
    12 come out dead last amongst the various competing
    13 departments in the medical school for research
    14 funds.
    15 And the department chairman, I think,
    16 thought that because I had known the founder of
    17 Marquette Electronics since the day he started
    18 the company in Milwaukee and that the chairman
    19 was, in fact, a Milwaukean by birth, that I
    20 would be a possible vehicle to attract corporate
    21 funds for the department to finally make some
    22 kind of showing in the area of research support
    23 for the Department of Radiology.
    24 When I accompanied the department
    25 chairman to Milwaukee to see if we could, in
    00044
    1 fact, get some corporate funds to support the
    2 research activities in the department, the
    3 president of Marquette said to me privately, he
    4 said: I wouldn't put my hard earned money in
    5 that department for anything. He said: I
    6 don't like that guy, and I don't think the
    7 University has the capability of coming up with
    8 any kind of results for my funding. So he
    9 turned thumbs down on the project.
    10 The dean was unhappy about it
    11 because the department chairman had told him he
    12 was in for a big surprise because Stratbucker
    13 was going to come up with a bunch of research
    14 money for the department. And that resulted in a
    15 scramble to try to figure out how to save the
    16 department chairman's job, and I ended up being
    17 the scapegoat for the whole thing on a
    18 subterfuge, basically an invention of what was
    19 called conflict of interest. He said I had a
    20 conflict of interest with a company and that was
    21 why they were terminating me from my job.
    22 I apologize for the digression in
    23 totally unrelated matters here, but you seem to
    24 be interested in it, so I --
    25 Q. I am interested in everything that
    00045
    1 you have to say, sir, because my clients, you
    2 understand, are being sued for $50 million by a
    3 lawyer and a plaintiff who allege that Patsy
    4 Ramsey brutally murdered her daughter; and you
    5 are their expert. And I am interested in
    6 everything about you. So don't hold back.
    7 A. It sounds like you have got it all
    8 well in hand, so.
    9 Q. We haven't gotten to the tip of the
    10 iceberg?
    11 A. Well, then let's go then.
    12 Q. We are going to go. But I am going
    13 to let you now take a moment, and I am going
    14 to let you look through your CV while we take
    15 a brief recess, and you are going to find for
    16 me the references to Air TASER or TASER
    17 International that you said were there indicating
    18 your involvement with that company. And also if
    19 you would get Doberson's report for us.
    20 MR. HOFFMAN: Lin, I don't know how
    21 you are set up out there. Is it possible for
    22 Dr. Stratbucker and I just to consult for a few
    23 minutes during this break?
    24 MR. WOOD: Absolutely.
    25 THE VIDEOGRAPHER: Counsel, we are
    00046
    1 off the record at 11:02 a.m.
    2 (A recess was taken.)
    3 (Defendants' Exhibit-5 was marked for
    4 identification.)
    5 THE VIDEOGRAPHER: Counsel, we are
    6 back on record at 11:39 a.m.
    7 Q. (By Mr. Wood) Dr. Stratbucker,
    8 prior to preparing and signing your Rule 26
    9 report, I am correct that the only photographs
    10 that you had seen that were represented as being
    11 crime scene or autopsy photographs of JonBenet
    12 Ramsey were the four monochrome photographs set
    13 forth in your report and identified in this
    14 deposition as Defendants' Exhibit-3; is that
    15 true?
    16 A. I think that is true, yes.
    17 Q. It is also true that you had not
    18 ever reviewed any color photographs of the crime
    19 scene or of the autopsy with respect to JonBenet
    20 Ramsey prior to signing and submitting your Rule
    21 26 report, true?
    22 A. Yes.
    23 Q. You have -- I am going to hand you
    24 Defendants' Exhibit-5 and ask you if you would
    25 take a look at those documents real quick.
    00047
    1 Have you had a chance to review
    2 Defendants' Exhibit 5?
    3 A. Yes.
    4 Q. Prior to preparing your Rule 26
    5 report, you had not, in fact, ever seen the
    6 color photos that are represented as being crime
    7 scene or autopsy photographs of JonBenet Ramsey;
    8 had you, sir?
    9 A. I saw some photos when I was in New
    10 York City at the invitation of NBC to render an
    11 opinion on some photographic material. It must
    12 have been in August, I think it was, probably
    13 July or August of last year. And there were
    14 photographic -- there were color renditions of
    15 those pictures at that time that I had only
    16 then for the first time seen in color. It
    17 could have been that those were shown to me at
    18 that time.
    19 Q. You don't know; do you?
    20 A. I don't remember. I don't remember
    21 that I saw color photographs of the ones you
    22 just saw at my office or anyplace like that.
    23 Q. Who arranged for you to go to New
    24 York at the invitation of NBC?
    25 A. That came about by -- I was
    00048
    1 testifying in a murder trial in North Carolina,
    2 the so-called Richard Jackson case. And the NBC
    3 network, through some source or other, learned
    4 that I was there and made contact with me at
    5 that -- actually in North Carolina as the trial
    6 was ending. I was finishing my testimony. And
    7 they asked me if I could change my travel plans
    8 and come to New York City directly from North
    9 Carolina, which would have been last, I think it
    10 was in July maybe, July or August.
    11 Q. Do you think Mr. Tuttle might have
    12 been involved in speaking with NBC?
    13 A. He could have been.
    14 Q. Was the idea --
    15 A. There were very few people who knew
    16 I was there at the time.
    17 Q. Tuttle knew?
    18 A. Maybe Tuttle did know, yeah. That
    19 is possible.
    20 Q. Did you go to NBC to look at
    21 specifically the JonBenet Ramsey case?
    22 A. Yes.
    23 Q. That would have been July of 2001?
    24 A. Yes.
    25 Q. I have your testimony from your
    00049
    1 trial in the Jackson matter. Did you testify
    2 truthfully in that case, sir?
    3 A. I certainly did.
    4 Q. Do you stand by each and every
    5 statement that you made in that testimony under
    6 oath with respect to stun gun marks?
    7 A. Yes.
    8 (Defendants' Exhibit-6 and Exhibit-7
    9 were marked for identification.)
    10 Q. (By Mr. Wood) So we can stay in
    11 order, let me just ask you, Defendants' Exhibit
    12 6 consists of three pages of handwritten notes
    13 and some e-mail correspondence that you provided
    14 me this morning out of your Wolf v. Ramsey
    15 file, true?
    16 A. Yes.
    17 Q. That is your handwriting on the
    18 first three pages?
    19 A. Yes, it is.
    20 Q. Let me show you what has been marked
    21 as Defendants' Exhibit 7 and ask you if you are
    22 familiar with that photograph from your testimony
    23 in the Jackson trial?
    24 A. No, I am not familiar with that
    25 photograph.
    00050
    1 Q. Did you identify stun gun marks on
    2 the body of the victim in that case on the
    3 left shoulder?
    4 A. I -- yes, I think it was on the
    5 left shoulder. But this photograph was not one
    6 that I ever recall seeing.
    7 Q. Are those the marks, though, in the
    8 left shoulder that you identified as stun gun
    9 marks?
    10 A. Well, they certainly aren't -- they
    11 would have been incidental to the main testimony
    12 having to do with the marks. Because I
    13 meticulously went over those photographs with my
    14 measuring apparatus and so forth to get the
    15 dimensionality, and I don't remember seeing this
    16 photograph.
    17 I don't -- it might have been --
    18 there was a huge collection of photographs. I
    19 don't have -- represent that I saw every one of
    20 them. But as a matter of fact, I concentrated
    21 my efforts on two or three, at the most, of
    22 all the photographs that were in evidence there.
    23 (Defendants' Exhibit-8 was marked for
    24 identification.)
    25 Q. (By Mr. Wood) Before I leave
    00051
    1 Defendants' Exhibit 7, the marks that I am
    2 pointing out to you on the shoulder of the
    3 victim in the Jackson case, you do not deny,
    4 sitting here today under oath, sir, that you may
    5 have identified those as stun gun marks at the
    6 trial in North Carolina?
    7 A. I have no recollection of having
    8 identified those marks. Those marks do not --
    9 I already told you, I don't think I ever saw
    10 that picture.
    11 Q. Did you ever find any stun gun marks
    12 on the victim's neck or left shoulder in the
    13 Jackson case?
    14 A. I don't -- there were marks
    15 extending up on the thorax; and, of course, most
    16 of the marks of the main concern were in the
    17 inguinal area. But I remember searching for
    18 some marks outside of the inguinal area and the
    19 area of primary focus to establish scale factors
    20 for the actual computation of two distances in
    21 those photographs.
    22 Q. Defendants' Exhibit 8?
    23 A. That one looks familiar, yes.
    24 Q. Where are the stun gun marks on the
    25 victim on that photograph, sir?
    00052
    1 A. These --
    2 Q. You can take your pen and circle
    3 them, if you like.
    4 A. Circle them, you say?
    5 Q. Yes, sir. Circle and just initial
    6 the stun gun marks that you found there.
    7 A. Well, I have circled two, two marks
    8 there, that are possible candidates. But in my
    9 testimony I had very carefully dimensioned and
    10 calibrated the photographs. And, of course,
    11 this has no such measuring and calibration. I
    12 have a recollection that those two marks might
    13 have been marks that I had identified as stun
    14 gun marks, but I would have to -- I would have
    15 to say that the nature of that case was such
    16 that the stun gun marks were, in most cases,
    17 far more mechanical than electrical because of
    18 the way the stun gun was employed. And there
    19 were only a few, actually, on the victim's body
    20 that were of such a character to rule out the
    21 possibility that there was a lot of excoriation
    22 of tissue and actual tissue damage due to the
    23 actual mechanical effects of the stun gun probes
    24 on the skin when the thing is used as a ramrod
    25 or a rongeur to actually force increased
    00053
    1 conductivity to the body by means of pressure.
    2 Q. Does the contract that TASER
    3 International has recently been awarded by the
    4 United States Government involve the purchase by
    5 the government of stun guns?
    6 A. The specific nature of that contract
    7 is confidential.
    8 Q. Does TASER International manufacture
    9 anything other than stun guns?
    10 A. Not anymore. They had a product at
    11 one time which was an electrically operated car
    12 theft preventer, and they no longer make that.
    13 Q. To your knowledge, are they about to
    14 start making a new product other than a stun
    15 gun?
    16 A. No.
    17 Q. You have in your file a spiral small
    18 pad. On the second page of that you have the
    19 name Fleet White.
    20 A. Yes.
    21 Q. What caused you to write Fleet
    22 White's name down there?
    23 A. Well, I suppose that -- this looks
    24 like some notes I made in conversation with a
    25 student at the University of Michigan State by
    00054
    1 the name of Mary McCullough. And I don't know
    2 Fleet White at all. This looks like Mr.
    3 Hoffman's telephone number. And why I wrote
    4 that down, I don't have any idea. But that is
    5 -- these are some telephone notes that I took
    6 probably in the course of a telephone
    7 conversation with Mary McCullough.
    8 Q. You did not rely on your review of
    9 photographs at NBC in coming to your conclusions
    10 in your Rule 26 report; did you, sir?
    11 A. I am not quite -- I don't
    12 understand.
    13 Q. You told us everything in your Rule
    14 26 report that you -- Matters Considered: I
    15 have examined the following documents as part of
    16 my examination and report.
    17 And you listed the autopsy report,
    18 and you listed four monochrome laser printed
    19 images purporting to be renditions of the crime
    20 scene and autopsy photographs most commonly
    21 attributed to Detective Lou Smit?
    22 A. Yes.
    23 Q. You didn't say anything about
    24 anything you saw at NBC; did you?
    25 A. No. What I saw at NBC was a
    00055
    1 hurried mishmash of stuff that was not very well
    2 provided, ill provided; and I really had
    3 difficulty making any sense out of what they
    4 showed me.
    5 Q. Do you know who at NBC you were
    6 dealing with?
    7 A. I can't remember the man's name.
    8 Nightline was the program.
    9 Q. That would be ABC.
    10 A. Well, I am sorry then. It is
    11 Dateline.
    12 Q. Dateline?
    13 A. Dateline, yes.
    14 Q. Was there some idea that perhaps
    15 they might do a segment involving you that Mr.
    16 Tuttle wanted them to do?
    17 A. No, no. The purpose of it, as told
    18 to me over the telephone in North Carolina that
    19 caused me to come to New York, was that NBC
    20 was wanting to do a counterpoint on the Couric
    21 presentation that had occurred that previous week
    22 or maybe earlier that week and that they wanted
    23 someone else outside, an expert, to review the
    24 pictures and render an expert opinion on them
    25 that was outside of the group that had already
    00056
    1 been involved. And that is why they apparently
    2 contacted me.
    3 Q. And that was never done, in terms of
    4 your involvement after the --
    5 A. Well, I actually was -- I actually
    6 was on the air for a very brief period of
    7 time.
    8 Q. Talking about what case?
    9 A. Talking about the Ramsey case.
    10 Q. On Dateline?
    11 A. Yes.
    12 Q. What you were shown was not, as you
    13 described it, you had difficulty making any
    14 sense out of what they showed you on NBC?
    15 A. Yes. They showed me some cropped
    16 video presentations of what were alleged to be
    17 some new evidence or new photographs that had
    18 not yet been seen, I think maybe from Mr.
    19 Smit's collection. And they wanted to know if
    20 I thought they looked like stun gun marks on
    21 these photographs that they presented on a
    22 monitor. Now, they had other photographs
    23 around, but the ones that they wanted me to
    24 comment on and which they took my video
    25 deposition, essentially, was based on some
    00057
    1 electronically presented photographic material
    2 that were some spots that they wished to know
    3 if I thought they looked like stun gun marks.
    4 And I, in the brief time that I was
    5 on there, I said that I really --
    6 Q. Couldn't say?
    7 A. -- couldn't say.
    8 Q. Could have been stun gun marks?
    9 A. Yeah, might have been.
    10 Q. You were not in a position to --
    11 A. Might have been.
    12 Q. Might have been?
    13 A. Might have been. Couldn't say.
    14 Q. In fact, the marks on JonBenet's
    15 back, as you state in your written notes here
    16 that are part of Defendants' Exhibit 6, could
    17 have been made by, your words, a conventional
    18 sharp pointed stun gun, true?
    19 A. Possible, yeah.
    20 Q. You don't rule out the use --
    21 A. Well, the dimensionality of stun gun
    22 marks is extremely important. If you are going
    23 to make any causative relationship, you have got
    24 to know --
    25 Q. The distance?
    00058
    1 A. -- the authenticity -- well, you
    2 have to know the photographic authenticity.
    3 Because in this day and age with photographic
    4 manipulations by computer, you can do anything
    5 you want to. You can make --
    6 Q. You bet.
    7 A. -- anything look like anything.
    8 Q. You bet. And the fact of the
    9 matter is you never have been provided with
    10 photographic evidence from the autopsy
    11 photographs or the crime scene evidence
    12 photographs that you were able to reach a
    13 conclusion on in terms of the distance between
    14 the marks on JonBenet's back; isn't that true,
    15 sir?
    16 A. Well, in cases that I have
    17 testified --
    18 Q. Please answer my question. My
    19 question is not cases you testified in before.
    20 The fact of the matter is you have
    21 never been provided with photographic evidence
    22 from autopsy photographs or the crime scene
    23 evidence photographs from which you were able to
    24 reach a conclusion in terms of the distance
    25 between the marks on JonBenet's back; isn't that
    00059
    1 the truth?
    2 A. That is the truth, yes.
    3 Q. Yes, sir. You haven't seen the
    4 photographs from the autopsy that have the
    5 coroner's scale on them; have you, sir?
    6 A. I haven't seen -- I have seen
    7 photographs that have scales on them, but I
    8 don't have any way of knowing whether those
    9 scales are legitimate, whether they were actually
    10 done at the time of the autopsy, whether they
    11 were fabricated in some fashion or another. I
    12 have no way. The chain of custody, which I am
    13 so familiar with in evidence that I have been
    14 involved with before, has never been presented
    15 to me in any contiguous and defensible fashion.
    16 Q. And the four monochrome photographs
    17 that you relied on in filing a Rule 26 report,
    18 you don't know where these came from; do you?
    19 A. Well, I know they came off the
    20 internet.
    21 Q. And you don't know what generation
    22 copy was on the internet; do you?
    23 A. No, I don't.
    24 Q. I mean --
    25 A. That is why I didn't rely on them.
    00060
    1 Q. You didn't rely on these?
    2 A. No.
    3 Q. You only relied on the autopsy
    4 report?
    5 A. I only relied on the autopsy report.
    6 Q. You were familiar with the Boggs
    7 autopsy report before you testified in that
    8 case; weren't you?
    9 A. Yes, I was.
    10 Q. That was done by Dr. Michael
    11 Doberson; wasn't it, sir?
    12 A. The autopsy report?
    13 Q. Yes, sir.
    14 A. Well, I think he participated in the
    15 autopsy report. I don't know whether he
    16 actually signed off on it or not. I know he
    17 participated in it.
    18 (Defendants' Exhibit-9 was marked for
    19 identification.)
    20 Q. (By Mr. Wood) Look at your Rule 26
    21 report for me. The introduction page, probably
    22 the third page, Expert Witness Report, February
    23 26 2002. Do you see it?
    24 A. Yes.
    25 Q. "Counsel for the plaintiff Chris Wolf
    00061
    1 in the above case has retained me as an expert
    2 witness. I have been asked to examine the
    3 12/27/96 Boulder County Coroner's Autopsy Report
    4 of JonBenet Ramsey along" --
    5 And I assume "with" was meant to be
    6 in there.
    7 A. Yeah, the --
    8 Q. It says "along the," but it should
    9 say "along with the PowerPoint presentation of
    10 Detective Lou Smit."
    11 Have I read that correctly?
    12 A. Yes.
    13 Q. You have never reviewed the
    14 PowerPoint presentation of Detective Lou Smit;
    15 have you, sir?
    16 A. Not in any form that I could attest
    17 to its authenticity.
    18 Q. Page 3 of your statement in your
    19 Rule 26.
    20 A. Page 3? Yeah. Go ahead.
    21 Q. It says under Opinion:
    22 I have reached the following opinion:
    23 A comprehensive examination and review of
    24 JonBenet's autopsy report and Detective Lou
    25 Smit's PowerPoint presentation.
    00062
    1 Let me ask you again -- Mr. Smit's
    2 PowerPoint presentation is on CD-ROM -- you have
    3 never seen it; have you?
    4 A. I never have seen this. I have
    5 never had the CD-ROM in my possession.
    6 Q. No, sir. You never have seen his
    7 PowerPoint presentation. That is the truth;
    8 isn't it, sir?
    9 A. No. I have seen things that were
    10 represented as his PowerPoint presentation.
    11 Q. By whom? Represented by whom?
    12 A. By NBC, by lines on the internet, by
    13 websites that traffic in this information. It
    14 is wherever you want to look you can find this
    15 stuff.
    16 Q. You have never seen the digital
    17 crime scene photographs as they exist in Lou
    18 Smit's PowerPoint presentation, that generation
    19 of photograph with that level of clarity; you
    20 have never seen them, have you, sir?
    21 A. My recollection is that the NBC
    22 network claimed that that's what they had.
    23 Q. They had a video image from the
    24 television show?
    25 A. They had a video image from Lou
    00063
    1 Smit's PowerPoint presentation.
    2 Q. And you are just not comfortable
    3 sitting around and giving an expert opinion
    4 based on photographs that you don't really
    5 yourself have any level of comfort with in terms
    6 of knowing if they are authentic or not; do
    7 you, sir?
    8 A. That is right. But I have a
    9 tremendous amount of reliance on the autopsy
    10 report.
    11 Q. Absolutely. I understand that.
    12 Let me just hand you Defendants'
    13 Exhibit-9. You recognize that as a photograph
    14 of Mr. Boggs taken after he had been exhumed.
    15 Here is the --
    16 A. Yes, yes.
    17 Q. In fact, on Defendants' Exhibit 9,
    18 you testified in the Boggs case under oath,
    19 right?
    20 A. Yes, I did.
    21 Q. And it was your opinion that the two
    22 marks on Mr. Boggs as shown on Defendants'
    23 Exhibit 9 were caused by a stun gun, true?
    24 A. Yes.
    25 Q. And would you circle for me on
    00064
    1 Defendants' Exhibit 9 the two marks that you
    2 testified under oath were stun gun marks?
    3 A. Well --
    4 Q. If you would just circle them for
    5 me, please, sir.
    6 A. This is not the photograph that I
    7 used at trial, so I don't know --
    8 Q. Was it this one? Was it this one?
    9 A. I can't -- I -- I can't tell you.
    10 It is likely that these are the two that I
    11 identified.
    12 Q. Circle the ones that are likely the
    13 two that you identified under oath in that trial
    14 as stun gun marks. Circle where I can see it,
    15 please, sir.
    16 Circle, circle. You circle it in
    17 the other one.
    18 A. And this one.
    19 Q. All right. Were you aware that in
    20 the Boggs autopsy report, Dr. Doberson had
    21 initially described those two marks that you
    22 have just circled as abrasions?
    23 A. Yes.
    24 Q. You have no degree as a forensic
    25 pathologist; do you?
    00065
    1 A. Well, I still carry an appointment
    2 in the Department of Pathology at the University
    3 that we discussed awhile ago.
    4 Q. Do you hold yourself out as a
    5 qualified forensic pathologist?
    6 A. Yes.
    7 Q. How many autopsies have you done?
    8 A. I haven't done one for probably 25
    9 or 30 years.
    10 Q. My question was how many autopsies
    11 have you performed, sir?
    12 A. Probably ten in my lifetime.
    13 Q. And with your -- I am going to hand
    14 you this photograph that is contained as part of
    15 Defendants' Exhibit-5. I have no idea what
    16 generation that is in terms of where that
    17 photograph was obtained, but I do know for a
    18 fact that it at least is a copy of some
    19 generation of one of the autopsy photographs of
    20 JonBenet Ramsey. And you concluded that that
    21 mark was not caused by a stun gun, that large
    22 red mark that we see on the photograph, the
    23 right side of her neck which actually is the
    24 left side, right?
    25 A. Yes.
    00066
    1 Q. Right, the big one that you looked
    2 at. Correct?
    3 A. The roughly triangular shaped one.
    4 Q. Whoever said that was a stun gun
    5 mark?
    6 A. I don't know that anybody ever did.
    7 Q. You said that in your report.
    8 A. These are the only -- the only marks
    9 on the body that were available to even remotely
    10 resemble a stun gun mark in somebody's
    11 imagination are the ones that I took as
    12 candidates. So that is why I took this as a
    13 candidate. It was called out by the pathologist
    14 who did the autopsy as an abrasion and as were
    15 all the other marks called out as abrasions.
    16 Q. Just like the mark on Mr. Boggs had
    17 been called an abrasion by Dr. Doberson?
    18 A. Well, that is a totally different
    19 matter. That is totally unrelated.
    20 Q. In your opinion.
    21 A. Boggs case -- well, no. In his
    22 case too.
    23 Q. You are not talking about Dr.
    24 Doberson's?
    25 A. Yes.
    00067
    1 Q. You think that -- have you talked to
    2 Dr. Doberson about that?
    3 A. Not since we testified in court
    4 together on the matter.
    5 Q. Maybe you want to just refresh
    6 yourself by discussing the Boggs matter with Dr.
    7 Doberson before you testify under oath about
    8 what he thinks about that case today. I make
    9 that suggestion to you.
    10 Can you tell me what caused that
    11 mark on her?
    12 A. I have no idea.
    13 Q. That's right. It is not within your
    14 realm of practice to make those kinds of
    15 decisions; is it?
    16 A. Well, I know it is not a stun gun.
    17 Q. You can tell me what you say it is
    18 not, but you don't have any idea of what it
    19 was caused by; do you?
    20 A. Well, I wouldn't say I don't have
    21 any idea.
    22 Q. Those were your words, sir, I'm
    23 sorry, not mine. You said I have no idea. Is
    24 that true or not?
    25 A. This is an abrasion.
    00068
    1 Q. Do you have an idea --
    2 A. I can tell you what an abrasion
    3 is --
    4 Q. Sir, excuse me.
    5 A. -- by definition.
    6 Q. You said I have -- I said, can you
    7 tell me what caused that mark on her. Answer:
    8 I have no idea.
    9 Did you just testify truthfully or
    10 not? What is the truth? Do you have an idea
    11 or --
    12 A. I don't have --
    13 Q. Do you not have an idea?
    14 A. -- much of an idea. I have an idea
    15 that it is not a stun gun mark.
    16 Q. Nobody ever said it was, sir.
    17 A. Okay.
    18 Q. Just like nobody ever said that the
    19 scratches on her legs were stun gun marks.
    20 A. Okay.
    21 MR. WOOD: Just about done, Darnay,
    22 before the recess.
    23 Q. (By Mr. Wood) From page 2 of your
    24 Rule 26 report, I just want to see. It says
    25 under Matters Considered: The autopsy report
    00069
    1 includes in relevant part specific references to
    2 four widely separated parts on the body bearing
    3 skin lesions described as abrasions, skin sites
    4 which have been viewed by some as being evidence
    5 of application sites of an electric shock
    6 generator known variously as stun guns or
    7 TASERs.
    8 Have you read that with me?
    9 A. Yes.
    10 Q. I've read it correctly?
    11 A. Yes.
    12 Q. Who, when you filed this report in
    13 federal court in Atlanta, Georgia, who were you
    14 referring to when you said that someone had
    15 viewed Site B and Site D as being evidence of
    16 application of a stun gun?
    17 A. Well, these were --
    18 Q. No. Answer my question, sir.
    19 A. Well, let me answer you.
    20 Q. Who were you referring to? Well,
    21 tell me who they were. With respect to Site B
    22 and Site D, who were you referring to when you
    23 said some had viewed those sites as being
    24 evidence of the application of a stun gun? I
    25 want to know the names of the people that you
    00070
    1 say said that.
    2 A. Well, I can't tell you the names.
    3 Q. Tell me who they are generically.
    4 A. Generically?
    5 Q. Yeah.
    6 A. The producer of the NBC show that we
    7 were talking about.
    8 Q. That is who you were referring to?
    9 A. That is one of the places where
    10 I --
    11 Q. Well, who else with respect to Site
    12 B and Site D?
    13 A. Those were -- those were sites that
    14 have been mentioned in communications, for
    15 example, that I have monitored over the internet
    16 and in other areas. But especially they are
    17 the only specifically defined skin markings that
    18 Dr. Meyer, the autopsy pathologist, calls out in
    19 his autopsy that could conceivably be considered
    20 to be stun gun marks.
    21 Q. Is the some that you are referring
    22 to is some producer that you don't know the
    23 name of at NBC?
    24 A. Yes.
    25 Q. And then some unknown or
    00071
    1 indescribable monitoring of conversations on the
    2 internet about this case?
    3 A. I mean, you have gone over all my
    4 records and so forth. You see that there is a
    5 considerable evidence or information derived from
    6 internet sources on this case, which was one of
    7 the ways that I came by these photographs in
    8 the first place.
    9 Q. None of which you've mentioned in
    10 your Rule 26 report?
    11 A. None of which I relied on. I
    12 didn't rely on them. But now you are --
    13 Q. Sir, why were you -- you were
    14 monitoring the discussion of the JonBenet Ramsey
    15 case on the internet; weren't you, sir?
    16 A. Not very avidly, I must say.
    17 Q. Why?
    18 A. Because I didn't ascribe very much
    19 credence to it.
    20 Q. You had never seen the photographs.
    21 You had never seen the photographs that you say
    22 as an expert you have to see before you would
    23 professionally render an opinion; isn't that the
    24 truth, sir?
    25 A. Well, if you read my --
    00072
    1 Q. Excuse me, sir. Isn't that the
    2 truth?
    3 A. Say it again, would you, please?
    4 Q. Let me read it back to you.
    5 A. Okay. Read it back to me.
    6 Q. Listen carefully.
    7 The truth is, you had, when you say
    8 you didn't ascribe very much credence to the
    9 theory of stun gun usage on JonBenet Ramsey, you
    10 had never at that point in time laid eyes on
    11 any crime scene or autopsy photograph that you
    12 say as an expert you would have to see before
    13 you would professionally render an opinion, true?
    14 A. I don't think that is entirely true,
    15 no.
    16 Q. Well, what part is entirely false?
    17 A. Well, the part that you couldn't,
    18 from a well done autopsy narrative such as we
    19 have here, implicate a stun gun from the
    20 dimensions and the nature of the marks and so
    21 forth as called out by the autopsy physician.
    22 Q. But you don't think there is an
    23 autopsy physician, sir -- taking you back to
    24 your sworn testimony in North Carolina, you
    25 don't think there is a pathologist or an autopsy
    00073
    1 physician that is capable of identifying a stun
    2 gun mark; do you?
    3 A. I don't say that they need to be
    4 capable of identifying a stun gun mark. They
    5 need to be capable of making accurate
    6 measurements and then citing some menu of
    7 possibilities that those accurate measurements
    8 could refer to.
    9 Q. Sir, do you know that, in fact,
    10 there are crime scene photographs of JonBenet
    11 Ramsey and autopsy photographs of JonBenet Ramsey
    12 made by the Coroner's Office, Boulder County,
    13 that, in fact, contain a very legible scale with
    14 respect to the marks on her face and her back?
    15 Are you aware of that fact?
    16 A. It has been alleged that that is the
    17 case. I don't know that the autopsy photographs
    18 that you are referring to are official. I
    19 don't know that they are official in any way.
    20 Q. Well, let me suggest to you, sir,
    21 that they are.
    22 A. Well, you could suggest it.
    23 Q. Well, don't you think that before
    24 you put your professional reputation on the line
    25 that you might want to look over and say, you
    00074
    1 know, there are some allegations that there are
    2 some photographs out there that show by scale,
    3 taken by the coroner, the distance apart of
    4 these marks and before --
    5 A. But I don't know that.
    6 Q. Excuse me, I am not through. Excuse
    7 me.
    8 You heard it. It was alleged.
    9 Don't you think you might have wanted to say
    10 maybe I should see those before I go into
    11 federal court in Atlanta, Georgia with a Rule 26
    12 affidavit giving an opinion that there is no way
    13 these are stun gun marks?
    14 A. No, I don't.
    15 Q. You don't need that kind of
    16 information; do you?
    17 A. It would be nice if it were
    18 available and it were provable and reliable.
    19 Q. You relied on solely photographs in
    20 the case in North Carolina, and you denied
    21 relying in any part on the autopsy photograph --
    22 I mean the autopsy report; didn't you, sir?
    23 A. And there was an impeccable chain of
    24 custody in those photographs --
    25 Q. Hello. There is an impeccable chain
    00075
    1 of custody that exists with respect to the crime
    2 scene photographs and the autopsy photographs of
    3 JonBenet Ramsey. And if you really do monitor
    4 the internet, sir, check it out. Lou Smit, as
    5 acknowledged by the Boulder District Attorney's
    6 office, had on his CD-ROM PowerPoint presentation
    7 that you claim you had comprehensively reviewed
    8 in your Rule 26 report --
    9 A. No, I didn't say comprehensive.
    10 Q. Excuse me.
    11 -- he has those photographs
    12 authenticated as the crime scene and autopsy
    13 photographs by the Boulder District Attorney's
    14 office.
    15 So Lou Smit, you will concede, has
    16 got one heck of a lot better photograph of
    17 JonBenet Ramsey than anything you've ever looked
    18 at on the internet or these monochrome
    19 photographs that you claim to have relied on in
    20 this case. Can we agree on that, sir?
    21 A. No, I won't agree to it. I have --
    22 you may say that, but I have no way of proving
    23 that.
    24 Q. Why don't you go read the record
    25 that was filed in the courthouse in Boulder
    00076
    1 County?
    2 A. Well, I will be happy to.
    3 Q. It seems to me, sir, that there is
    4 an awful lot you don't know about this case.
    5 Could you concede that at least?
    6 A. I think there is an awful lot about
    7 this that most people don't know, including you.
    8 Q. I am not asking you about most
    9 people because most people -- excuse me. Most
    10 people didn't come into federal court and sign a
    11 Rule 26 affidavit. You did.
    12 A. All right.
    13 Q. And I am asking you, will you
    14 concede that there is apparently an awful lot
    15 that you do not know about this case and what
    16 happened to this little girl?
    17 A. No, I won't concede that.
    18 Q. So you got it all?
    19 A. I have no reason to.
    20 Q. You've got it all?
    21 A. No, I did not say I have it all.
    22 You said I have it all.
    23 Q. What efforts have you ever made to
    24 try to get the crime scene photographs?
    25 A. Well, one of the efforts that I made
    00077
    1 was to make a special trip to New York City to
    2 try to find out whether or not --
    3 Q. To go up with NBC for Mr. Tuttle?
    4 A. Mr. Tuttle had nothing to do with
    5 it.
    6 Q. Mr. Tuttle knew where you were. Mr.
    7 Tuttle is with Air TASER. And you know that
    8 Mr. Tuttle -- you know this, sir.
    9 A. Well, you are telling me now for the
    10 first time.
    11 Q. Excuse me.
    12 A. Thanks very much.
    13 Q. You know --
    14 A. I appreciate that.
    15 Q. You know -- if we have time, we
    16 will see whether we do or not, I'm going to
    17 tell you a lot of things you apparently don't
    18 know.
    19 A. Okay.
    20 Q. But I'm going to tell you one thing
    21 that I think you do know. Bill Tuttle does
    22 not want his Air TASER stun gun associated with
    23 the murder of JonBenet Ramsey. It is just not
    24 good public relations. And you know that for a
    25 fact; don't you, sir?
    00078
    1 A. No, I don't know that. We have not
    2 discussed that. I don't any -- that is your
    3 invention, not mine.
    4 Q. How do you know it is my invention?
    5 A. Well, you just stated it.
    6 Q. How do you know where I get it
    7 from? I mean, so far I haven't been inventing
    8 anything when I come up here and start showing
    9 you your sworn testimony, which we will go back
    10 to, where you said that there is not a coroner
    11 or medical examiner in the country that is
    12 capable of identifying a stun gun mark, that you
    13 are the only one.
    14 A. Oh, well, you show me where I said
    15 that.
    16 Q. Sit tight.
    17 Page 1109 of your sworn testimony,
    18 recross-examination by Mr. Belser.
    19 Question: Doctor, you are saying
    20 that no forensic pathologist anywhere in this
    21 country who did the autopsies for the state and
    22 the crime labs and the prosecutor, none of these
    23 people have enough expertise like you to
    24 recognize a stun gun mark?
    25 Answer: They didn't.
    00079
    1 Question: And you are the only
    2 expert that can do that, not the doctors who
    3 look at the bodies, but you with your
    4 transformations on the photograph; is that what
    5 you are telling the jury?
    6 Answer: I think that's correct,
    7 yes.
    8 A. Well, in that case it was correct,
    9 yeah. The autopsy --
    10 Q. Did you testify to that, sir?
    11 A. Yes, I did.
    12 MR. WOOD: We are going to take
    13 that recess, Darnay? But I have one question.
    14 I want to make this clear, if I could.
    15 MR. HOFFMAN: We can make the recess
    16 and then when you come back, I'm going to talk
    17 on the record.
    18 MR. WOOD: Let me just ask this
    19 doctor one question.
    20 MR. HOFFMAN: Yes.
    21 Q. (By Mr. Wood) And I really, Doctor,
    22 could care less what you base this on. It can
    23 be your trip to NBC. It can be your
    24 monitoring of the internet. It can be your
    25 monochrome photographs. For all I care, it can
    00080
    1 be based on the Stratbucker Children's Trust.
    2 Are you accusing my client Patsy
    3 Ramsey or my client John Ramsey of criminal
    4 involvement in the murder of their daughter
    5 JonBenet? I want you to answer that question
    6 for me under oath.
    7 A. Accusing them?
    8 Q. Yes, sir.
    9 A. No.
    10 Q. You don't have the slightest idea
    11 how this child died; do you?
    12 A. Probably as good an idea as anybody
    13 else, which is not very much.
    14 Q. Why did you choose professionally,
    15 for free, pro bono, to team yourself up with
    16 Chris Wolf in a lawsuit that says that my
    17 client murdered her daughter?
    18 A. Well --
    19 Q. Pro bono.
    20 A. Yeah, pro bono is correct, yes.
    21 Q. You bet.
    22 I don't even need an answer to that
    23 question. We'll take a recess.
    24 THE VIDEOGRAPHER: Counsel, we are
    25 off the record at 12:27 p.m..
    00081
    1 (A recess was taken.)
    2 THE VIDEOGRAPHER: Counsel, we are
    3 back on the record at 12:47 p.m.
    4 MR. HOFFMAN: Thank you very much.
    5 I am going to address this, of course, to Lin
    6 Wood and to Jim Rawls because they represent the
    7 counsel for John and Patsy Ramsey. And I
    8 certainly acknowledge Mr. Bauer's important role
    9 in the case.
    10 Let me take an opportunity to --
    11 MR. WOOD: Hey, Darnay, don't --
    12 MR. HOFFMAN: -- due to the
    13 testimony of the deposition today and to
    14 consider not only the witness but also the
    15 testimony from the witness and looking at it in
    16 relation to my theory of the case, I have
    17 decided at this point to withdraw Dr. Robert
    18 Stratbucker as an expert witness in this
    19 particular case with the understanding, of
    20 course, that this testimony, of course, can be
    21 sealed if counsel for the defense would like
    22 that and there will certainly be no either
    23 public reference to any of Dr. Stratbucker's
    24 theories to this Rule 26 report, to any of the
    25 things that he stated today, any conversations
    00082
    1 he may have had with me formally or informally,
    2 or any other communication involving his theory
    3 of whether or not stun gun -- a stun gun was
    4 used on JonBenet Ramsey.
    5 MR. WOOD: Well, let me say this on
    6 behalf of the Ramseys. We do not seek for
    7 this testimony to be sealed. I mean, we don't
    8 have any plans to use it.
    9 I mean, the bottom line is with no
    10 conditions whatsoever, do you formally and
    11 unequivocally withdraw Dr. Stratbucker as an
    12 expert witness in this case?
    13 MR. HOFFMAN: Yes, I do, formally
    14 and without any conditions.
    15 MR. WOOD: And, likewise, will you
    16 stipulate that under no circumstances will you
    17 reengage him in any fashion with respect to the
    18 Wolf v. Ramsey case in the future?
    19 MR. HOFFMAN: Absolutely. I will
    20 not reengage him in any way.
    21 MR. WOOD: With that stipulation,
    22 then there is obviously no reason for us to
    23 continue the deposition today. So the
    24 deposition is terminated in light of the
    25 witness' withdrawal by counsel for plaintiff.
    00083
    1 Thank you very much, Darnay.
    2 Anybody need to add anything else?
    3 MR. HOFFMAN: I want to thank
    4 everybody for their cooperation, and I want to
    5 thank Dr. Robert Stratbucker for making himself
    6 available today.
    7 And, Doctor, I will speak to you
    8 later this evening or tomorrow.
    9 MR. WOOD: Hey, Darnay.
    10 BY MR. HOFFMAN: Gentlemen, thank
    11 you very much --
    12 MR. WOOD: Hey, Darnay.
    13 MR. HOFFMAN: And we are now, I
    14 think, probably at the end of our deposition
    15 period, and we will be positioning ourselves for
    16 summary judgment. And I don't know how you want
    17 to proceed with the Daubert hearings --
    18 MR. WOOD: Hey, hold on a second.
    19 MR. HOFFMAN: -- if there are going
    20 to be any, but we can work that out.
    21 MR. WOOD: Darnay, why don't we go
    22 off the record now and let's just chat for two
    23 seconds.
    24 MR. HOFFMAN: All right. Good.
    25 MR. WOOD: Let the videographer make
    00084
    1 his record.
    2 THE VIDEOGRAPHER: This is the
    3 conclusion of tape No. 1 and also the conclusion
    4 of the deposition of Robert A. Stratbucker,
    5 taken on May 30, 2002.
    6 Counsel, we are off the record.
    7 (A recess was taken.)
    8 (Whereupon, the deposition was
    9 concluded at 12:49 p.m.)
    10 .
    11 .
    12 .
    13 .
    14 .
    15 .
    16 .
    17 .
    18 .
    19 .
    20 .
    21 .
    22 .
    23 .
    24 .
    25 .
    00085
    1 DESCRIPTION OF EXHIBITS
    2 Exhibit Description
    3 1 Amended Notice of Deposition
    4 2 Plaintiff's Disclosure of Expert
    5 Testimony
    6 3 Monochrome photocopies of autopsy
    7 photographs
    8 4 Letter - January 16, 2002 From
    9 Dr. Stratbucker to Chief Ferdelam
    10 5 Report entitled "The following exhibits
    11 are part of Dr. Robert A. Stratbucker's
    12 Rule 26(a)(2) report of February 26,
    13 2002"
    14 6 Handwritten notes of Dr. Stratbucker
    15 7 Laser color copy of photograph from
    16 Jackson case
    17 8 Laser color copy of photograph from
    18 Jackson case
    19 9 Laser color copy of photograph from
    20 autopsy of Mr. Boggs
    21 (Original Exhibits 1 through 6 and
    22 Exhibit 9 were attached to the original
    23 transcript. Color copies of Exhibits 7 and 8
    24 were attached to the original transcript; the
    25 originals having been retained by Mr. Bauer.)
    00086
    1 STATE OF GEORGIA:
    2 COUNTY OF FULTON:
    3 I hereby certify that the foregoing
    4 transcript was reported, as stated in the
    5 caption, and the questions and answers
    6 thereto were reduced to typewriting under my
    7 direction; that the foregoing pages represent
    8 a true, complete, and correct transcript of
    9 the evidence given upon said hearing, and I
    10 further certify that I am not of kin or
    11 counsel to the parties in the case; am not
    12 in the employ of counsel for any of said
    13 parties; nor am I in anywise interested in
    14 the result of said case.
    15 .
    16 .
    17 .
    18 .
    19 .
    20 .
    21 .
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    23 .
    24 .
    25 .
    00087
    1 Disclosure Pursuant to Article
    2 8(B) of the Rules and Regulations of the
    3 Board of Court Reporting of the Judicial
    4 Council of Georgia, I make the following
    5 disclosure:
    6 I am a Georgia Certified Court
    7 Reporter, here as a representative of
    8 Alexander Gallo & Associates, Inc., to report
    9 the foregoing matter. Alexander Gallo &
    10 Associates, Inc., is not taking this
    11 deposition under any contract that is
    12 prohibited by O.C.G.A. 5-14-37 (a) and (b).
    13 Alexander Gallo & Associates,
    14 Inc., will be charging its usual and
    15 customary rates for this transcript.
    16 .
    17 .
    18
    19 ALEXANDER J. GALLO, CCR-B-1332
    20 .
    21 .
     
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