Arias case headed to closing arguments, jurors to weigh experts' testimony ... - Washington Post

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PHOENIX — As Jodi Arias’ trial wraps up this week after four months of testimony, her fate rests in part on the testimony of expert witnesses who have offered up one clinical diagnosis after another for the small-town waitress and aspiring photographer from California to explain why she killed her lover five years ago.
Post-traumatic stress, amnesia, battered woman’s syndrome and borderline personality disorder are among the conditions that various experts have offered to describe Arias, who is charged with first-degree murder in the stabbing and shooting death of Travis Alexander, 30, in his suburban Phoenix home in June 2008.

The jury must also come to grips with the defendant’s ever-changing version of events. After initially denying involvement and later blaming masked intruders, she now claims she killed him in self-defense but doesn’t recall details about the slaying.
Testimony continues Wednesday. The jury could get the case by the end of the week after closing arguments Thursday and Friday.
Arias faces a possible death sentence if convicted of first-degree murder. Authorities say she planned the attack on Alexander in a jealous rage. Two years after her arrest, she claimed self-defense.
Testimony began in early January, and quickly captured headlines with lurid tales of sex, lies, religion and a salacious relationship that ended in a blood bath. The case spawned a virtual cottage industry for talk shows, legal experts and even Arias, who used her notoriety to sell her jail artwork, as it unfolded like a real-life soap opera for thousands of trial enthusiasts who followed every twist.
Jurors on Wednesday will hear from what will likely be the final witness, defense expert Robert Geffner, a psychologist and founding president of the Family Violence and Sexual Assault Institute in San Diego, Calif. His testimony will be aimed at countering a prosecution witness’ contention that Arias suffers from borderline personality disorder.
The state witness, clinical psychologist Janeen DeMarte, testified that Arias showed signs of immaturity and an “unstable sense of identity.” People who suffer from borderline personality disorder “have a terrified feeling of being abandoned by others,” she said.
DeMarte also discounted defense experts’ testimony during which they told jurors that Arias suffered from battered woman’s syndrome, post-traumatic stress disorder and amnesia, which explains why she can’t recall details from the day of the killing. DeMarte said she found no evidence to support the defense experts’ diagnoses.
Geffner’s part will be to convince jurors DeMarte is wrong.
It’s a move that may play well for Arias as jurors could be left with a final testimony from a defense witness before hearing closing arguments, experts said.
“It can only help her on a case that most would say seems to be overwhelmingly in favor of the prosecution,” said Los Angeles-area criminal defense lawyer Mark Geragos.
He said the move by prosecutor Juan Martinez to introduce the border personality diagnosis wasn’t needed given the entirety of the damning evidence already presented by the state.

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