Detroit — A canine expert whose dog allegedly detected a
cadaver scent in the home of a missing toddler will be
allowed to testify at the murder trial of the girl's
father, a judge ruled Friday.
Wayne County Circuit Judge Vonda R. Evans made the ruling after
attorneys for D'Andre Lane spent more than two hours
trying to discredit the relatively new scientific
method. Lane is charged with first-degree murder and
child abuse in the death of his 2-year-old daughter,
Bianca Jones
"I believe the evidence offered is sufficient to go forward. The
people should be allowed to demonstrate to a jury that
your client was implicated in this particular murder,"
Evans told the defense. "I think your argument is to
weight as opposed to admissibility."
The court Friday also denied a defense motion to halt proceedings
in the case while the state Court of Appeals evaluates
efforts by Lane's attorneys to have the case tossed out.
The attorneys said they also plan to appeal Friday's
ruling.
Two forensic canine experts testified Friday before Evans ruled to
admit at trial the potential evidence, which is key for
prosecutors in the case against Lane.
Danian Woodson, an attorney for Lane, tried to argue against the
cadaver dog evidence. But Evans cut her off and denied
the motion.
After the hearing, Woodson said the alleged evidence is "not
admissible, not relevant, highly prejudicial and should
be excluded."
Lane has claimed Bianca was in the back seat of his 2004 Mercury
Grand Marquis on the morning of Dec. 2 when he was
approached by armed carjackers near Brush Street and
Grand River.
The vehicle was found shortly after, but the child was not inside.
Her body has not been found.
Forensic canine expert
Martin Grime
testified
Friday and at Lane's prior preliminary examination that
he brought in his victim recovery dog, Morse, two days
after the girl went missing. He said the dog detected a
cadaver scent inside Lane's car, on the child's blanket
and car seat, and in the girl's bedroom and Lane's home.
Grime said the dogs detect only the generic scent of human
decomposition. The dogs, he said, cannot determine
identity, age, race, gender or the rate of
decomposition.
Grime testified in court Friday that Morse has never had a false
positive response, and that testing done just prior and
after the dog worked in the Jones case was successful.
"I believe that the testimony, his conclusion is based on
principles and methods that have been in place for
several years," Evans said of Grime.
Also Friday, Rex A. Stockham, a special agent for the FBI who
oversees its forensic canine program, said the agency
has been studying the science for about a decade.
The FBI began testing contract and volunteer teams for the human
scent detection program in 2008, Stockham said. The
agency has three full-time dogs working in the country.
The dogs are tested annually to ensure they meet best practices
standards. Morse has only been tested one time, Stockham
said.
Prosecutors allege Lane beat the toddler to death with an 18-inch
stick with a towel wrapped in duct tape at the end over
a potty training incident.
Lane's attorney, Terry Johnson, contends Lane did "spank" the child
with the stick, but that there was no evidence of child
abuse or murder since the girl's whereabouts is unknown.
Lane told Detroit Police he left his home around 7:45 a.m. Dec. 2.
He dropped his nephew and 8-year-old daughter off before
visiting a gas station, Wayne County Community College
in Detroit and, with a friend, near the Greyhound bus
station on Howard Street. The carjacking, Lane claimed,
occurred just afterward, with only him and Bianca in the
vehicle.
FBI agent Christopher Hess testified at Lane's preliminary
examination that the defendant was unable to explain
where he was for a 45-minute window around the time his
daughter disappeared.
Lane's girlfriend, Anjali Lyons, has testified she awoke Dec. 2 to
Bianca's screams as Lane used the stick to beat the
toddler for urinating in bed. Later the same morning,
Lane carried a silent Bianca to his car. She was covered
with an animal print blanket.
Lane's trial is slated for Sept. 18.
cferretti@detnews.com
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