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Police were immediately skeptical of the housemates' account. Price and Zaborsky reported hearing short screams or grunts and running from their bedroom to the guest room to find Wone stabbed and alone. Ward said he came out later when he heard the commotion after his housemates' discovery. None heard anybody running through the hall or on the stairs. Price and Zaborsky said that shortly before the screams, they heard an exterior door's automatic chime and assumed it was a basement tenant arriving home. After the killing, the three housemates answered questions from the police well into the next morning. They contend their cooperation wasn't entirely voluntary and have sought to have the statements thrown out because they weren't informed of their rights. "Any decent person would want to help," Ward testified at a recent hearing. "Robert Wone was our friend. Kathy Wone was our friend. Even if they hadn't been our friends, I would have wanted to help. But that doesn't mean that I had a choice that night." The mystery of Wone's death is not just who killed him, but how. That he was fatally stabbed is clear. But how to explain the absence of defensive wounds, and cuts so clean Wone would have had to be lying perfectly still as he was attacked? Prosecutors argue the apparent lack of movement indicates Wone was incapacitated before he was stabbed. Investigators tested Wone's blood for the presence of paralytic drugs, but found nothing. Nor were there any markings on his body that would indicate he'd been restrained. Assistant U.S. Attorney Glenn Kirschner had hoped to introduce evidence of padded restraints found in Ward's room
-- which would have been less likely to cause bruising -- but Leibovitz forbade it as too prejudicial without enough to tie it to the crime. The defense plans to outline its version of why Wone was unable to fight back. The attorneys have said they will call a cardiac surgeon to testify that a single cut to the aorta could instantly incapacitate someone. Such a scenario would be consistent with a quick attack by a stealthy intruder with no signs of a struggle. Prosecutors have acknowledged that police incorrectly used a chemical in examining the crime scene, leading them to detect traces of blood in the room where there may not have been any. Another glitch: Investigators failed to copy the data from Wone's BlackBerry before it was returned to his employer and "recycled." A detective saw two apparently unsent e-mail messages on the device from 11:05 p.m. and 11:07 p.m. If Wone wrote those messages, it gives credence to the quick-attack theory. If someone else wrote them, they could be part of a cover-up. Either way, it's one piece of the puzzle that's gone for good. ___ On the Net: Wone case blog: http://whomurderedrobertwone.com/
[Associated
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