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Vass backed up prosecutors' theory, testifying Monday that he smelled an "overwhelmingly strong" odor of human decomposition in the air sample. He told jurors that his machine found high levels of chemical compounds observed when the body breaks down, such as chloroform, in the sample taken from Anthony's car. Anthony's attorneys claim Vass' tests haven't been duplicated anywhere else and that the researcher has refused to share his database, claiming it is proprietary. During cross-examination Monday, Baez suggested that Vass stood to make money off of his method if it is adopted by police departments. "You sir, have a financial interest in your testimony here today, do you not sir?" Baez said Monday. "Not in my opinion," Vass answered. But two defense scientists say Vass' technique is too premature for use in criminal cases. "To allow the presentation in court of the findings ... in this case would lend it an aura of scientific authority not justified by its novel nature," said Barry Logan, an expert in toxicology. Florida International University analytical chemist Kenneth Furton said no scientifically valid method of identifying human remains based on chemical residue existed. "Previously touted techniques for locating human remains have not been demonstrated to be reliable," Furton said in court documents. He added that Vass' methods "are still in the experimental stage."
[Associated
Press;
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