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The defense also insisted investigators were too quick to focus on Coleman, excluding other potential suspects, in a harried bid to solve the closely watched case. Coleman told police his family was asleep when he left the house to work out at a gym about five miles away on the morning of the killings, then grew concerned when he could not reach them by telephone. Their bodies were found after he called police. Prosecutors presented a largely circumstantial case, eliciting testimony from witnesses who said the emailed threats were created on Coleman's laptop computer, and that there were similarities between Coleman's handwriting and writing patterns and the spray-painted graffiti at the crime scene. Police also testified that the formula of the paint used by the killer was the same as that found in red paint Coleman bought weeks before the slayings. Prosecutors leaned heavily on forensic pathologist Michael Baden's testimony that the victims perhaps were dead more than two hours before police say Coleman said he left for the gym. Baden said his assessment was based on reports and photos from the case and took into account such things as the rigidity and discoloration of the bodies. A forensic pathologist who did the autopsies testified that while she did not feel she could accurately pinpoint when the victims died, she speculated the killings happened sometime between 3 and 5 a.m., still before Coleman's claimed departure for his workout.
[Associated
Press;
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