NY Post:
http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/30058.htm
Delay expected in start of Pelosi trial:
<<Suffolk County prosecutor Janet Albertson plans to ask Judge Robert Doyle to first hear legal motions and arguments involving the witness, the sources said.
The prosecution witness, an expert on stun guns, is expected to testify that small double-burn marks on Ammon's body were consistent with those made by stun guns, possibly one that Pelosi owned.
>>
Today's Newsday
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/ny-pelosi0328,0,6695212.story
<<Other than a 30-minute glimpse into the case at Pelosi's arraignment Tuesday, authorities have revealed little of their exhaustive investigation. It took police a year and a half and a grand jury nine months to charge him with second-degree murder. Fifty-one witnesses and more than 100 exhibits were brought before the grand jury.
Albertson said that evidence includes witnesses who say Pelosi implicated himself, missing pieces of Ammon's security system, and stun guns Pelosi purchased before the murder.
The defense starts from an unwavering, if unsurprising, assertion that Pelosi has been wrongly accused.
As the case moves into the courtroom, it's easier to see what is missing than what is there. No confession. No eyewitnesses. No murder weapon. Nothing to forensically connect Pelosi to the crime.
Nevertheless, such cases can be just as compelling as those built on forensic evidence and eyewitness accounts, prominent defense lawyers said. The lengthy investigation could have given the district attorney's office a chance to amass a pile of powerful circumstantial evidence, including phone records, store receipts and more, said defense lawyer Steven Wilutis of Miller Place.
Phone records could show who Pelosi was talking to before, during and after the crime. Store receipts could reveal when and where Pelosi bought his stun gun, which Albertson said was used in the attack.
"If the DA has everything she says she has, then it strikes me that there's a stronger case," said defense lawyer John Ray of Miller Place.>>