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Nancy Kissel's defense challenged police Tuesday,
suggesting that notes made during their murder investigation show she was
arrested more than three hours earlier than police had said, and before there
was any mention of lawyers or her right to remain silent.
Several police officers have testified during Kissel's murder trial that she was
arrested in the Ruttonjee Hospital at 2:40am on November 7 after the body of
her husband, Robert Kissel, was found in a storeroom.
In the High Court Tuesday, senior counsel Alexander King pointed out a
reference in a police notebook which read, ``I guard the Nancy - AP'' on
November 6, at 11:29pm.
``What does the `AP' stand for in police terms?'' asked King. ``Arrested
person,'' was the reply.
The officer who made the notes said the entry was a mistake.
Kissel, 40, is accused of serving her husband a cocktail of drugs in a pink
milkshake which left former Merrill Lynch banker Robert Kissel unconscious as
she beat him to death on November 2, 2003.
Kissel told doctors and the police that her husband was drunk on November 2 and
had assaulted her after she refused to have sex. She has pleaded not guilty and
is out on bail.
On November 6, around 4pm, police officer Ng Yuk-ying drafted the witness
statement of David Noh, a friend and colleague of the banker, when he filed the
missing-person report and informed the police of a ``large stinky carpet,''
which was removed from the Kissel residence into a storeroom.
Ng testified Tuesday that she was assigned to take notes when officers
interviewed the accused at her Parkview home in Tai Tam. Ng said when the
accused began to show officers how she was assaulted in the master bedroom, Ng
remained outside the doorway and could not hear what was being said, except
when another senior inspector asked about the storeroom.
After returning from the master bedroom, she saw the accused in conversation
with her father, Ira Keeshin, in the dining room, but could not hear what they
were saying, except when the father walked towards the police officers saying
loudly ``My God, I don't believe it.''
Ng said Keeshin said this four to five times but, because she was so surprised,
she forgot to note it down. Before Ng, two other officers testified to hearing
the same words, but none of them made a note of it. For the defense, King
suggested that Kissel's father had actually said, ``Oh my god, it can't be.''
Before the accused was made aware of the search warrants, Kissel asked for a
lawyer and denied having keys to the storeroom, but eventually delivered the
keys without a word, according to Ng.
When police officers discovered the banker's decomposing body in the storeroom,
Ng was attending to the accused, she said.
Under cross-examination, Ng admitted that none of her three written records
state that she was instructed to investigate an assault, but only a missing
persons report. King pointed out that she did, however, testify in court that
she went to Parkview to assist in an assault claim as well.
``Where did that recollection [that the investigation was also for an assault
claim] come from?'' asked King. Ng said that her superior had told her orally
when the arrived at Parkview. She said it was her mistake for failing to record
this fact in her official notebooks.
Referring to her notes, King pointed out that there was a note of ``house
search,'' and the next entry reads ``N requested to talk to her father alone,''
showing that the accused had spoken with officers in the master bedroom for
five to six minutes without Ng making a record.
King also noted that Ng had testified Kissel requested a lawyer before she
delivered the keys to the storeroom, but this was not mentioned in her
notebooks. Ng said, ``Actually, I do not write down each and every word.''
At 11:29pm, Ng recorded that she was guarding an ``arrested person.'' Ng said
this was a mistake. King pointed out she wrote again that other officers then
came in and ``also guarded AP.''
``Is that also a mistake?'' asked King. Ng said she wanted to write
``accompanied her'' but made a mistake.
While other officers were discovering the corpse and Ng was guarding Kissel,
King suggested that the accused had said to her repeatedly, ``He wouldn't stop,
he wouldn't stop,'' which was not recorded by Ng. Ng said she didn't hear such
words.
``And I suggest to you,'' said King ``she just kept repeating that over and over
again. She also said, `make sure the children are OK', again, repeatedly. And,
of course, there's no record of that in your notepad, because you've already
agreed that there are many other things not recorded down.''
albert.wong@singtaonewscorp.com
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