FAIRFAX, Va. — Police investigated more than 40 people of interest before their nine-year search for the man who brutally attacked a woman in 2005 led them to Jesse Matthew, a detective testified Tuesday. ADVERTISING FAIRFAX, Va. — Police investigated
FAIRFAX, Va. — Police investigated more than 40 people of interest before their nine-year search for the man who brutally attacked a woman in 2005 led them to Jesse Matthew, a detective testified Tuesday.
Matthew, 33, of Charlottesville, is on trial in Fairfax for attempted murder and sexual assault on a woman. He is also charged in a separate case with capital murder in the abduction and death last year of University of Virginia student Hannah Graham. The cases are linked by DNA evidence.
Defense attorneys cross-examined the lead detective in the Fairfax case about other suspects and people whose names showed up in the detective’s investigative file.
The defense hoped to show jurors that someone other than Matthew might have been the perpetrator, noting that many of the people in the file more closely matched the victim’s description of her attacker than Matthew, who is taller, heavier and slightly younger than the description provided to police in 2005.
The detective, Michael Boone, acknowledged that he had pursued the case aggressively and pursued a wide variety of leads and tips, often clearing names quickly because they had an alibi or a DNA profile that ruled them out.
Ultimately, though, Boone said the key to cracking the case was finding the person whose DNA matched that found under the fingernail of the victim, who scratched and fought her attacker.
Matthew faces up to life in prison if convicted.
The Hannah Graham case will be tried separately at a date to be determined. Prosecutors in that case are seeking the death penalty.