GLYNN COUNTY, Ga. — It’s been more than two years since 22-month-old Cooper Harris died in the back seat of a hot SUV outside a Cobb County office building.
His father, Ross Harris, is now on trial for his death.
Follow minute-by-minute coverage of the case below:
4:26 p.m. Court is adjourned for the weekend. Court will resume at 8:30 a.m. Monday.
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4:17 p.m. Doerr says Harris did the 30 minute session. She says he didn't talk about his life with her.
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4:07 p.m. Doerr says when she met with a detective in September that year they verified through phone records that the number that called her was Harris.
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4:05 p.m. Doerr says Harris was very dumpy and didn't really care about his appearance. She says she engaged in sexual acts with him three times. She described Harris as strictly business and "vanilla."
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4:03 p.m. Doerr says she met with Harris in May at an Econo Lodge. She says she remembered him immediately. "In that business you have a memory. You can't block it out." Doerr says she also remembered him because she doesn't prefer white men.
Doerr says she saw Ross Harris' picture on the news and remembered meeting with him. https://t.co/sfcgxFUk8T #HotCarDeath pic.twitter.com/jqahu0XdmR
— Ross Harris Trial (@RossHarrisTrial) October 14, 2016
4:00 p.m. Doerr says a detective called her ad and asked to meet with her. He did not mention he was an officer. After meeting with her, he introduced himself and showed her a photo of Harris.
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3:57 p.m. State calls Daniela Doerr to the stand. Doerr worked as an escort and had an ad on the website backpage.com
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3:44 p.m. Coalson says she didn't find anything on that computer.
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3:42 p.m. Coalson says detectives told her to look for internet history and anything related to crimes of murder and car deaths.
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3:37 p.m. Coalson analyzed an Apple Macbook Pro belonging to Ross Harris.
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3:29 p.m. Court resumes. State calls Pam Coalson, a retired Cobb County police officer, to the stand.
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3:13 p.m. Court recesses for afternoon break.
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3:04 p.m. Prosecution asks Yaeger, "Just because you didn't find anything doesn't mean it wasn't there, correct?" Yaeger says that is correct.
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2:54 p.m. Yeager says he spent hours, maybe days going through Ross Harris' computer.
Yeager on what Harris did and did not search on his computer: "I don't report what I don't find." #HotCarDeath https://t.co/XEzCvlKHdR pic.twitter.com/VeLTKGFfKw
— Ross Harris Trial (@RossHarrisTrial) October 14, 2016
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2:49 p.m. Defense says Harris only visited the child free site one time in April and never searched it again.
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2:39 p.m. Defense walks jurors through search history on Ross Harris' computer. Search history shows Harris never searched child free. Yeager says he didn't search it. He typed in the URL directly.
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2:25 p.m. Yeager says he did not find any research of hot car deaths on Ross or Leanna Harris' computers.
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2:18 p.m. Defense goes through a list of things Yeager pulled from Leanna Harris' computer. They included invite lists to a baby shower, a letter to Ross, a sonogram of Cooper, images of Cooper among other files.
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2:05 p.m. Defense says first extraction didn't pull information from the app Whisper so another extraction was done later to get that information.
Harris #HotCarDeath Trial: Defense Attorney hammers High Tech detective about what was and was not found on Harris' electronics. @wsbtv pic.twitter.com/QTykkSB1en
— Ross Cavitt (@RossCavitt) October 14, 2016
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1:50 p.m. Prosecutors argue that Yeager shouldn't be testifying about the content on the disk because he was only responsible for pulling it. The detectives were the ones looking at the information. Defense says he created the disk and knows what is on it. Judge says questioning can continue for now.
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1:48 p.m. Court resumes from lunch. Defense continues cross-examining Yeager.
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12:27 p.m. Court breaks for lunch.
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12:20 p.m. Defense questions Yeagar about what he found on Harris' phone. He says he did not specifically look at Harris' search history. The only thing he remembers looking at is all history relating to the word "child," which is where he found the childfree website. He says the terms "child death" did not come up anywhere in that search.
The defense is grilling investigator Yeager about whether he was told Harris searched child deaths inside vehicles @RossHarrisTrial pic.twitter.com/U39f9aGLEz
— Craig Lucie (@CraigLucie) October 14, 2016
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12:10 p.m. Defense says Yeagar didn't find any evidence that Harris had researched hot car deaths over the internet. Yeagar says he doesn't know because he didn't look for that. He says his analysis didn't find that specifically but he passed along the search history to detectives, who then looked into it further.
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12:05 p.m. Defense asks Yeagar if he was ever told by detectives that "Harris stated (during an interview) that he recently researched, through the internet, child deaths inside vehicles and what temperature it needs to be for that to occur." Yeagar says he was not told that and didn't specifically look for that. The defense says it was in the search warrant.
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11:53 a.m. Yeager says it's not unusual to have a case with this many devices and this much information to go through. He says they have one like this "probably every six months."
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11:50 a.m. Yeager says he didn't find anything on Leanna Harris' computer that would have made her a suspect. "I wasn't looking for that data, that information." He says the files he noted on her computer involved names and addresses that might be of use in the case.
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11:49 a.m. Defense begins cross-examination of Yeager.
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11:46 a.m. Yeager says Harris specifically typed into the browser reddit.com/r/childfree. The other four times were just things he clicked on in connection with that initial search. One of the articles was titled, "Dating is nearly impossible."
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11:41 a.m. Yeager says he found Ross Harris has accessed Reddit five times using the term "childfree" on his work computer.
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11:38 a.m. Yeager says he also analyzed Ross Harris' work computer, which Harris had in his possession when Cooper was found.
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11:21 a.m. Yeager says he searched and logged the internet history on Leanna Harris' laptop.
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11:17 a.m. Yeager says he performed an analysis and extraction on Leanna Harris' laptop. He says he found things that "might be of interest to the case."
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11:15 a.m. Yeager says he did analysis and extraction on several other devices, including laptops, a home computer and a Google Chromecast among others.
Harris #HotCarDeath Trial: Detective testified he found chats on Harris' phone with a "Dark Phoenix 1982" the day Cooper died. @wsbtv pic.twitter.com/u1AoeBFeCp
— Ross Cavitt (@RossCavitt) October 14, 2016
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11:05 a.m. Yeager says he was asked to pull call logs between Harris' phone and his wife Leanna on June 18, 2014.
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11:03 a.m. Court resumes from break. Yeager resumes his testimony.
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10:16 a.m. Court recesses for mid-morning break.
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10:02 a.m. Yeager explains how he analyzes a computer versus a cell phone.
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9:54 a.m. Yeager says he was assigned to coordinate the analysis of all of the devices brought in for the case, including cell phones, computers and iPads.
Cobb County Det. Ray Yeager on the stand talking about analyzing cell phones and other device data for @RossHarrisTrial pic.twitter.com/btiP5ECm1A
— Craig Lucie (@CraigLucie) October 14, 2016
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9:49 a.m. The state calls its next witness to the stand, Ray Yeager. He was a detective with the Cobb County Police Department. He is now retired and a part-time reserve officer. Yeager says he worked in the high-tech crime unit which did forensic analysis of digital devices.
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9:47 a.m. Prosecutors point out that Harris' right side was to Houston as he left the building. Houston says there was no interaction with Harris that would make him believe that he couldn't hear him.
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9:44 a.m. Houston says he didn't want to know anymore about the case in the day and weeks following. He says he didn't watch any news coverage about Cooper's death because it was too much for him.
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9:38 a.m. Houston says Leanna Harris was asking, "Where's Ross? Where's my son?" in the lobby of the office. Houston says Leanna's emotions went "from hot to not" while watching the news unfold on TV.
"She was very much in control. She didn’t do anything." Home Depot Sec. officer explaining #RossHarris wife watching @wsbtv when Cooper fnd
— Craig Lucie (@CraigLucie) October 14, 2016
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9:33 a.m. Houston says he talked to detectives about the events of the day and what unfolded. He says he told them Harris walked out of the Treehouse location and mentioned he was going to the movies. Houston says he knew something was wrong later when a security officer from the main office showed up at the Treehouse location with Leanna Harris. He called it a "red flag."
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9:29 a.m. Houston says it was "out of his character" for Ross Harris to tell him he was going to the movies after work.
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9:20 a.m. Defense cross-examines Houston. Defense Attorney Bryan Lumpkin asks Houston about his interactions with Ross Harris.
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9:18 a.m. Houston says Leanna Harris "had a lot of steam" when she first came in, but then seemed to lose it. Houston says Leanna Harris showed no emotion while sitting in the lobby, seeing news of a dead child on the TV. "When she first came in she had a whole lot of steam. As time went on her emotions died out. It was like, "Huh, oh well." She was just sitting there like nothing happened. To me, as a parent you lose a child or you see some breaking news or something, you are full of emotion. She didn't have any." He says detectives later came to speak with her.
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9:16 a.m. Houston says later that afternoon WSB-TV was on in the lobby. He says there was breaking news about a child dying. Houston says there was a commotion in the office and Leanna Harris was there. He says she looked "cold."
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9:12 a.m. Houston says he remembers Harris saying he was going to the movies with someone with the last name Mullins. Jurors see security camera video of Harris leaving the office building on the day Cooper died.
Security camera video shows #RossHarris leaving work on the day Cooper died. https://t.co/2rOoT1UVkK pic.twitter.com/stq2FMl2mQ
— Ross Harris Trial (@RossHarrisTrial) October 14, 2016
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9:07 a.m. Houston says on June 18, 2014, he remembers Harris leaving the office. He told Harris to "Have a great evening." He says Harris responded, "You too." Houston says Harris told him he was going to the movies, which struck him as odd because he says Harris never told him about his activities outside of work until that day.
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9:04 a.m. Houston says he liked to speak to the employees at the Home Depot Treehouse location. He says he remembers interacting with Ross Harris. He says he said "Hello" and "Goodbye," but they never talked about their personal lives.
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9:00 a.m. The state calls it's first witness of the day, Wesley Houston, to the stand. Houston is a corporate security officer at Home Depot. He sometimes worked at the Little Apron Academy and was at the Treehouse office the day Cooper Harris died.
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8:50 a.m. Trial begins with a few motions. The defense says Ross Harris has not been able to see the screen during the trial. The judge allows him to change seats.
Harris #HotCarDeath Trial: Ross Harris complains he can't see evidence on video screens, allowed to change seats. Testimony to start. @wsbtv pic.twitter.com/C5jjXW72VD
— Ross Cavitt (@RossCavitt) October 14, 2016
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