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Minute-by-minute: Day 15 of the Ross Harris hot car death trial

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:

4:23 p.m. Court adjourns for the day.

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4:14 p.m. Dustin explains how he created the 3D animation of the crime scene.

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4:02 p.m. State calls next witness, David Dustin, to the stand. Dustin runs Dustin Forensics, a company that specializes in 3D laser scanning.

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3:54 p.m. "It's extremely suspicious to me that you have one browser where he clears his cache (and) the other one where he leaves it intact," Persinger says.

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3:52 p.m. Defense says there's no evidence Harris was trying to delete the "filthy" images that were saved on his phone.

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3:33 p.m. Court resumes. Persinger returns to the stand.

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2:58 p.m. Court recesses for afternoon break.

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2:43 p.m. Persinger says he found no evidence that Harris searched for murder, homicide or malicious intent. Prosecution says jurors need to keep in mind that Harris' search history was limited because it had recently been deleted.

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2:30 p.m. Defense says Harris was a web developer and many of the websites he visited, including the private internet access site and the psychology site, were related to his business.

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2:20 p.m. Persinger says "maybe (Harris) was crafty enough" to tell detectives he watched the hot car video because he knew he forgot to delete it. "I believe that some of the methods he used to hide the information, to delete the information was an intentional move, so yes I think he's crafty," Persinger said.

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2:14 p.m. Persinger said there was not enough history on Google Chrome for him to determine what Ross Harris had and had not searched.

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1:47 p.m. Persinger says when he was initially brought into the investigation he was asked to look at one Whisper chat and the video about hot cars.

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1:30 p.m. Persinger says Harris visited a website on May 9 , 2014 that held a checklist for a divorce. The website was titled, "Divorce, legal separation checklist." Persinger says the website was internal on the Home Depot website.

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1:25 p.m. Persinger says Harris was searching for a vacation in July or August for two adults and no children.

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1:15 p.m. Court resumes from lunch break. Persinger returns to the stand.

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11:24 a.m. Court recesses for lunch break.

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11:21 a.m. Persinger says on June 17, 2014 Harris searched for vacation places for two adults with no child.

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11:18 a.m. Persinger says Harris also visited a private internet access website that helps hide your identity on the internet and allows you to use the internet without being tracked.

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11:16 a.m. Persinger says sometime between April 18, 2014 and the day his son died, Harris visited a psychology website that specializes in information on interviewing witnesses, jury selection and forensic evaluations. Prosecution says Harris was doing some work for that company at the time.

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11:10 a.m. Persinger says the search history was manually deleted again on June 6, 2014.

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11:07 a.m. Persinger says computer records show Harris manually deleted his search history on Google Chrome on his computer on April 18, 2014.

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11:00 a.m. Persinger says the Google Chrome history on Harris' computer was deleted less than two weeks before son's death.

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10:51 a.m. Persinger says that because there were only two dates of search history on Harris' iPhone, he knows that Harris manually deleted his search history.

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10:48 a.m. Persinger says he received the "dump" of Harris' iPhone 5 along with the forensic images of Harris' Macbook and work computer.

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10:35 a.m. State calls Jim Persinger to the stand. Persinger works for PM Investigations, a company that digital forensics and cyber analysis. He is an expert in forensic evaluation of electronic devices.

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10:31 a.m. Grimstead says he has taken the car seat in and out of the car "at least four times" now.

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10:27 a.m. State calls next witness, Detective Carey Grimstead, back to the stand.

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10:21 a.m. Cornett says she and Harris were messaging until 3:04 p.m. on the day Cooper Harris died.

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10:17 a.m. Cornett says Harris never expressed unhappiness with his marriage but did say "he just wanted to sleep with as many different women as possible."

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10:14 a.m. Court resumes from break. State calls Angela Cornett to the stand. Cornett talked with Harris on the messaging application Scout. She says conversations were purely sexual.

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9:55 a.m. Judge Mary Staley denies the request for a mistrial. She says the car is a piece of evidence and jurors have the right to view all evidence in the case.

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9:53 a.m. Defense calls the jury view of the car "disastrous."

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9:49 a.m. Kilgore asks the judge for a mistrial. He says Harris has been "denied a fair trial."

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9:44 a.m. Lawyers return to court and defense argues that the viewing has harmed their case. Defense attorney Maddox Kilgore says jurors leaned into the car and looked around, which is inconsistent with what Harris did that day. "So what we're left with is exactly what I warned about months ago ... We're in a situation now where jurors have been given free rein to substitute their vantage point, their view point for the evidence, for what Mr. Harris could or could not see from his height, from his view point," Kilgore said. "It allows them to substitute what they could or could not see for what Mr. Harris could or could not see."

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8:50 a.m. Court resumes. Jurors are taken outside to view Harris' SUV that has been placed in the parking lot outside the courthouse. The SUV was inspected by lawyers and the judge this morning before court began.

Posted by Ross Cavitt on Thursday, October 27, 2016