The Face Of A Child Killer
David Westerfield was sentenced to death for the slaying of Danielle van Dam.
Westerfield was sentenced to death on January 3 for Danielle's kidnapping and murder.  The jury
that convicted him never heard about the lie detector test. Tapes of the questioning session were
released Wednesday after media organizations sued for access to them and other materials deemed
too prejudicial for release during the trial.


Polygraph specialist Paul Redden, a civilian employee of the San Diego Police Department,
interviewed Westerfield February 4, two days after Danielle vanished from her bedroom.

"Did I pass?" the 50-year-old engineer asked Redden moments after answering the final question.

"No, you did not pass my test and I don't think that's a surprise to you," Redden shot back, adding,
"You are somehow involved in the disappearance of Danielle van Dam."

Westerfield protested, "No, I'm not" and offered to retake the test. He also said his "mechanical
background" made him distrustful of the results. But Redden showed him how his blood pressure
"went crazy" every time he answered a question about Danielle and noted that everyone else tested,
including the girl's parents, "passed with flying colors."

Westerfield first said he couldn't have reacted to her name since "I didn't even know her name until
today," but finally told a detective the results must have been skewed by his own concern for the
missing child.

Danielle's naked, badly decomposed body was found by a roadside three weeks later.
Missing Children
Have you seen these children