In addition to asking to watch the videotaped confession again, the jury also asked to listen to a recording of a phone conversation between a private investigator and a Neptune man who claims to have seen Stern alive after prosecutors says she was murdered.
Stern's body has never been found, which the defense asserts creates doubt about whether she was murdered.
Jurors also asked to see body-camera footage from two police officers who questioned McAtasney in the immediate aftermath of Stern's disappearance and a videotape of McAtasney's roommate at Stern's house re-enacting for investigators how he moved the victim's body from the house to bushes outside, allegedly at McAtasney's behest.
In addition, the jury asked for surveillance video from the house across the street from Stern's, which prosecutors allege shows McAtasney and his roommate, Preston Taylor, returning later that night to load the corpse into the victim's car before taking it to the bridge.
At the trial, Christopher Decker and Meghan Doyle, assistant Monmouth County prosecutors argued that McAtasney strangled Stern in her Neptune City home on Dec. 2, 2016 after convincing her to take money out of the bank, .
Sarah Stern murder: Jury wants to review confession