The defense is done questioning Eisenstat. Prosecutor Savanna Goude is now cross-examining him. She notes he was actually here Friday, meaning he is getting paid $5,500 for that too. That means he will make more than $10,000 just for appearing in court two days.
Goude asks Eisenstat: If Paul’s head wound was an entry wound, and shotgun pellets expand, why would the exit wound through Paul’s neck be so small? E: Pellets would have only traveled about a foot before exiting through Paul’s neck, so they would still be close together.
Goude asks how blood spatter got onto the feed room ceiling and the top of the door and wall if Paul was shot directly in the head from a downward angle. Eisenstat says the pressure and force of the shotgun blast essentially cased Paul’s head to explode, ejecting matter upward.
That is all for Eisenstat. The defense's 13th witness is Tim Palmbach, a crime scene analyst from Connecticut.