“We know there is room to stop a vehicle, it doesn’t need to be on the roadway, in my submission to you,” he said.
He showed the jury two photographs of the Kholo Creek Bridge from Mt Crosby Rd at Anstead.
Mr Fuller asked the jury if a dark-coloured Holden Captiva that did not have personalised plates or was coloured white, as Baden-Clay’s Prado was, would have been less likely to have attracted attention late on April 19, 2012 or in the early hours of the morning on April 20, 2012.
He said there had been significant changes to the area around the Kholo Creek Bridge since 2012.
Mr Fuller said there was rainfall on April 27 until April 28, 2012.
He asked the jury where the mud was that would have been present on April 19, 2012.
Mr Fuller said the area leading down to the creek was vegetated.
He showed the jury a photo of underneath the Kholo Creek Bridge, a concrete arc and a steep, red earth embankment.
He said the area had changed, and been raised higher, when the jury went to look at it during the trial.
Mr Fuller said a police officer fell while walking down to retrieve Ms Baden-Clay’s body on April 30, 2012, not underneath the bridge but along the watermark below.
He showed the jury a photo of the place where the police officer fell into soft silt on the water’s edge.
“Don’t be distracted by that,” he told the jury.
Mr Fuller said Ms Baden-Clay’s body was pushed off a concrete ledge beneath the bridge and fell to where it was found.
He said there were a number of things that might help the jury come to that conclusion, including the position of her arms and legs, consistent with her being rolled or pushed off that concrete ledge above.
http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/...-allison-in-2012/story-fnihsrf2-1226980999956