The hearing continues today after the Hari Raya break with Anwar potentially facing another scandal when an Umno-friendly blogger threatened to release allegedly another sex video dated Jan 12 this year.
Blogger Papa Gomo has also revealed CCTV footage allegedly taken minutes before the much publicised Feb 22 sex video, where the infamous Datuk T trio were charged and fined.
Lead defence counsel Karpal Singh had in the past sought the court to take action against individuals who are seemed bent on interfering the administration of justice in this controversial trial.
McDonald, who is the fourth defence witness, is expected to take another two days to complete his testimony with cross-examination by the prosecution pending.
It remains to be seen whether Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak and his wife Rosmah Mansor will take the stand this week.
LIVE REPORTS
8.55am: Defence lawyers Sankara Nair and CV Prabhakaran arrives with foreign DNA expert Dr Brian McDonald.
Prosecuting team led by solicitor-general II Mohd Yusof Zainal Abiden is also in court. DPP Noorin Badaruddin is expected to cross-examine McDonald.
Chemist Dr Seah Lay Hong, who was a prosecution witness, is seated besides Noorin to provide expert advice.
8.59am: The accused, Anwar Ibrahim, arrives with his wife, Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, and some of his supporters. Half of the court is still empty.
9.33am: Among those present in the public gallery is former Bukit Bintang MP Dr Lee Chong Meng from MCA.
9.34am: Top defence lawyer Karpal Singh arrives. He is wheeled into court by his assistant.
9.35am: PKR vice-president and Batu MP Tian Chua is also present with Baginda Minda, former business partner of Ummi Hafilda, both of whom were witnesses in Anwar's first sodomy trial.
9.38am: Court begins with Kuala Lumpur High Court judge Mohamad Zabidin Mohd Diah presiding.
Dr Brian McDonald called to the stand.
9.42am: McDonald tells the court he got to know there is one case which he knew that his evidence was not accepted in an Australian case concerning sub-population case.
"I am not expert statistician."
9.46am: Court is full now.
McDonald (right) says the samples taken in B7, B8 and B9 were not consistent with the history as the samples were taken after 56 hours.
"No slides were made according to international standards.”
9.49am: McDonald says there was no information as to the sperm documented, although Seah says she saw sperm.
9.52am: There was no interpretation of degraded sperm, says McDonald.
From the three samples, B7 there is predominant Male Y and a minor component of the complainant (Mohd Saiful Bukhari Azlan).
"Seah did not cover on B8. B8 is high rectal swab (...) is major DNA component is that of complainant and minor is Male Y. She should have made a slide instead of guessing in her explanation as to why this is so.
"These are two contrasting features to the high rectal swab (ie, B7 and B8)."
As to B9 low rectal swab, McDonald says there are equal amounts of Male Y and the complainant's DNA.
"None of the sperm fraction shows any degraded DNA. If it comes from sperm at all, it should show degradation, especially after 56 hours in rectum and 46 hours (before giving to chemist)."
9.58am: McDonald says the finding is not consistent with the history of it being kept a long time.
As to B5, it came from the peri-anal swab, McDonald says. Seah (left) said she saw spermatozoa, but it is not known how many.
10.01am: McDonald says Seah testified that there was the DNA of three individuals, with the main contributor being that of an unknown male.
"Male Y, Seah noted, came from the degraded sperm."
"Seah's reasoning that the unknown male came from (a) toilet seat is because she did not find any other in the rectal swab.
"Seah did not conduct tests on this sperm sample. There is unknown male which Seah concluded is from toilet seat, but she did not conduct tests."
However, McDonald says the complainant says he did not go to the toilet for the past two days.
10.06am: McDonald says Seah was only guessing in coming to the conclusion.
10.08am: Looking at McDonald's own 15-page dated April 2008, the witness says that Seah was only guessing from the sample taken as there were mixtures of sperm taken.
Ram Karpal: At the moment, we do not know which cells the DNA came from.
McDonald: No.
10.13am: McDonald says it is not known whether the sample retrieved from B5, B7, B8 and B9 had come from saliva or a blood sample.
"That evidence does not tell us (whether) it came from sperm or saliva."
10.15am: Ram and McDonald go into a discussion on the field of contamination.
McDonald says contamination is a crucial issue in DNA.
10.18am: Ram: Do you find any evidence of contamination?
McDonald: It is difficult question to answer, as there are some instances where the DNA obtained could be related to the offence.
"There is DNA which does not come from either of the two people, and this should be explained."
10.24am: McDonald says Seah has misinterpreted what the chemist described was a starter.
10.30am: Lembah Pantai MP Nurul Izzah Anwar enters court.
10.35am: McDonald says Seah did not re-amplify the B5 sample (peri-anal swab), which she should have done.
10.37am: He also says chemist Nor Aidora Saedon (right) had also failed to recognise mixtures in samples retrieved from Anwar's cell.
10.41am: Ram: There is a third contributor in the tests conducted by Seah and Nor Aidora.
"Nor Aidora ignored all criteria on mixture, which she must do (sic) as an objective scientist."
10.45am: When questioned by Justice Zabidin, McDonald says there should be more tests to identify whose DNA it is.
10.48am: Ram Karpal says would it be reasonable to conclude that the person in the lab or the police who handled the samples may have contaminated it.
McDonald says they could have contaminated the DNA.
10.50am: McDonald refuses to speculate, however, when asked by Ram Karpal as to whom may have contaminated the sample.
"Without documents, I cannot say who or where it came from, but based on some Australian cases, the element could have come from police."
10.53am: McDonald shows there is a mixture sample in Nor Aidora's tested sample which she had ignored.
10.55am: "You do not ignore it. You should report it as a single profile."
Ram: As it stands, would it be correct to say it is not a single profile but a mixed profile.
McDonald: Yes, it is wrong."
11am: Ram (in photo, next to Anwar): Both Seah and Nor Aidora found an '18 allele', but they had ignored it?
McDonald: Ya, both of them did not offer an explanation.
11.03am: Ram Karpal asks for short break and says he can finish it by lunch. Trial to continue at 11.30am.
[More to follow]
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