The New Zealand Herald

Were two kids strangled?

- Kristine Phillips and Avi Selk

Two young Colorado girls who, with their mother, were killed this past week may have been strangled before their bodies were dumped in an oil well, according to a court document.

A motion filed by lawyers defending Christophe­r Watts, an oil and gas worker, who investigat­ors believe killed his pregnant wife and daughters, asks that DNA samples be taken from the children’s necks.

The document cites an expert who argued that DNA would still be present on the bodies — even though they had been submerged in crude oil for four days before they were found — but that evidence would be lost once the autopsies were performed.

A Weld County judge, however, denied the request, the Denver Post reported. And authoritie­s said that they had finished the autopsies on the victims, though they did not say how they died.

The document offers the first glimpse into what may have happened to Shanann Watts, 34, and her two daughters when they disappeare­d last Tuesday.

The following day, Christophe­r Watts stood in front of a parade of news cameras and told reporters that his children were his life. His family had just vanished, he told Denver 7 ABC. “I’m living in a nightmare, and I can’t get out of it,” he told NBC affiliate KUSA.

But the media interviews were over on Thursday, when police vehicles showed up at the Watts house. Reporters photograph­ed officers removing bags of evidence and towing away a ute. The Frederick Police Department arrested Christophe­r Watts, 33, on suspicion of first-degree murder and evidence tampering — three counts each.

Watts was fired the same day he was arrested, the company said.

By Friday, authoritie­s said that they had found the bodies of 4-year-old Belle, 3-year-old Celeste and their mother, all “in close proximity” to each other on property owned by Watts’ employer Anadarko Petroleum, one of the state's largest oil and gas drillers.

Christophe­r Watts’ lawyers sought to preserve DNA evidence they said would still be present on the bodies, saying that once autopsies are finished, the evidence will be “lost forever,” according to the motion.

The lawyers said they consulted DNA expert Richard Eikelenboo­m who said in court records that he has experience taking samples from dead bodies and “getting good results after strangulat­ion”.

“This DNA can be retrieved with a double swab technique. DNA scientists are familiar with this technique and an experience­d person should take this samples. In my opinion the presence of oil will not destroy the DNA,” Eikelenboo­m said.

Eikelenboo­m added that the hands of the children, as well as the hands and nails of their mother should all be sampled as well. He and defence lawyers did not seek swabs from the mother’s neck.

Eikelenboo­m is a forensic scientist who specialise­s in DNA trace recovery and has examined “hundreds of crime scenes,” according to Independen­t Forensic Services, a company he owns with his wife.

In 2016, a Denver district court judge rejected Eikelenboo­m as a DNA expert after he admitted to a prosecutor that he had no direct DNA extraction or analysis experience, that he operated an unaccredit­ed lab, that he failed basic proficienc­y tests in 2011 and 2012, and that he was “selftraine­d” in running DNA profiles, the Denver district attorney’s office said. The agency also said that Eikelenboo­m “has committed fundamenta­l DNA analysis errors by not following accepted scientific standards in the DNA field.” Eikelenboo­m, who’s from the Netherland­s, said the district attorney’s office misreprese­nted his experience. He didn’t have experience with DNA extraction and analysis back in the 1990s, before advancemen­ts in DNA technology, he said, “but that doesn’t mean I didn’t do it in 2005 or in 2016, or that I’m not fully accredited.”

He added: “It’s just manipulati­on of facts,”

Eikelenboo­m’s wife started Independen­t Forensic Services in

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