KEY POINTS:
A former mental patient's note that his hands should be on Uma Thurman's body "at all times" might be creepy but was not criminal, a lawyer said in defence of a man accused of stalking the actress.
Lawyer George Vomvolakis told the jury in his opening statement that defendant Jack Jordan "does not think the way you and I think. He doesn't know the boundaries you and I know. He thinks it's romantic."
But Assistant District-Attorney Colleen Walsh told the jurors Jordan had tried to communicate with Thurman sporadically for more than two years, "with the intent to harass, annoy, threaten and alarm" her.
She said he sent her family an email saying: "I will kill myself if I do not get to see Uma Thurman within 24 to 48 hours."