In the interview taped at Chandler's bedside, police asked him to blink three times for yes, and twice for no, as he answered their questions. He reportedly blinked three times to indicate that he knew the gunman, identified Woods from a photo, and even named him by indicating the letter "O".
Woods sometimes went by the street name "O", Hamilton County assistant prosecutor, David Prem, said in his opening statement, assuring jurors they would find the 17-minute video convincing.
Chandler did not blink in response to every question in the interview, and sometimes blinked involuntarily, but the triple blinks are said to be clear. According to Julie Wilson, of the Hamilton County prosecutor's office, "The police, at different times, also changed [the signal system] to make sure the victim really understood what they were asking."
Chandler slipped into a coma and died on November 12, 2010.
Woods was charged with murder, assault and weapons offences. Prosecutors claim Chandler, a regular drug user, owed Woods money for drugs - but on the night of the attack had driven to a neighbourhood known for drug deals to buy from another dealer.
The men in the car with Chandler could not identify the gunman, though one had heard a voice calling Chandler's name, said Prem.
However, Woods' defence attorney, Wendy Calaway, said her client was "an innocent man who found himself in a perfect storm of misinformation and misidentification".
Chandler, she said, had stolen drugs from dealers and had "many enemies". His blinks, she told the jury, were "inconsistent and sporadic", and he had responded to only about half of the questions put to him.
Murder cases in which a culprit is identified by non-verbal means are rare but have resulted in convictions.
- Independent