Murder defendant Dennis Wolter’s actions the night he killed his estranged girlfriend in May 2011 were consistent with symptoms of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, a defense expert testified Wednesday.
Wolter is accused of stabbing his estranged girlfriend, Kori Fredericksen, more than 70 times inside his home at 1205 W. 39th St. in Vancouver. He’s charged with aggravated first-degree murder, which requires prosecutors to prove premeditation and intent.
Wolter’s attorney, Therese Lavallee, has argued that Wolter has brain damage from a fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, as well as a traumatic brain injury sustained at age 18. She said the damage interfered with his ability to form intent.
In the fourth day of Wolter’s defense in Clark County Superior Court, Natalie Novick Brown, a clinical and forensic psychologist, testified that people with fetal alcohol disorders have brain damage. Wolter specifically has damage in four parts of his brain, she said. That includes the orbital frontal cortex, which operates executive functions. Conscious decision-making and self-regulation happen in the orbital frontal cortex and allow people to act in a socially appropriate manner.