Hill said in court that he couldn’t say the order in which the shots were fired, but since the car fled from the scene, he and his partner ordered them from front to back.

Greenway’s defense attorney Peter Baruch had filed a motion seeking to prevent the introduction of a report that Hill and his partner prepared, including a trajectory analysis of the bullets, as evidence. Baruch argued that the detectives drew conclusions that should be up the jury to consider.

Taylor countered that having the detectives testify to their observations and their expert opinions about what happened is important “to give jurors a demonstrative illustration of what happened.”

A judge denied the defense’s motion, after which Taylor withdrew the report from evidence, which prevents it from becoming part of the public record ahead of the trial.

Judge Michael Allen, a stand-in retired judge, also denied a motion from the defense that would have prevented the prosecution from referencing Greenway’s prior training or county police policies.