By Jeremy Pawloski | The Olympian
Braae testified that he had engaged in a sexual relationship with Jones since April 2001, but he could not name anyone who ever saw them together before the bartender at Bailey's saw them there July 6, 2001. Braae said he and Jones met when she walked up and began talking to him in April 2001, while he was fishing on Hicks Lake in Lacey.
Braae said he never met Jones' daughter Elisa, who lived with Jones and was 11 at the time of her mother's death. When Jones was killed, Elisa was on a camping trip on the coast with a friend.
Braae said that on July 6, 2001, Jones had left a note on the door of his Tacoma home asking him to meet her at her apartment. When he got there, a note on her door advised him to meet her at Bailey's, he said.
Earlier in his testimony, Braae said he was born in Palo Alto, Calif., but grew up in Bonney Lake. He said he made a living working on cars and buying and selling them.
When Tunheim asked Braae whether singing in bars got him women, he responded, "If you want to put it that way, of course it does."
Yakima incident
Tunheim also questioned Braae about allegedly trying to force himself on a woman in Yakima and strangling her in July, after Jones' death. Tunheim showed a picture of the woman to Braae and the jury, showing her with large bruises around her neck.
Braae said the woman wasn't his type, then added, "There's a saying that the girls all get prettier at closing time; that's not necessarily true."
When Tunheim asked Braae whether he strangled the woman so he could be in control, Braae angrily responded, "You're more of a control freak than I am."
Braae said the woman in Yakima had wanted to have sex with him, and there was no reason to force himself on her.
"You're a well-dressed, well-groomed, good-looking guy; why wouldn't she want you, right?" Tunheim asked Braae.
"Right," Braae responded.
Memory lapses
Braae said that after Jones left him outside Bailey's, he called her several times, but he couldn't remember exactly when. Braae responded to many of Tunheim's questions that he could not remember events from that far back.
"I'm getting old; I don't have the best memory in the world and I drink a lot of beer," he told Tunheim.
One of Braae's attorneys, Larry Jefferson, asked Braae whether he is responsible for Lori Jones' death.
"That's ridiculous," Braae said. "I had absolutely no reason to want to harm her. Just the opposite; we were talking about trying to make some sort of exclusive commitment to each other."
Braae is serving a prison sentence in Idaho stemming from his conviction on charges related to the police chase July 20, 2001.
Jeremy Pawloski covers public safety for The Olympian. He can be reached at 360-754-5465 or jpawloski@theolympian.com.
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