The dominatrix and the disappearing corpse

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A prosecutor put on a black leather mask and re-enacted a bondage session Friday at a dominatrix’s manslaughter trial, telling the jury the woman did nothing to help her client when he suffered a heart attack.
BOB NELSON
Assistant Disrict Attorney Bob Nelson puts on the mask found in defendant Barbara Asher's makeshift "dungeon" to show the jury how client Michael Lord may have died Friday in Dedham, Mass.Greg Derr / AP

A prosecutor put on a black leather mask and re-enacted a bondage session Friday at a dominatrix’s manslaughter trial, telling the jury the woman did nothing to help her client when he suffered a heart attack.

Prosecutor Robert Nelson also dumped a box of hoods, collars and paddles onto a table during his closing arguments, declaring that 56-year-old Barbara Asher was trying to protect her business and “that’s why she didn’t call the police.”

The jury deliberated for about four hours on Friday before being sent home until Monday morning.

Asher, who called herself Mistress Lauren M, is charged with manslaughter and dismemberment in Michael Lord’s death.

Lord, a 53-year-old retired telephone company worker from North Hampton, N.H., died in 2000 while strapped to a replica of a medieval torture device in Asher’s Quincy condominium, according to police. His body was never found.

Police said Asher confessed that she and her boyfriend chopped up Lord’s body in the bathtub and dumped it behind a restaurant in Maine.

DOMINATRIX ASHER
Barbara Asher listens to openning arguments at her manslaughter trial Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2006, in Dedham, Mass. A prosecutor said that the dominatrix waited too long to call for help as a client died of a heart attack during a bondage session, then dismembered and disposed of the body rather than report the death. (AP Photo/The Patriot Legder, Greg Derr, POOL)Gregg Derr / POOL THE PATRIOT LEDGER

In a re-enactment for the jury, the prosecutor donned the mask, and with both hands, reached back and clutched the top of a blackboard to simulate how Lord was strapped.

“After a gasp, his head went forward and she did nothing, nothing for five minutes,” Nelson said, his voice muffled as he spoke through the zippered mouth opening.

Lord’s attorney objected, and Judge Charles Grabau agreed.

“That’s enough, Mr. Nelson,” the judge said. “Thank you for your demonstration.”

Defense attorney Stephania Page told the jury that prosecutors failed to produce any incriminating evidence. “No body. No blood. No DNA. No evidence,” Page said.

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