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Hudson describes warning sister about brother-in-law

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CHICAGO (MCT) — Jennifer Hudson, dressed all in black and wearing little makeup, struggled at times to maintain her composure on the witness stand Monday as the trial of her former brother-in-law opened in dramatic fashion.

Her voice cracked as the Academy Award-winning actress described how no one in the family wanted her sister, Julia, to marry William Balfour, accused of killing Hudson’s mother, brother and 7-year-old nephew.

“We didn’t like the way he treated her, and I didn’t like the way he treated my nephew,” she testified.

Balfour is accused of fatally shooting Hudson’s mother, Darnell Donerson; brother Jason Hudson; and nephew, Julian King, in October 2008 after Julia Hudson told him that she wanted a divorce.

Jennifer Hudson’s emotional testimony offered little insight into the murders but gave prosecutors a chance to put a heartbroken — and familiar — face on a gritty crime. Her presence gives an important advantage for the prosecution, who will present a largely circumstantial case during the expected monthlong trial.

Earlier Monday the defense addressed her star power quickly during opening statements, saying the heavy media interest following the murders prompted authorities to arrest Balfour without a proper investigation. There is no DNA, fingerprints or gunshot residue connecting Balfour to the murders, according to his attorneys.

With so much attention focused on the Chicago icon in the days following the slayings, police did not look into Jason Hudson’s alleged drug dealing or the people he associated with, public defender Amy Thompson said. Jason Hudson, 29, who had been arrested for drug possession in the past and had been shot on two other occasions, brought an element of danger to the home, she maintained.

“This really had nothing to do with (Jennifer Hudson),” Thompson told jurors. “It was what Jason was doing to make money for their family … as he worked as a drug dealer in Englewood.”

Hudson’s presence, however, could not be ignored in the Cook County courtroom as jurors listened intently to her testimony. She appeared soft-spoken and vulnerable on the witness stand, answering questions so quietly that the judge asked her to speak up more than once.

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