Taking the stand in a hearing at the Stamford courthouse to determine if the state has enough evidence to charge Stamford resident Deshawn Hayes with Gooden’s murder, police officer Ed Rondano said the bullet, a 10 millimeter live round, was found in the car Hayes and two others were pulled over in moments after the shooting. On an aerial map used for the hearing, a direct line could be drawn from where the shell casings were found in the park to where Gooden was standing and beyond to where bullets that night caused damage to homes at 70 and 74 Merrell Avenue. [...] under cross examination by Hayes’ defense attorney Darnell Crosland, none of the police officers brought to the stand could say unequivocally that the spent bullets found by police, including the bullet fragment that killed Gooden, came from the 10 millimeter casings.