Jodi Arias will be cross-examined again for the sixth day during her first-degree murder trial on Monday.

Last week, Arias broke down and cried several times when prosecutor Juan Martinez' cross-examined her about the horrific kiling her ex-lover Travis Alexander. Arias killed Alexander, a 30-year-old Mormon motivational speaker, on June 4, 2008. When her murder victim was found, police discovered he was stabbed 27 times with a slit from ear to ear and shot in the head.

Arias confessed she lied in earlier testimonies as she sobbed on Feb. 28. She cried when Martinez asked her a series of questions about how she stabbed him.

Were you crying while you were shooting him?" Martinez asked Arias.

"I don't remember," replied Arias.

"Were you crying when you were stabbing him?" Martinez asked, and Arias replied, "I don't remember."

"How about when you cut his throat, were you crying then?" he inquired.

"I don't know," she replied as she sobbed on the witness stand.

On Feb. 27, Martinez set out to debunk what he called Arias' "litany of lies" when he asked her about the recorded phone sex conversations with her victim. The prosecutor played a clip of Arias' sexually charged phone conversations with Alexander where she told him she hoped to marry a "kinky" Mormon man. Martinez also presented sexually explicit phone text messages to contradict her testimony that Alexander's sexual fantasies made her uncomfortable.

In one of them, Arias wrote to Alexander "I want to [expletive} you like a dirty, horny little school girl."

"You did enjoy dressing up though, right?" Martinez asked Arias after he played the recording, and she answered, "Um, yes"

"It was a consensual mutual relationship sexually speaking, wasn't it?" Martinez asked.

"Yes, always," Arias said.

"No indication that you were offended?" the prosecutor continued.

"Correct," Arias replied.

Martinez then showed receipts to prove Arias bought nine gallons of gas with cash 4 minutes after she bought eight gallons of gas with a debit card. The prosecutor asked her if it would be harder to track purchases if someone bought gas with cash and she agreed.

"Wouldn't you agree that cash transaction is harder to keep track of then a credit transaction?" he asked.

"Yes I would agree with that," Arias replied.

If Arias is convicted of the murder and the lies that she confessed to she will likely face the death penalty and become the fourth woman in Arizona's history to die by lethal injection.

Watch the live stream of Arias being cross-examined by prosecutors in her murder trial on Monday, March 4, starting at 12:15 p.m. EST.

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Jodi Arias, Live streaming