The live court session for Jodi Arias' first-degree murder trial will return on Monday for the 2008 Arizona killing of Travis Alexander.

The trial can be watched via the free live stream below.

Defense witness Dr. Alyce LaViolette, a domestic violence expert, returned to the witness stand Thursday and was grilled by prosecutor Juan Martinez for the first time. During the cross-examination, Martinez became so visibly frustrated by some of the expert's answers that she asked him, "Are you mad at me?"

The question by LaViolette led everyone who attended the trial to burst into laughter, which prompted the judge to demand that everyone be quiet

Someone else attended the trial on Thursday and stunned courtroom attendees- juror No. 5, who was infamously booted from court on Tuesday. The unidentified woman, who witnesses said "stood out" to everyone because she has a "unique" hairstyle, sat a few rows behind Arias. Juror No. 5 is a married, white female in her 30s who wears eyeglasses and sports a blonde chin-length bob hairstyle with scarlet red highlights.

Arias' defense attorney, Kirk Nurmi, filed a request for a mistrial and the removal of juror No. 5 from the courtroom on Monday. According to the defense lawyer, she said prejudiced statements in front of her fellow jurors. Nurmi wrote in his petition that her as-yet-unrevealed comments constitute a "misconduct that inserted partiality in what is supposed to be an impartial body," according to Arizona Republic.

"Ms. Arias takes the position that the statements Juror 5 made in front of her fellow jurors amounts to misconduct," Arias' attorney wrote. "Given the evidence that came forward on March 28, 2013, it is beyond legitimate dispute that Juror 5 is not fair and impartial making her unfit to continue as a juror."

The details about juror No.5's statements have not been made public because the court documents are sealed, but she released a statement that said she is not giving any interviews to discuss her removal.

Nurmi told the judge that Martinez stopped and posed for photograph and signed autographs for fans outside of the Maricopa County courtroom on March 28. If jurors saw this, it is considered prosecutorial misconduct. Arizona's 12 News ran footage of the prosecutor with fans outside of the courthouse and it was re-aired on CNN.

Judge Sherry Stephens then demanded that each juror be questioned individually about the incident. Juror No. 5's statements reportedly prove that she is neither fair nor impartial, according to Nurmi, who added that it makes juror No. 5's removal from the jury "essential."

Watch the video of juror No. 5 sitting in the court gallery in the video below.

Arias, 31, has been on trial since Jan. 4 for murdering her ex-lover, Alexander. Autopsy records showed that Jodi stabbed Alexander over 27 times, slit his throat from ear to ear and shot him in the head. According to police, Arias lied twice at first about how Alexander was killed and later admitted that she killed him in an act of self-defense. If she 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 free live stream of Arias' trial on Monday, April 8 at 12:30 p.m. EST.

Tags
Jodi Arias