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Ex-wife says dad in son's hot car death 'destroyed my life'

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BRUNSWICK, Ga. (AP) — A day after she defended her former husband as a loving father, the ex-wife of a Georgia man charged with leaving their toddler son to die in a hot SUV bitterly told a jury Tuesday: "He destroyed my life."

Justin Ross Harris, 35, is charged with murder in the June 2014 death of his 22-month-old son, Cooper. His defense attorneys say Harris accidentally left the boy in his SUV outside his workplace after forgetting to drop him off at day care. Prosecutors say he killed the child on purpose.

Leanna Taylor, who divorced Harris in March after eight years of marriage, took the witness stand in his defense Monday. She walked the jury through a series of family photos and video clips cute enough to make some jurors laugh out loud. She said Harris would not have left their son to die intentionally.

But Taylor spoke of her former husband in much harsher terms Tuesday after prosecutors questioned how well she really knew him. Evidence in the trial has shown Harris, not long before his son's death, met a prostitute for sex. He went online seeking sexual encounters with men and women. The day Cooper died, Harris was swapping sexual text messages with a 17-year-old girl, asking for a photo of her breasts.

"Basically you had no idea how his behavior was escalating over the years," prosecutor Chuck Boring said.

Taylor broke down. She had previously said sexual problems plagued her marriage to Harris and they sought counseling years earlier after he confessed to frequently viewing pornography. Taylor said she hadn't known until after their son's death that Harris was having physical affairs.

"He ruined my life. He destroyed my life," Taylor said before leaving the witness stand in tears. "I'm humiliated. I may never trust anyone again the way that I did. If I never see him again in my life, that's fine."

That testimony contrasted sharply with the image of a playful father and family man Taylor presented under questioning from Harris' defense attorneys on Monday.

Even Harris grinned from his seat at the defense table as defense attorney Maddox Kilgore played video clips of Harris trying to teach his son to say "banana" and letting the toddler strum his guitar. Several members of the jury openly laughed.

Despite problems in their marriage, Taylor testified Monday, Harris had been an enthusiastic and involved parent who doted on their son.

"He wanted to enjoy every second he could with him," she said.

Prosecutors say Harris left his son in his car seat to swelter and die on purpose so that he could escape the responsibilities of family life as he sought relationships with other women. Harris told police he strapped Cooper into his car seat after they ate breakfast together at a restaurant, then forgot about the boy during a drive of just over a half-mile to his workplace.

Harris worked as a Web developer for Home Depot in the Atlanta suburbs after he and Taylor moved to Georgia from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, in 2012. The trial was moved to the coastal city of Brunswick, 275 away from suburban Cobb County, because of pretrial publicity.

A former Home Depot co-worker testified Tuesday that Harris gushed about fatherhood. Jason Abdo said the two of them often discussed music, and Harris told him being a dad was far better.

"As much as you love music, you'll love your kid 100 times more," Abdo recalled Harris telling him.

Before she left the witness stand Tuesday, Taylor said she hasn't spoken to her ex-husband since she filed for divorce in February.

She said she's now living in Florence, Alabama, "to be close to my new boyfriend."