The trial of Richard Satchwell, who is accused of the murder of his wife Tina in March 2017, continued for a second week at the Central Criminal Court in Dublin.
Mr Satchwell has pleaded not guilty to murdering his wife whose body was found buried under the stairs in their home in Youghal, Co Cork, more than six and a half years after he told gardaí she was missing.
Our Legal Affairs Correspondent Órla O'Donnell looks back at the latest evidence in the case.
The camera tracked through the front door of the narrow house at Grattan Street in Youghal, Co Cork.
On the screens in courtroom number six, the jury could see a cluttered hallway. A shelving unit on the left inside the door was messy and crammed with items including a bottle of bleach.
In the background, a wooden staircase - with no carpet or paintwork - could be seen leading up to the first floor.
The camera continued along the black and white tiled floor, towards the stairs into what was known as the main living room of Richard and Tina Satchwell's home.
The brickwork on the side of the stairs was exposed and at its highest point there were slatted doors leading into a storage area underneath.
The wall and the doors weren't immediately accessible as they were blocked by a large couch and other items, including a cement mixer. The room was dirty and untidy. The dark, old fashioned furniture was full of clutter, the patterned wallpaper was peeling off the walls.
In the small kitchen leading from the main sitting room, dirty dishes and cooking equipment was piled on every surface. Aldi and Lidl shopping bags mounted up on the floor.
In the front sitting room, which could not be accessed from the hallway, a large television was still on, showing the quiz show 'Who Wants to be a Millionaire?'
Cups of tea were discarded in the room, which, like the others, was cluttered, dirty and dark.

Seven days into the trial of Richard Satchwell, who denies murdering his wife in March 2017, the jury got their first proper views of the interior of the house in Youghal they had heard so much about.
The video was taken on 10 October 2023, more than six and a half years after Mr Satchwell first told gardaí his wife was missing.
Now, the home they had shared was about to be dug up.
The court heard this followed a review of the case by a new senior investigating officer, Superintendent Ann Marie Twomey. She had come to the conclusion more than a year earlier that Ms Satchwell was no longer alive and Mr Satchwell needed to be arrested to progress the investigation.
The video shown to the jury was taken by garda photographer Mairead Crowley, before the team began their intensive and intrusive search of the property.
Detective Garda David Kelleher told Mr Satchwell gardaí would be "in the walls" of the house and would be searching every inch of it.
The jury had already watched footage of the very lengthy interview carried out with Mr Satchwell after his arrest on the morning of the search. It lasted almost three hours and was shown over two days in court.
When the jury were asked on Thursday afternoon if they wanted to stay on a little later to finish the video or come back the next day, they indicated immediately that they wanted to take a break, almost before Mr Justice Paul McDermott had finished asking the question.
In the interview, gardaí quizzed Mr Satchwell again, in great detail, about the couple's movements on 19 and 20 March 2017 and his own movements after that.
In his answers, Mr Satchwell often referred to the fact that he had given the same details before in many previous media interviews and garda statements, including an "enhanced cognitive interview", carried out by specialist interviewer Garda Sergeant David Noonan in June 2021.
He told gardaí "we've had the talk already" and urged them to "just ask questions".
The big difference for Mr Satchwell in October 2023 was that this time he was under arrest on suspicion of murder.
He spoke about the car boot sale the couple had been to on 19 March 2017 in Carrigtwohill, and how they had come home afterwards and ordered a takeaway from Apache Pizza. He told them about their nightly routine.
He ran a bath for his wife and sat beside her chatting as she bathed. He told the gardaí that his wife liked her bath, "the hotter the better", and when she got in she "wouldn't get out for two hours".
He then laid two towels down on their bed and massaged Tina with baby oil. He then had a bath himself in the same bath water and went to bed.
The next morning he got up and was working in his shed out the back, before making Tina a cup of tea and some toast. She asked him to go to Dungarvan for a a few things and he said he set off around 9.40 or 10am, collecting their dole money in the post office on the way.
When he came back a few hours later he told gardaí, again, that his wife was gone.
The jury got some insights into the couple's relationship from witnesses who had come across the Satchwells at car boot sales around Cork.
Mr Satchwell told gardaí that as he didn't drink and Tina Satchwell rarely drank, these sales were their main social outlet.
The witnesses said Tina Satchwell would run around buying things, while Richard did all the selling.
Witness Linda Hennessy, who said she "remembered everything", told the court Ms Satchwell would sit in the passenger seat of the car and "wouldn’t lift a finger" while Richard sold her bags, shoes and clothes.
After he had reported his wife missing, the court heard Mr Satchwell told some car boot sale attendees who asked after her, that she had become really sick from dry rot or mould in their house and had gone to England to seek treatment.
During his detention on suspicion of murder, gardaí learned more about the Satchwells' relationship.
Richard Satchwell said he was captivated by Tina from the moment he met her when he was 22-years-old and knew immediately he would marry her.

She was his first relationship, he said, although he said he had had sex once previously but that, he told gardaí, was "personal".
He said however, that she had attacked him hundreds of times and on one occasion, he said she was surprised to see her hands were black with bruises from hitting him.
Mr Satchwell said she had changed completely after her brother took his own life in 2012. He said she last attacked him in late December or early January 2017.
The trial heard the couple's financial situation was not good. Forensic accountant Tadhg Twomey said between 2015 and 2017, Mr Satchwell spent more money than he brought in.
Mr Twomey also said that there was no cash windfall in the couple's finances that could account for the savings of €26,000 Mr Satchwell said his wife had taken with her when she left.
The jury were also shown emails and texts relating to Mr Satchwell's attempts to buy two marmoset monkeys from a man called "Mr James" who was involved in an international monkey rescue organisation.
Detective Garda Kelleher said he believed the monkeys' names were "Terry and Thelma".
Mr Satchwell told "Mr James" he didn't have any more money to send and that his wife was threatening to leave him.
Garda Kelleher agreed with defence counsel Brendan Grehan that it seemed to be a scam as Mr Satchwell sent significant amounts of money, but the monkeys never arrived to his door.
In the hours after his arrest, Mr Satchwell stuck to the version of events he had been telling gardaí since March 2017 about the last time he had seen his wife and the circumstances of her disappearance.
But in a second interview carried out the following morning, gardaí put a number of statements to him from other witnesses, contradicting some of what Mr Satchwell had been saying previously.
They told him the picture being painted by the evidence they were gathering, was different from the picture that had been painted by him.

They showed him pictures of Ms Satchwell and of the couple's beloved pets and told him that they had location data from his phone showing where it was at certain times.
Later that day he was back in the interview room, as the search of his home continued. Gardaí showed him photographs which had been sent from the search scene, focusing in particular on the area under the stairs, described as a "cubby hole". Asked what he kept in there, Mr Satchwell, replied "bits and pieces".
What Mr Satchwell didn't know at the time was that by this stage gardaí had zeroed in on this area, after receiving indications from a trained victim recovery dog that there were human remains there.
The jury heard a statement read into evidence by dog handler Alan Ward about the search he had carried out with his dog Fern, who showed "huge interest" in the area around the stairs and had given a "full freeze indication" signalling the presence of human remains.
Photographs by Garda Crowley showed how the garda excavation in the area developed step by step.
They removed lino, then layers of concrete and dug down to find a black plastic bag buried 74 centimetres under the floor, containing the remains of Tina Satchwell.
The jury is expected to hear more about this discovery and about Mr Satchwell's subsequent interviews with gardaí when the trial resumes.