SNIP IT:
"TODAY
Police Sgt. Ron Cloward, who coordinated search efforts for Laci Peterson, is scheduled to testify.
Matt Geragos, brother of Mark Geragos, is due in Modesto to argue against Sharon Rocha's request that Scott Peterson not be allowed to profit from Laci Peterson's death. Tuesday, Stanislaus County Superior Court Judge Roger M. Beauchesne issued a tentative ruling that overturned his previous decision to throw the case out. Rocha originally asked the court to keep any payments from book or movie deals in a trust account until a verdict is reached in the double-murder trial. The judge in February sided with Matt Geragos, who said the court must dismiss the case because it was filed under California's "Son of Sam" law, which the state Supreme Court struck down two years earlier. But Beauchesne also gave Rocha a chance to amend her complaint. Attorney Adam Stewart of Modesto now seeks to stop the sale of any items that are enhanced by the notoriety of the case. Matt Geragos could not be reached for comment on Beauchesne's tentative change of heart. Stewart said he would reserve comment until after today's hearing.
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I don't think Geragos wants to mess with Sgt Cloward!
Testimony offers alibi contrasts
Testimony offers alibi contrasts
Img src="http://www.modbee.com/ips_rich_content/944-16a1peterson.jpg">
Modesto police Detective Jon Evers took the stand Tuesda MONICA M. DAVEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
By JOHN COTÉ
and GARTH STAPLEY
BEE STAFF WRITERS
Last Updated: June 16, 2004, 04:51:01 AM PDT
REDWOOD CITY -- After testifying Tuesday that Scott Peterson volunteered to produce a parking receipt for the Berkeley Marina, a Modesto police detective acknowledged he had testified differently at Peterson's preliminary hearing. Detective Jon Evers' admission undercut the suggestion that Peterson was eager to establish an alibi for Dec. 24, 2002, the day his pregnant wife, Laci, was reported missing.
Evers also testified that Scott Peterson was cooperative when police asked to search his home, truck and warehouse, and seemed distraught when Evers first encountered him.
That account, portions of which were corroborated by two other officers who testified earlier in Peterson's double-murder trial, stands in contrast to testimony by Laci Peterson's family members last week. They described Peterson as evasive and lacking emotion the night his wife disappeared.
Evers -- a patrolman at the time Laci Peterson disappeared and the first officer to respond to the missing person's report -- also revealed potentially damaging details from his talks with Peterson that night.......
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Peterson trial resumes after juror's illness
Peterson trial resumes after juror's illness
Diana Walsh, Chronicle Staff Writer
Tuesday, June 15, 2004
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The Scott Peterson double-murder trial resumed this afternoon after a juror who had taken ill earlier assured the judge that he had recovered.
Judge Alfred Delucchi had postponed the trial earlier in the day after juror No. 6, a man who works as a firefighter, became nauseous and left the courtroom during testimony from a Modesto police officer. After a temporary break, Delucchi said the juror told him he did not believe he could return to the court for the morning.
"He doesn't think he has the flu," Delucchi told lawyers and spectators in the Redwood City courtroom. ìI hope itís not the flu. If it is the flu, everybody else will get sick and weíll be here until Christmas."
The delay came during the third week of testimony in the trial which is expected to last five months. Peterson is on trial for murdering his wife, Laci Peterson, and the couple's unborn son, Conner.