Posted on 01/23/2003 5:21:46 AM PST by runningbear
People want to know: Who is Scott Peterson?
People want to know: Who is Scott Peterson?
January 23, 2003 Posted: 05:10:11 AM PST
By TY PHILLIPS
BEE STAFF WRITER
His cell phone rings incessantly. TV camera crews capture his every move. Curious people drive, slowly, by his home every few minutes.
For Scott Peterson, privacy is a thing of the past. He has become perhaps the most recognizable man in Modesto.
"I feel badly for him," said Brian Argain, a friend of Scott and Laci Peterson's. "I can't even imagine being in Scott's shoes. Everybody has a theory on what happened to Laci, but nobody really knows. It's all very sad."
Laci, Scott's wife, was reported missing on Christmas Eve. The story has been a nightly fixture on many national TV news programs. Internet forums and talk shows brim with wild speculation about what happened to the pregnant woman.
Early on, family and friends described the couple's relationship as perfect. Most pledged unwavering support. Then cracks began to appear.
Last week, police detectives told
Laci's side of the family that her husband had an affair and during the summer took out a $250,000 life insurance policy on his 27-year-old wife, according to family members.
The family felt betrayed, and they distanced themselves from Scott. Many of Laci's friends also left his side. Others remain loyal to a man whom they consider a good friend.
"We're all looking for the truth," Argain said. "I'm going to support Scott no matter what the rumors are. It doesn't affect my friendship with him. Just because he may have had an affair doesn't mean he has anything to do with her disappearance."
Still, his recent behavior has many people -- including some who know him -- asking the same question:
Who is Scott Peterson?
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He was born Oct. 24, 1971, at Sharp Hospital in San Diego. His mother, Jacqueline, described him as a healthy, happy baby. The youngest of Lee and Jacqueline Peterson's seven children, Scott enjoyed no shortage of attention growing up.
As Lee raised his five sons, he instilled in them his passions for golfing, fishing and hunting. Scott quickly took to hunting and fishing as a young boy; golf was another story.
"When he was about 6 or 7 years old, we'd all go golfing together," Jacqueline said in an interview last week. "He would put his fishing pole in his bag because the course we often went to was on the San Diego River. By the second hole, he'd stop golfing and start fishing. We'd pass by him every so often, and he usually fished until we were done golfing."
The family, especially the Peterson boys, often took fishing trips to the mountains. Scott eventually convinced his father to buy a fishing boat.
As Scott got older, his parents enticed him to go golfing with them by letting him drive the cart. Over time, he began to excel at the sport.
He made the golf team at University of San Diego High School, playing alongside Phil Mickelson, who is now a touring professional.
"Lee told him once if he ever played a round of scratch golf, he'd buy him a Ferrari," Jacqueline said. "Lee never thought it would happen, but Scott was doing that before he got out of high school. We did get him a car, but it was a used Peugeot sedan. We thought it would be safer."
Scott had no living grandparents. So, while he was in high school, he befriended an elderly woman who had no grandchildren and visited her on Sundays after church, Jacqueline said.
"The school he went to encouraged community service," she said. "One day, he told us he was bringing his grandmother to Grandparents Day at the school. I asked where he got a grandmother. He told me he'd had one for a while.
"I went and met her the following Sunday. She just kept saying what a great kid he was, and how nice it was that he visited an old lady and brightened her day."
While Scott was in high school, his parents received two letters from people whose cars had broken down on the road, Jacqueline said. Scott had stopped to help them get going.
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Scott graduated from high school in 1990. He briefly attended Arizona State University on a partial golf scholarship, but he moved back with his parents, who had bought a house in Morro Bay.
He moved out about six months later, telling them that he was too old to be living at home. He began working three jobs to put himself through
Cuesta College and California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.
While he was a waiter at
Pacific Cafe, Scott met Laci Rocha, an upbeat young woman with a beautiful smile. Laci's neighbor worked at the cafe, and Laci ended up there from time to time, sometimes having brief conversations with Scott over a counter as she ordered coffee.
One day, Laci wrote her phone number on a piece of paper, handing it to her neighbor to give to Scott. Thinking his friend was playing a mean trick on him, Scott crumpled the paper and threw it in the garbage. After being convinced it was no joke, he retrieved the number from the trash and called her soon.
Everyone who knew them then said they quickly fell in love. When Sharon Rocha came to Morro Bay to meet Scott, the mother and daughter each were greeted by a dozen roses at their dinner table at Pacific Cafe.
A few weeks later, Scott brought Laci to San Diego to meet his brothers and sisters, and they noticed how their brother could not stop smiling.
"The moment he was with Laci, they just beamed at each other," Jacqueline said. "No one else ever made my son smile like that. They did everything right."
After graduation, the couple opened a popular eatery called The Shack, a place near the Cal Poly campus where students came for hamburgers and sandwiches. The restaurant, a converted bakery, featured barrels of peanuts and numerous televisions showing sports.
The business quickly became a success. The couple sold The Shack two years later after deciding to move to Modesto to start a family and be closer to Laci's parents.
They rented a home for a while before buying a fixer-upper on Covena Avenue in the La Loma neighborhood. Scott is a salesman for a specialty fertilizer company.
After several years of trying, Laci became pregnant last summer. She was so excited when she found out that she began calling family and friends at 7 a.m. after taking a pregnancy test.
As the holiday season progressed, the Petersons held several parties at their home. Guests walking in noticed that the house no longer resembled the place that the Petersons had purchased.
"Scott remodeled the entire house, doing woodwork, tile, plumbing, a little bit of everything," said Guy Miligi, a friend of the Petersons'. "I know he put a lot of hours into making that baby room just right. He was real excited about having his first child. He talked about that all the time."
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On Dec. 23, Laci and her mother spoke by telephone. The call ended about 8:30 p.m. Scott told police he last saw his wife the next morning as he left for a fishing trip out of the Berkeley Marina, and was unable to find her when he returned home that evening.
Early on, police obtained a search warrant for the couple's home and vehicles and his warehouse. Police said they gathered evidence during those searches, but have not elaborated.
When they released pictures of Scott's truck and boat several weeks ago, police said they had been unable to corroborate his story. Police have said he is cooperating with investigators "to some degree."
Scott has not been named a suspect in his wife's disappearance; Police Chief Roy Wasden said Wednesday that detectives have not been able to eliminate Scott from the investigation.
Initially, Scott refused nearly every media request for interviews, saying that he preferred to keep the focus on his wife and not himself. He broke his silence roughly at about the same time that reports surfaced about the affair and life insurance policy.
Since he began talking with the media last week, Scott mostly has given one- and two-sentence comments, mostly about his plans to keep searching for his wife and child. He has ended most interviews quickly and abruptly.
He has not issued a direct denial of allegations of the affair. During a brief interview Friday with a Bay Area TV station, Scott called The Bee's report "a bunch of lies."
That same day, the Rocha family issued a statement asking Scott to tell police everything he knows, imploring him to prove that he has nothing to hide.
That weekend, as national media trucks inundated the area around the Modesto Police Department, Scott headed to Southern California to help with a one-day event to raise awareness of his wife's disappearance
(Excerpt) Read more at modestobee.com ...
Well, I guess I'm not the only one that thinks that way. I said the same thing, Maybe on this thread or another one. I've read so many of these threads, after awhile they all start to run together.
I never met ANYONE who wasn't guilty of something. The question for police is whether he is guilty of something in this case.
If he is, I have no pity for how he must feel now, but if he is innocent, it would be beyond horrible. What's the hurry? Answer,,follow the money.
Either way the media is into making money off of this misery. And they come to the wrong conclusion more often than not.
I'm still waiting for apologies to the Ramsey family for the travesty they continue to suffer. It will never be forthcoming from the blood suckers.
Heck, maybe I read your comment there, don't think it was the same name, but if you have a different name over there, then I may have read what you wrote. But it makes a lot of sense.
SP should have let them keep those items, what does he want them for. But it might be admitting too much too soon, if he gave them back now. (Just speculation, only an opinion.)
I really have a life outside of FR, I really, really do. At least, I think I do.
1. Scott Peterson is innocent.
2. He last sees his pregnant wife at 9:30AM on Christmas Eve as she is preparing to to take the dog for a walk in the nearby park. Scott leaves to go fishing at a Berkely Marina which is several hours away.
3. Now there are several possibilities as to how she might have disappeared:
a) As soon as the perp(s) saw Scott leave they entered the house before Laci could leave and overwhelmed her. Assuming the baby was what they wanted they would have killed her then and there and literally ripped the baby from her body. They would have to know something about what they were doing, they would have to work fast, and they certainly wouldn't stick around to clean up the mess or spirit the body away. They would have left with the baby if it was born alive. It was born dead, they would have left it behind. Because they feel for the dog who has to piddle, in an act of kindness after killing Laci, they let the dog out with the leash on.
b.) The perp(s) watch her leave the house with the dog and then kidnap her in broad daylight on Christmas eve. No one sees them do this, no one hears her scream, and no crime scene is left behind. They leave the dog behind running free on the leash.
Both these scenarios assume they the perp(s) have been following Laci's pregnancy for some time and decided to make their move on Christmas eve in broad daylight.
After reading this, would you like to reconsider your suggestion that she was possibly kidnaped and killed for her baby?
I'm sorry. I must have missed the arrest of the killer in the Jon Benet Ramsey case which exonerated the Ramsey family from any possible involvement in the death of their daughter.
I'm sure the police are formulating their apology to Patsy Ramsey right now. Hope that puts your mind at ease.
Regards,
Citizen 19384763266
What Lee thinks is an amusing anecdote about Scott, sounds like a dirty trick that might enrage a young man who achieved an impossible goal. His Dad promises him a Ferrari, and he gets a used Peugeot sedan.
I don't think parents should play with a kid's mind like that. Why didn't they just say, hey, we'll get you a car if you achieve that goal?
While I was reading that part, I started to get fearful, wondering: did she disappear too? So whatever happened to the old lady anyway?? lol
As to the Ramsey case, I guess you haven't seen all the new revelations. Pity, in which case, you are still ignorant of their innocence. OR you think that an arrest of someone else is the only thing which will exonerate them. (in your mind.)
Where were you on the date in question? Oh never mind, until they arrest someone, you are still a suspect, and actually guilty in some minds.
It's ok, in the end, I'm sure the media and police will apologise when they admit to the truth.
Let me guess, did you spout off on this forum about thier guilt when this all went down?
Regards, a concerned citizen.
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