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A Laci Peterson look-alike 'debunks' mistaken identity
The Modesto Bee ^ | May 24, 2003, 06:24:24 AM PDT | John Cote' and Garth Stapely

Posted on 05/24/2003 8:06:32 AM PDT by runningbear

A Laci Peterson look-alike 'debunks' mistaken identity

Homer and Helen Maldonado say they saw Laci Peterson Dec. 24.

Laci Peterson look-alike 'debunks' mistaken identity

By JOHN COTÉ and GARTH STAPLEY
BEE STAFF WRITERS

Published: May 24, 2003, 06:24:24 AM PDT

Two people who insist they saw the pregnant Laci Peterson walking her dog after 9:30 a.m. Christmas Eve now have even stronger reason to believe they are right. A woman from the same neighborhood resembles Peterson, was pregnant last year and could have been mistaken for her.

But that woman had her baby in October and said she did not walk her dog that day. Scott Peterson, his wife's accused killer, said he last saw Laci at 9:30 a.m. Dec. 24 when he set out from their Modesto home on a fishing trip.

Prosecutors allege that Peterson killed his wife "on or about and between" Dec. 23 and 24, and have discounted reports from people who say they saw Laci Peterson after her husband contends he went fishing.

Mark Geragos, Peterson's lead attorney, said the woman who resembles Laci Peterson, but was no longer pregnant in December, "debunks their whole theory."

The woman, who has since moved from the La Loma neighborhood, has a golden retriever named McKenzie -- the same breed and name as the Petersons' dog.

She said she is sure about not walking her dog on Christmas Eve, because her husband's two sons were at their home to go shopping that day.

"I'm 99.9 percent sure I was not walking that day," said the woman, who asked not to be identified. She is a prosecutor in another county.

Scott Peterson has pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder in the deaths of his wife and their unborn son, Conner. Soon after taking Peterson's case, Geragos announced that he was launching an investigation to "find out who did this to Scott's wife and Scott's son."

The defense was searching for one woman in particular, but Geragos declined to say Friday if she had been found.

The woman who resembles Peterson said she has spoken to police and Modesto attorney Kirk McAllister, a member of the defense team.

Geragos said the woman's account supports the defense contention that police arrested the wrong person.

"It certainly would confirm my belief that Laci was abducted on the 24th and certainly debunks any leaks out there that this was someone else who was walking that morning."

Homer Maldonado, a 59-year-old commercial painter, said he saw Peterson between 9:45 and 10 a.m. Dec. 24, moments after he left the USA Gasoline station on Miller Avenue, about a half-mile south of the Peterson home at 523 Covena Ave.

"I slowed down and was taking a good look. What caught my eye was she was so pregnant," Maldonado said. "There's no question it was her."

Maldonado said he told police on Jan. 1 about the sighting as search teams fanned out from East La Loma Park. But an officer told him that search dogs indicated that Peterson went in another direction, Maldonado said. He said police never called him to follow up.

A bloodhound indicated that she left her home in a vehicle, not on foot, the dog's handler said Dec. 30.

Maldonado and his wife, Helen, said they left their Phoenix Avenue home at about 9:30 a.m. Dec. 24, dropped off a Christmas gift and then went for gas.

They said they saw a yellowish-tan van with dull paint at an adjacent pump. The van reeked of cigarette smoke, the Maldonados said.

"They weren't getting gas. They were just there," Homer Maldonado said.

According to Maldonado, a man came out of the gas station's store and a male voice from the van asked if the man had "got the cigs."

Maldonado said he saw Peterson about a block away from the gas station, walking in front of 211 Covena Ave.

Vivian Mitchell, who lives on Buena Vista Avenue roughly 10 blocks from the Peterson home and about three-quarters of a mile from the Maldonado sighting, has told police that she saw Peterson walk by between 10 and 10:30 a.m. Dec. 24.

"How can you duplicate a woman that looked like her?" Mitchell, 79, said. "She was so magnetic. She was so pretty."

She called police, and got no call back for several weeks.

Mitchell and her husband, Bill, said they were sure it was Dec. 24, partially because the sun had come out after several days of damp and foggy weather.

But data at the Western Regional Climate Center show fairly clear weather in Modesto on Dec. 22 and 23, with mist setting in about 6 p.m. Dec. 23 and lasting at least through Christmas.

Chief Deputy District Attorney John Goold said he could not explain, without discussing other evidence, why authorities discounted the witnesses' statements.

"Police were very seriously looking at whatever seemed credible," he said. "Modesto's a big town. I imagine there was more than one pregnant woman in it."

---------------------------------------------------------

Wiretap documents filed

Wiretap documents filed

By GARTH STAPLEY and JOHN COTÉ

BEE STAFF WRITERS

Published: May 24, 2003, 06:26:13 AM PDT

Scott Peterson talked with his girlfriend four weeks after his pregnant wife was reported missing, according to court documents filed late Friday.

The wiretap documents reveal that he called Amber Frey and discussed his hiring of a private investigator. The call came late at night on Jan. 20, almost a month after Frey had gone to police to tell them about her affair with Peterson, and four days before she went public.

The documents from prosecutors also reveal that authorities intercepted 69 calls between Peterson and his Modesto attorney, and two calls between Peterson and his private investigator. The prosecutors said they inadvertently monitored some of those conversations.

Because monitoring attorney-client and investigator-client discussions is illegal, prosecutors wrote that they immediately stopped listening in most cases and did not learn anything "substantive."

The attorney, Kirk McAllister, called the eavesdropping "worse than underhanded" and vowed to "pursue this fully and vigorously." He said Peterson's defense team will review the documents this weekend and consider asking the Superior Court to throw out double-murder charges against Peterson.

The 30-year-old is charged with murder in the deaths of his wife, Laci, and their unborn son, Conner. She was eight months pregnant when family members reported her missing from her Modesto home Christmas Eve.

The wiretap documents state that a judge referred to Peterson as a suspect, though police insisted that he was not a suspect -- nor had he been ruled out -- before his arrest April 18.

Stanislaus County Superior Court has sealed the original wiretap recordings, and a district attorney's investigator has copies.

But prosecutors in District Attorney James Brazelton's office say they have not listened to them, preferring to have the court sanction their release to the prosecution and defense. Otherwise, the recordings should be kept secret, prosecutors argue.

Judge Al Girolami is scheduled to take up the matter Tuesday morning.

On Jan. 20, while tapping Peterson's cell phone, investigators heard him tell Frey about his private investigator, and say that a tabloid newspaper also had tried to hire the investigator, according to the documents.

Authorities apparently disclosed the conversation to explain why they erroneously intercepted Peterson's discussions with the private investigator. They simply had not known before that he was working for Peterson's defense team, investigators wrote.

They also wrote that Peterson's mother, Jackie Peterson, offered to pay the private investigator and her son accepted. Authorities listened to that conversation as well.

Wiretapping laws allow investigators to briefly spot-check conversations between clients and their lawyers from time to time. But Superior Court Judge Wray Ladine "was not comfortable with the idea of any spot checks," federal task force agent Steven P. Jacobson wrote in an affidavit filed Friday.

"Judge Ladine said he felt monitoring or spot-checking any conversations between Scott Peterson and Kirk McAllister would be inappropriate and could cause problems," Jacobson wrote.

The newly filed documents state that investigators intercepted calls between Peterson and McAllister from Jan. 10 until Peterson's arrest, and monitored segments of only two of the 69 intercepted calls.

Agent Steve Hoek of the Stanislaus Drug Enforcement Agency once listened for 41 seconds before recognizing McAllister's voice, according to the documents.

---------------------------------------------------------

Laci's remains raise mutilation questions

Laci's remains raise mutilation questions

By GARTH STAPLEY and JOHN COTÉ
BEE STAFF WRITERS

Published: May 24, 2003, 06:26:13 AM PDT

EDITOR'S NOTE: This story contains graphic details that may be disturbing to some readers.

Laci Peterson's body was recovered without a head and feet, two separate sources close to the double-murder investigation said Friday.

One source added that significant parts of the torso were missing as well.

"There were no organs, no skin, nothing from the belly button up to the chest area," said a source familiar with the autopsy report, which a judge has sealed from public review.

Two forensic experts, however -- without having seen the autopsy -- offered differing opinions on whether the body might have been mutilated before being dumped in San Francisco Bay.

The body of Peterson, 27, and her unborn son were found along the bay's eastern shore in mid-April, about four months after the then-pregnant woman had gone missing from her Modesto home.

Divers, who had been searching the bay for evidence the last eight days, quit early Friday afternoon and were not expected to resume before Tuesday.

Authorities have said they will seek the death penalty against Scott Peterson, 30. He has been charged with two counts of murder in the deaths of his wife and their unborn son, Conner.

"The absence of parts of (Laci Peterson's) body says to me it was dismembered before being placed in the water," said Dr. Michael Baden. He is a New York forensic pathologist who worked on O.J. Simpson's defense team and helped Chandra Levy's family after the Modesto woman's remains were found in Washington, D.C.

Killers sometimes dismember bodies to make it easier to dispose of them, Baden said.

But Dr. Gregory Schmunk, Santa Clara County coroner, said news of the headless torso "doesn't surprise me at all." He said it is perfectly natural for tidal activity, boat propellers and feeding animals to break apart bodies.

"This is the normal type of thing we see," Schmunk said.

Baden disagreed, saying extremities are known to separate in water -- but not in four months.

In the past two weeks, he has presided over six autopsies of people who drowned or were killed in the winter, and whose bodies floated up as spring temperatures produce more decomposition gases. "None of them was dismembered," he said.

"Usually (a body) stays together pretty good," Baden continued, adding that marine animals normally do not chew through tough ligaments holding bones together. "After a while (separation occurs), yes, but not after four months -- not even after four years."

Schmunk said speculation of mutilation is not warranted until borne out by the autopsy report.

--------------------------------------------------------------------

Keeping track of McAllister's other pending case, not of Peterson

Arraignment postponed in dairy deaths

SNIP IT

The judge commented: "It doesn't seem you're moving along with any great speed."

Nunes' attorney, Michael Fagalde of Merced, said the appeal "blindsided" him. "We found out about it late (Thursday) afternoon," he said.

Faria's attorney, Kirk McCallister of Modesto, agreed to the delay because "there may be issues involved in this beyond what Mr. Falgalde and I have researched."

The grand jury's 500-page report alleged that Alatorre and Araiza had not been properly trained to deal with methane gas, did not have proper equipment and that the air in the pipe had not been tested.

The California Occupational Safety and Health administration has fined the dairy $126,650, in a decision the dairy is appealing.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

A case of murder got conviction in Mexico, scaughty, Mexico would of convicted ya? ;o)

http://www.modbee.com/local/story/6830914p-7768407c.html">Suspect in '98 killing is convicted in Mexico

excerpted:

Suspect in '98 killing is convicted in Mexico

By DARYL FARNSWORTH
BEE STAFF WRITER

Published: May 24, 2003, 06:26:21 AM PDT

A suspect in a 1998 Stanislaus County murder has been convicted of the crime in Mexico, the Sheriff's Department reported Friday.

Oscar Sanchez Mata, 28, was convicted May 18 of first-degree murder and received a 20-year prison sentence, Detective Mark Copeland said. Mata is imprisoned in Jalisco.

The Mexican government put Mata on trial under a law that allows prosecution of Mexicans accused of crimes against fellow citizens in other countries.

The killing occurred July 28, 1998, at a dairy on Crow Road between Oakdale and Waterford. Twenty-six-year-old Armando Munoz died from a gunshot wound to the head.

Munoz had been attending a barbecue at the dairy when he and his brother Cesear got into a fight with Mata and his brothers Ernesto and Celestino, investigators said.

The Matas left, only to return 90 minutes later and start fighting again with Cesear Munoz.

When Armando Munoz tried to break up the fight, Oscar Mata shot him once in the head with a handgun, detectives said.

The Mata brothers fled. Mexican authorities caught Oscar and Ernesto in Celaya, Guanajuato, and prosecuted both.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Excerpt) Read more at modbee.com ...


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: lacipeterson; scottpeterson
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To: Howlin
I don't see why a judge would allow the case to be tried in LA. And I am not even sure an LA just would let him walk. Not even the OJ jury, which in fact only gave OJ a pass to get back at whitey, which was Cockroaches master plan anyway. They'd probably hang Peterson. :) Of course I think Peterson did it, and I expect the evidence to prove it. Maybe San Diego would be a good spot for the trial. The Westerfield jury did a good job.

There is some traction for the defense if there is no blood evidence etc., to pin on Peterson, unfortunately. But one assumes the prosecution has something more on him than we know about. He's one cold SOB that's for sure. PEOPLE magazine has a cover story this week on Scott - "the boy next door" angle. I think he wanted to be with Amber Frey, and he must have flipped at the idea of being "saddled" with a child, too. What a horror story.

41 posted on 05/24/2003 9:47:48 AM PDT by veronica (How's about a Palestinian state inside France? It could be called "Francenstine"...)
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To: Howlin
I don't see why a judge would allow the case to be tried in LA. And I am not even sure an LA just would let him walk. Not even the OJ jury, which in fact only gave OJ a pass to get back at whitey, which was Cockroaches master plan anyway. They'd probably hang Peterson. :) Of course I think Peterson did it, and I expect the evidence to prove it. Maybe San Diego would be a good spot for the trial. The Westerfield jury did a good job.

There is some traction for the defense if there is no blood evidence etc., to pin on Peterson, unfortunately. But one assumes the prosecution has something more on him than we know about. He's one cold SOB that's for sure. PEOPLE magazine has a cover story this week on Scott - "the boy next door" angle. I think he wanted to be with Amber Frey, and he must have flipped at the idea of being "saddled" with a child, too. What a horror story.

42 posted on 05/24/2003 9:47:48 AM PDT by veronica (How's about a Palestinian state inside France? It could be called "Francenstine"...)
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To: veronica
Geragos hope is the change of venue. If you remember the Bush 1 elections of how the states broke down who voted, most of all Central Valley/Statewide, voted for GW, only the heavily large populated, mostly coastal voted for Gore. Geragos might hope for LA, but may not get it.

Look at Charles Ng

Just a small aspect of what happens when you a change of venue. Cary Stayner, Charles Ng, David Westerfield, etc.... Got death penalties!

43 posted on 05/24/2003 9:47:54 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: STOCKHRSE
Good morning Stockhrse... ;o) Enjoy your weekend.. In a bit, out doors to enjoy the coming of summer sun yard work...lol..
44 posted on 05/24/2003 9:50:23 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Howlin
"They did check it out."

I don't have any inside information on this like some do, but the article said:

"But an officer told him that search dogs indicated that Peterson went in another direction, Maldonado said. He said police never called him to follow up."

Now, either they did or they didn't...
45 posted on 05/24/2003 9:50:38 AM PDT by babygene (Viable after 87 trimesters)
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To: joyce11111
A good prosecutor will get the jury to see that actions and behaviors mean things.

If Scott was innocent, and his wife was abducted by chain-smoking Satanists in a brown van, then how can the defense explain 1000 of Scaughty's behaviors since she went missing?

Why did the grieving husband not allow anyone in the home? Why did he immediately mop the previously mopped floors, vacuum, take umbrellas in a tarp to storage, have missing cement anchors, sell Laci's car and jewelry within weeks, omit all this for two weeks to his bimbo, laugh at Laci's vigil, dye his hair and carry his brother's passport, speak of her in the past tense immediately, not remember the bait he had fished with the day before, and so many other suspicious things?

If anyone else killed Laci and happened to throw her into the bay 2 hours from her home on the same day that Scott happened to be fishing there, why is he doing all of the above?

46 posted on 05/24/2003 10:14:47 AM PDT by Yaelle
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To: veronica
Dumbass sealed his own fate...

Aha, but clever Geragos could even use that to help his case.

"Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, you are being asked to BELIEVE, here, that this man [pointing at Scaught] is SO INCREDIBLY STUPID as to provide proof to law enforcement that he was at the exact place where his poor dead wife and son would eventually turn up?? I am asking you, COULD ANYONE ACTUALLY PLAN ANYTHING THAT STUPID???"

47 posted on 05/24/2003 10:19:12 AM PDT by Yaelle
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To: Yaelle
LOL... so fitting to the OJ thing, :"If it doesn't fit, you must acquit!"...
48 posted on 05/24/2003 10:23:15 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: runningbear
Too bad the judge out there can't change the venue... to someplace in this direction. The "value" of Geragos' BS would immediately take a dive akin to that of stocks on Black Tuesday. And Scott would find his happy ass headed to the injection room so fast, it would make his head spin.
49 posted on 05/24/2003 10:28:28 AM PDT by Devil_Anse
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To: Yaelle
Yes--Scott's refusal to let the police rifle through his possessions w/o a warrant can possibly be called "claiming his 4th Amendment rights", but Scott's refusal to let Sharon, Ron, or Amy into the master bedroom CANNOT be explained by any such thing. And I hope the jury notices.
50 posted on 05/24/2003 10:32:07 AM PDT by Devil_Anse
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To: Devil_Anse
;o)
51 posted on 05/24/2003 10:38:39 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: runningbear
Thanks for the ping!
52 posted on 05/24/2003 10:56:08 AM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah
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To: Howlin
Now, I will catch a lot of crap for this, but as soon as that happened -- as soon as he denied them access to his house IMMEDIATELY -- I knew he did it.

I agree. It seems to me that anyone who has been gripped by the fear of having someone they know, let alone love, in possible danger knows you don't resist efforts to assist.

Another thing, though I am not sure of the exact chronology, Laci's mother has talked about the call she got that afternoon when she heard from Scott, "Laci's missing." I have never been quite clear on how long Scott was home before he made this call but it seems like it was less than two hours. Isn't that a short time to conclude that she was missing and not out on a walk, with friends, doing some last minute Christmas chore or whatever?

53 posted on 05/24/2003 11:01:49 AM PDT by Dolphy
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To: All
I posted this early Feb as this case was happening, because I wanted to bring together a time line of info and NOW vs Geragos info. So I am posting my notes from that time:

" Here is what I gathered so far on the Laci Peterson case.

...This is from beginning Dec 24th, to current Feb 2003

7:41 PM 2/1/03(my notes for this date)

Modest Bee stories on the Laci Peterson Case:

http://www.modbee.com/reports/laci/

Before reaching the later months of her pregnancy, Laci Peterson occasionally worked as a substitute teacher.

Scott Peterson is a salesman for Tradecorp, a Spanish company that manufactures and distributes a line of special fertilizers. He joined the Modesto Rotary Club about one year ago.

Modesto police and firefighters carried out a massive and futile search along Dry Creek on Wednesday for a woman who is eight months pregnant who disappeared Christmas Eve while walking her dog in East La Loma Park.

The last time Laci Peterson is known to have spoken with anyone other than her husband was Dec. 23 about 8:30 p.m. when she had a phone conversation with her mother, police said.

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.

Peterson called Grantski, Laci's stepfather, who then called police. (reported time 5:48 PM, MPD)

One of Laci Peterson's family members believes that whatever happened to her may have occurred sometime on Dec. 23, after she spoke to her mother.

Laci Peterson opened the drapes in her home every morning, said the family member, who asked not to be identified.

"I don't think she made it through that night," the family member said. "If she was alive that morning, she would have opened up her drapes. I know that's something minor, but maybe it was overlooked."

December 24th 2002:

By nightfall, there was still no sign of Laci Denise Peterson, 27, who left her home on Covena Avenue about 9:30 a.m. Tuesday.

She was last seen in the park about 10 a.m. Peterson was reported missing shortly before 6 p.m. Tuesday, after her husband returned home from a fishing trip to the Bay Area, police said.

Officers located people who said they saw her in the park about 10 a.m. Karen Servas, a neighbor, said she spotted the Petersons' golden retriever about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, his leash attached and muddy. Servas said she returned the dog to its yard, not realizing there might be something amiss.

Police said Scott Peterson tried calling his wife on his cell phone when he finished fishing but was not able to reach her. When he arrived home, he said he found her purse in the house and her sport-utility vehicle in the driveway.

He started contacting neighbors and family members, and then called police, officials said.

The Petersons have lived in the neighborhood about two years, and friends described the missing woman as cheerful and friendly.

The 3-day-old search for a missing Modesto woman ended without success Thursday just as police posted yellow crime- scene tape around her house and served a search warrant.

Officers arrived with the warrant at 7:45 p.m. at Laci Denise Peterson's house in the La Loma neighborhood. FBI crime- scene investigators joined police inside the home.

Authorities said the house would remain sealed through the night, and the investigation would continue today. Police said Peterson's husband, Scott, was staying with friends.

Officials declined to say what they might be looking for.

At 10 p.m., workers prepared to haul a pair of vehicles from the Peterson home. Authorities said Laci Peterson's Land Rover sport utility vehicle and her husband's Ford F150 pickup would be examined elsewhere.

Investigators theorized that Peterson disappeared some time between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. the day before Christmas.

A police officer interviewing people along the park's Peggy Mensinger Trail, and elsewhere around the park, reported that he spoke with a woman who said she heard screams about 10:15 a.m. Christmas Eve. She lives on the park's border.....(This maybe a strike out as not credible or implicated to this case, my opinion)....

Scott Peterson is the last person to report seeing his wife for certain. It was about 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, according to police, and he said he was going on a fishing trip to the Bay Area, and his wife was headed to East La Loma Park with McKenzie, an 8-year-old golden retriever.

A neighbor found the dog, with leash attached, wandering at 10:30 a.m., and put the dog in the Peterson yard, not realizing that something might have been amiss. Thursday, Police Chief Roy Wasden said the leash was muddy, as if it had been dragged for some distance.

Scott Peterson reported his wife missing at 6 p.m. after he returned home. Police launched a search then and continued the effort Christmas Day.

at 5 p.m. when officers released the bloodhound in front of the Peterson home, the dog did not go to the dirt path. Instead, the hound led police to houses around the corner, then south to Yosemite Boulevard and eventually to Santa Rosa Avenue near E.&J. Gallo Winery.

(Originally published Dec. 28, 2002)

Investigators expanded their hunt for clues Friday to a warehouse used by the Modesto man whose pregnant wife has been missing since Christmas Eve.

police and FBI crime-scene analysts spent a second day working inside the La Loma neighborhood home that belongs to the missing woman, Laci Peterson, 27, and her husband, Scott, 30.

The warehouse, which Peterson uses in his work as an agricultural salesman, is on North Emerald Avenue near Kansas Avenue in Modesto. Police sealed the warehouse as well as the Peterson home.

Modesto and Berkeley police went to a marina on San Francisco Bay to investigate Peterson's claim that he was fishing at the time his wife disappeared. No details were available about what detectives might have found out.

Ridenour said investigators were looking for evidence in two computers and two vehicles seized Thursday night from the Peterson home.

Neighbors told about their home being burglarized across the street from the Peterson home some time around Christmas.

According to police, Peterson said he last saw his wife at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday when he left with his aluminum fishing boat for a trip out of Berkeley, and she headed to East La Loma Park with their dog.

Police said Peterson told detectives that he tried to call his wife after he was done fishing, but was unable to reach her. He reported her missing shortly before 6 p.m. after returning home, authorities said.

Thursday, Peterson left a news conference shortly after it began at the Police Department, apparently upset that reporters were asking questions about the fishing trip.

He did not appear with other family members at either of two press conferences Friday.

At one of the Friday news conferences, as a reporter questioned police about Peterson's fishing trip, Lee Peterson stood and said that his son had provided detectives with a launch receipt that verified his trip. Later, Peterson also said his son had turned over a receipt from a Bay Area gas station.

Police said they doubt now whether Peterson went to East La Loma Park on Tuesday, despite witnesses who said they believed that they saw her there with her golden retriever.

Police said they had found no connection between Peterson's disappearance and a burglary across the street from her Covena Avenue home. Investigators say they believe the burglary occurred between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesday, the day Peterson disappeared.

A neighbor found the dog, with leash attached, wandering in the neighborhood and put it in the Petersons' yard, not knowing that anything might be amiss. Family members said the dog did not behave in an unusual manner.

Evidence collected so far includes two computers and two vehicles from the Peterson home, and a boat from the Modesto warehouse that Scott Peterson uses in his work as an agricultural salesman.

Police said they were still investigating receipts that Peterson turned over from his trip, one for launching his boat and one for gasoline in the Bay Area. Published 12/30/02

The bloodhound made a beeline down Maze, said deputy Mark Cardoza, a member of the dive team.

"We are looking at all the areas where people could pull off the side of the road and not be seen," he said Monday.

At an afternoon news conference at the Modesto Police Department, Sgt. Ron Cloward said bloodhounds often are reliable.

"I've worked on cases where those dogs have located people six months after they disappeared," he said.

Besides checking the river, the dive team searched sloughs along the river and a large pond on Mape's Ranch. Helicopters flew over the California and Hetch Hetchy aqueducts looking for any sign of Laci Peterson.

Scott Peterson gave investigators a receipt last week from the Berkeley Marina where he said he went fishing. When asked during Monday's news conference if that eliminates him as a suspect, Ridenour said, "At this point, we are not ruling him or anybody out."Published 12/31/02

The handler for a bloodhound used to track the woman told police that she left her house in a car instead of by foot that day. Her car was parked in her driveway and her purse and cell phone were in the house when she was reported missing that evening.

Tuesday, police said it's becoming evident that the case involves foul play.Published 01/02/03

Modesto police on Thursday asked the public for help corroborating the story of a Modesto man who reported his pregnant wife missing Christmas Eve.

Police released photos of Scott Peterson's truck, boat and boat trailer, asking anyone who saw Laci Peterson's husband the two days before Christmas to call the Police Department.

Ridenour said forensic evidence has been taken from both Scott Peterson's boat and truck. The evidence was sent to a Department of Justice lab, Ridenour said, and it could take detectives as long as 60 days to receive the results.

Peterson told police that he launched his aluminum boat at the marina, then went northwest and fished around Brooks Island, said police Sgt. Ron Clow-ard, who is directing the search.

Late Saturday afternoon, searchers pulled something from the water, and Cloward later described what happened: "They pulled a tarp out of the water and found no one in it. It was nothing significant. It was just a tarp."

The California Rescue Dog Association is furnishing the dogs at the request of the California Office of Emergency Services, after Cloward asked for help.

The blue tarp searchers pulled from San Francisco Bay waters on Saturday afternoon will be brought to Modesto and evaluated by detectives, police Detective Doug Ridenour said.

"(The searchers) felt it was suspicious enough to take and have a look at it," Ridenour said. "But, at this point, investigators don't think it will turn out to be anything significant."

At least two search warrants have been served in the case, one at the Peterson home in the La Loma neighborhood and one at the Modesto warehouse that Scott Peterson used in his work as a fertilizer salesman.

Authorities have seized two vehicles and two computers, and an aluminum fishing boat and trailer.

Public works crews once again removed every manhole cover in East La Loma Park and around the Peterson home, without finding any evidence in the manholes.

Police said they have searched more than 100 miles of waterways, including canals, sloughs, rivers and creeks in Stanislaus County, and the California Aqueduct. The search could expand to Don Pedro and New Melones reservoirs in the foothills east of Modesto, Cloward said. He declined to say when, adding that he did not want search dogs to be distracted by the media.

At least two search warrants have been served in the case, one at the Peterson home in the La Loma neighborhood and one at the Modesto warehouse that Scott Peterson used in his work as a fertilizer salesman.

Authorities have seized two vehicles and two computers, and an aluminum fishing boat and trailer.

details about the searches -- and everything that police might have been looking for -- were unavailable. The files have been sealed, Ridenour said.

Michael Tozzi, executive officer of Stanislaus County Superior Court, said Thursday that police had not yet filed documents on what the searches might have uncovered.

"Because it's a pending investigation, the court will not verify any information until such time as that information becomes public record," Tozzi said.

At the marina, harbor master Ann Rial Hardinger said the mystery object was found close to the end of the old Berkeley pier, which is 2 1/2 miles long. Anglers said the water depth at the end of the pier is 12 to 17 feet.

The search zone covered some 2,200 square feet about 300 yards west of the end of the old Berkeley pier, extending some 2 1/2 miles into the bay.

Modesto police Sgt. Ron Cloward confirmed at 3:20 p.m. Saturday that a mystery object in San Francisco Bay had been identified as an anchor.

Divers did not retrieve the anchor, Cloward said.

"If we don't find a body, it usually means someone has gone to some lengths to conceal it for some reason. That certainly indicates sophistication.

"Wherever someone does go to dispose of a body, it's usually an area they're familiar and comfortable with. One of the questions we ask when we find a body is, 'Why here?' Sometimes if we can answer that question, it points us in the right direction."

January 17, 2003 @ 10:08:00 AM PST

Modesto police told Laci Peterson's family that her husband was having an affair and recently took out a $250,000 life insurance policy on her, a family member said Thursday.

Detectives met with Laci Peterson's side of the family Wednesday night to tell them why they believe Scott Peterson is responsible for the disappearance of his 27-year-old pregnant wife, the family member said.

Peterson took out a $250,000 life insurance policy on his wife last summer, after she got pregnant.

Peterson was having an affair with a woman in the Fresno area. Detectives showed family members pictures of Peterson and the woman posing together.

Since the case began, Peterson declined most interview requests, telling friends and family he wanted to keep the emphasis on his wife. Thursday, he talked to a reporter from Sacramento-area TV station KCRA.

"All of a sudden, Scott is talking to the media," the family member said. "He is realizing people are finding out about the girlfriend, so he'd better go out there and do some damage control."

He wanted his Del Rio (Country Club) membership."

((Added May 24, 2003)), since then Del Rio bought Scott Peterson's membership off for $25,000, reported in the Modesto Bee

Several days after Laci's disappearance, Peterson stormed out of a press conference when several reporters questioned police about the fishing trip. He has not attended any more press conferences, although he regularly has spent time at the volunteer search center.

He did not sit with family members at a vigil for his wife that was held on New Year's Eve. Instead, he mingled with friends and family in the crowd, laughing and smiling a good deal of the time.

Jan 2003

Friday, Peterson denied a report in The Bee that he was having an affair and that last summer he took out a $250,000 life insurance policy on his wife.

"Well, it's a bunch of lies," Peterson told San Francisco-Oakland television station KTVU. "So what are you to do?"

"Approximately two weeks ago, Ron Grantski, Laci's stepfather, asked Scott if he had a girlfriend," Kim Petersen said. "Scott told him no and Ron believed him. Now, however, they believe he has lied to them about this and possibly other things as well."

Peterson did not return calls to The Bee on Friday. He has not been named as a suspect in his wife's disappearance, but Police Chief Roy Wasden said Peterson has not been eliminated from the investigation.

In other developments:

Early in the investigation of his wife's disappearance, Peterson retained criminal defense attorney Kirk McAllister of Modesto. An investigator working for McAllister has interviewed La Loma-area residents this week in relation to a van reportedly seen in the neighborhood about the time Laci Peterson disappeared.

Wasden said detectives believe the van -- reportedly seen by several residents -- belonged to a landscaping crew.

Peterson, 30, denied the reports in an interview with a television reporter Friday, and said he was going to open up his own volunteer center and "find my wife and my kid."

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.

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.

A 28-year-old Fresno woman said Friday she had a romantic relationship with Scott Peterson, whose pregnant wife has been missing since Christmas Eve.

Amber Frey spoke at a Modesto Police Department press conference Friday evening. In a halting voice, she said she met Peterson in November; he told her he was not married.

On Dec. 30, Frey contacted police after seeing Scott Peterson's photo in reports regarding his wife's disappearance. She has been eliminated as a suspect in the investigation, Modesto Police Chief Roy Wasden said.

Scott Peterson did not answer his home or cell phone on Friday night, and he did not return messages seeking comment. Wasden said Peterson has not been eliminated from the investigation.

Friday night, Amber Frey, a 28-year-old single mother who lives in the Fresno area, came forward to say she had a romantic relationship with Scott after meeting him Nov. 20.

The revelation came during an emotional news conference at the Modesto Police Department. "When I was introduced to him, I was told he was unmarried," she told the media. "Scott told me he was not married."

He said Amber was hurt when Peterson told her he was not going to be around for Christmas: "He told her was going to Paris. Nobody leaves his girlfriend alone on Christmas.

"He told her that because of his job, he had to travel all over the country and that it was not unusual for him to be gone from home for up 30 days at time."

Frey said it was not easy for his daughter to come forward and contact Modesto police about her relationship with Peterson. He said he watched the Friday news conference on television.

Modesto police refused Tuesday to comment on Scott Peterson's claim that he told them Christmas Eve about his affair with Amber Frey.

Peterson also said he told his wife in early December about the affair, and added that he continued to see Frey after telling his wife about her.

During the interview, Peterson said he told police about Frey when they opened the missing-person investigation on Christmas Eve.(GMA with Diane Sawyer)

Frey, a single mother whose 28th birthday is Feb. 10, went public Friday night about her relationship with Peterson, and said he told her that he was not married when they met Nov. 20. She said she notified police Dec. 30 after seeing Peterson in news reports.

He noted that there is no proof that his wife is dead. He added, though, that the possibility runs through his mind. "It's not one that we're ready to accept, and it creeps into my mind late at night and early in the morning.

"And during the day, all I can think about is the right resolution to find her."

He cried when talking about his frequent walks in East La Loma Park with his wife. He said he last saw her as she prepared to go to the park for a walk with the family dog.

He said he continues to walk the dog in the park because it was "our time."

Scott Peterson conducted several televised interviews at his home on Wednesday, address-ing numerous allegations and rumors surrounding the investigation into the disappearance of his wife, Laci.

By 5 p.m., more than a dozen TV trucks had set up camp near the Petersons' house on Covena Avenue in Modesto's La Loma neighborhood.

Both he and Laci have $250,000 life insurance policies, taken out two years ago. He called untrue a report that he took out such a policy on his wife only last summer.

His wife may not have opened the drapes Christmas Eve morning because it was probably 40 degrees outside, and keeping the drapes closed helps keep the house warm. Family members and neighbors have said that Laci Peterson opened the drapes every day.

He routinely cuts his hands in his work on farms. Peterson, a fertilizer salesman, made the comment and showed his hands in response to reports that police had found blood in one of his and Laci's vehicles.

He loaded large umbrellas to take to his warehouse on Christmas Eve. A neighbor reportedly saw Peterson putting something into a vehicle that day. During the interview, Peterson described his marriage as "glorious" even though he admitted to cheating on his pregnant wife. "We took care of each other very well," he said. "She was amazing. She is amazing."

Asked about the baby boy due within weeks, he responded: "That was, it's so hard."

At his home, Peterson sat down with several news outlets. He went through the interviews alone, without an attorney.

Speaking with Gloria Gomez of Sacramento TV station KOVR, Peterson explained why he said he told his wife about his affair with Amber Frey: "It was the right thing to do. And, as you know, when you're not doing the right thing, it eats you up. You know you feel sick to your stomach and you can't function. And you have a hard time, you know, looking at someone."

He changed past-tense statements to present when he talked about his missing wife.

Tears surfaced regularly, but he cried without losing composure.

Another factor behavior specialists look at is eye contact. When asked difficult questions, such as, "Did you murder your wife?" and, "Did you ever hit her or injure her?" Peterson's eyes quickly shifted to the left and then back to Sawyer.

"On both occasions, he looked away, rather than looking her straight in the eyes," said Eric Hickey, a criminology professor at California State University, Fresno. "That doesn't mean he's guilty, but often when someone is harboring some kind of guilt, it's difficult for them to look a person in the eye."

Flint said there is no scientific proof that supports Neuro-Linguistic Programming, a practice that asserts a person's eye movement can indicate how a person is thinking, including when he or she is lying.

Story changes: (A Partial)

www.lacipeterson.com

MODESTO, CA -- Laci Peterson, an attractive 27-year-old Modesto woman, has been missing since Christmas eve. Her husband, 30-year-old Scott Peterson, told family members and police that he went to his office at around 9:30 AM PST to get a few hours work done. He said his wife, Laci, planned to shop for dinner and then walk their aging golden retreiver, McKenzie, in nearby East La Loma Park.

Scott kept a 14-foot aluminum boat stored at his office, and after working there for a while he decided to hook it up to his truck and take a short fishing trip in the San Francisco Bay. He says he headed out toward the Berkeley Marina, some 85 miles away. He said he tried to call Laci from his cell phone during the day but could not reach her.

He said both cars were in the driveway, and Laci's purse and keys were in the house.

On December 23, 2002, at around 7:30 PM PST, Laci's half-sister, Amy, cut Scott's hair at her Modesto salon. Laci was with him. And on January 27, 2003, Amy confirmed that a video surveillance camera got Scott and Laci on tape there. Though police will not confirm it, it is believed that the visit to Amy's salon shown on that video is the last verifiable time that Laci was

About an hour later, Laci's mother, Sharon Rocha, said she talked to her daughter at around 8:30 PM PST on December 23rd -- the night before she was reported missing. Police believe that that is the last ...

The repeated searching of the Berkeley Marina clearly indicated that police were looking long and hard at Scott and his alleged fishing trip there on the morning of Laci's disappearance. They published photographs of his truck and boat and asked the public to help them corroborate Scott's story.

Scott and Laci's house was searched. Her SUV, his truck and boat, and their computers were seized. And police have dug deeply into his background from every conceivable angle in the days since her disappearance

MPD:

http://www.modestopolice.com/laci/default.htm

On 12-24-02 at about 5:48 p.m., Modesto Police received a phone call from a man stating that his pregnant wife had not been seen since 9:30 a.m. that day.

Scott Peterson, of Modesto, left to the Bay Area to go fishing. His wife, Laci Denise Peterson, 26 years, eight months pregnant, stayed home to shop for dinner that evening and to walk their dog at East La Loma Park, commonly known as Dry Creek Park.

After Scott was done fishing, he tried to call Laci from his cell phone but did not reach her. When he arrived home, he discovered his dog in the back yard of his house with the leash still attached. There was nothing unusual found in the house to indicate anything had happened and Laci’s purse was still in the house. Scott and family members began searching the park for Laci and called the Police.

Modesto Police call for additional public assistance for Laci Peterson

http://www.modestopolice.com/laci/vehicle.asp

Laci Peterson's husband, Scott Peterson, reportedly last saw his wife at 9:30 on Christmas Eve morning. Scott left the family residence in his pickup truck, hooked the boat up at another location and went to a marina in Berkeley for a fishing trip. The truck is a 2002, Ford F150 pickup, bronze in color, with California license 6T59718. The boat is a 1991, 14-foot aluminum boat and trailer with a 15 horsepower outboard motor.

Police are trying to corroborate Scott's trip to the Berkeley area. Please contact Detective Craig Grogan at (209) 572-9551 if you can provide information that would assist in this matter.

Anything beyond this date, I to me, is further in the developing saga which lead to Scott Peterson's arrest and charged with 2 counts of homicide.

For those who needs a refresher course of the events from the beginning. ;o)

54 posted on 05/24/2003 11:10:54 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: runningbear
The DA has all the answers to these false theories and bad actors.
55 posted on 05/24/2003 11:30:33 AM PDT by RGSpincich
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To: RGSpincich
yeah, but kind of hilarious to read about them...Wondering, what is the next angle of spin?...;o)
56 posted on 05/24/2003 11:36:39 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: runningbear
**I just got into an arguement with a retired LE, and even though he is conservative in life values, he tends to speak of democrat crap**

You aren't by any chance in Modesto and spoke to my brother in law, did you? Ha!

57 posted on 05/24/2003 11:39:05 AM PDT by homeschool mama
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To: RGSpincich; All
From yesterday's Court TV:

Witness tells Scott Peterson's attorneys he saw suspicious man

Snip it:

"The neighbor who spoke with Peterson's attorneys previously told CNN that Modesto police had dismissed his report in the early days of the search. A sergeant, he said, told him search dogs had identified Laci's scent and that she had left her home in a vehicle.

The neighbor said he saw the suspicious man and the van at a nearby gas station and that he overheard a conversation that drew his attention. He did not say what he heard.

After leaving the gas station, he said, he passed a pregnant woman walking a dog a few blocks from the Petersons' home and pointed the woman out to his wife, saying he was afraid the leaping dog would knock her down.

During his interview with the attorneys Thursday night, the man said the attorneys showed him what he termed "mug shots" and asked if he could identify any of them, but he would not say if he did.

A source with the defense said Thursday the defense team was looking for a tan van and individuals they wanted to question in connection with the murder.

Another witness who reported at the time that she had seen a pregnant woman walking a dog on the day Laci Peterson disappeared was also interviewed by the defense team, the woman's husband said, and she too was asked not to speak to the media.

58 posted on 05/24/2003 11:42:58 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: runningbear
A very good and thorough rundown, RB! Thanks a million! It's a real refresher course.
59 posted on 05/24/2003 11:46:42 AM PDT by Devil_Anse
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To: homeschool mama
LOL... yes I live in this crazy mixed up city, but no, he wasn't a MPD officer... From the bigger city...

Funny thing is, I chose Modesto to live after Los Banos, Ca because coming from City life, San Jose, to Los Banos, that was God's country, but once I landed in Modesto in the early 90's, I found the Bay Area attitude here in full swing..... You felt it as soon as you start driving around.. ;o)

Los Banos, the natives hated the Silicon Valley folks invading that little town, and then Wal Mart came! ;o)

60 posted on 05/24/2003 11:48:53 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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