Posted on 06/02/2003 5:37:27 AM PDT by runningbear
Defense Team Seeking Man Named 'Donnie' as Laci Peterson Murder Suspect
Defense Team Seeking Man Named 'Donnie' as Laci Peterson Murder Suspect
Monday, June 02, 2003
MODESTO, Calif. New details have come to light about the person Scott Peterson's defense team says they believe could be responsible for the murder of his 8-months-pregnant wife, Laci Peterson (search).
The defense has revealed that it is searching for a man named "Donnie," with no known address and a possible tie to illegal drugs, including methamphetamines, Fox News has learned.
Peterson's attorneys say they're also still combing for signs of a brown van reportedly spotted in the area when Laci disappeared on Christmas Eve. They believe that Donnie and others are linked to the van.
Meanwhile, tensions escalated as battles over personal belongings continued this weekend between the Petersons and Laci's family, the Rochas. The latest squabble was apparently over Laci's wedding ring, which Scott Peterson wants back.
In an interview with Fox News, Rocha family attorney Adam Stewart said he was retained about two months ago by Laci's mother, Sharon Rocha, to oversee the property matters in the case.
Rocha asked Stewart not to discuss the wedding ring details with Fox News. But Stewart did say that the Peterson family ignored the Rochas' repeated requests to go into Laci and Scott's Modesto (search) home to go through some of Laci's belongings.
The Rochas had a list of 22 items -- many of them of sentimental value, like her wedding dress and the crib for the unborn baby Conner -- that they wanted to retrieve.
But after her requests were ignored, she and the rest of the Rocha family grew frustrated --leading to their surprise visit on Friday to get the mementos they sought, Stewart told Fox News.
Against the advice of their attorney and unbeknownst to the defense, the Rochas arrived at the house Friday morning and left with several carloads of belongings -- including the crib, the dress, the rocking chair in the baby's room and other items.
"Sharon's objective, at the start of all this, was to get inside the home and look at her daughter's belongings," Stewart told Fox News. "She wanted to have that time. I think she would give back everything she has of Laci's to have that time."
The incident infuriated the Petersons and their lawyers. The battle between the two families played out at least partly in the media over the weekend.
After the anguished families clashed Friday over the Rochas' removal of personal items, a new tiff arose surrounding Laci's wedding ring -- which the Peterson family wants back, according to The Modesto Bee.
-------------------------------------------------------------
POLL: FETUSES ARE PEOPLE, TOO
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
June 2, 2003 -- Almost half of Americans believe life begins at the moment of conception, a new poll says. Forty-six percent say a fetus should be considered a person as soon as conception occurs.
Another 24 percent believe human life begins only when the fetus can survive outside of the womb. Just 11 percent believe life begins at birth, according to a Newsweek poll released yesterday.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(((if you are eating breakfast, lunch, dinner, might want to put it down before reading the NY Daily News article)))
Laci's Memorial Pic
Laci's kin retrieve her stuff
By MAKI BECKER
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Scott Peterson's parents accused their former in-laws of trespassing yesterday after Laci Peterson's family went into the couple's former home and took out truckloads of the dead woman's mementos.
The bizarre scene underscored simmering tensions between the families since Scott Peterson has been accused of murdering Laci Peterson and her unborn baby, Conner.
Laci Peterson's relatives entered the suburban Modesto home one day after lawyers hammered out a deal that would allow them to visit next week.
But Laci Peterson's family members and their friends arrived yesterday morning and began loading pickup trucks with furniture - including the white rocker Laci Peterson had planned to use to lull her baby to sleep - and boxes of goods.
Scott Peterson's attorneys were furious with Laci Peterson's relatives, including her mother, Sharon Rocha, accusing them of trespassing.
The Rochas' attorneys told the Modesto Bee the accusations were "ridiculous."
Scott Peterson's mother, Jackie Peterson, told the Bee, "I have a lot of empathy for Sharon but she does not have a right to go in our house and take what she wants."
Also yesterday, ABC's "Good Morning America" reported that it had obtained a copy of Laci Peterson's sealed autopsy report, which showed her ribs were broken, her maternity bra was torn or cut and a long strip of duct tape was found between what's left of her legs.
Laci Peterson's remains were found badly decomposed and her head, arms and parts of her legs were missing. But her torso has yielded some tantalizing clues of who killed her and her unborn son - and when.
Forensic experts say it's possible that if the duct tape had been used to bind her body before it was dumped into the San Francisco Bay, there's a chance the adhesive glue still bears the fingerprints of her killer.
"I don't know after three months in the water but I would not dismiss the possibility until I've checked it [for any prints]," said Dr. Werner Spitz, a forensic pathologist.
Caffeine in system
The report also said she had caffeine in her system. If the levels are high, and Laci Peterson had a habit of drinking coffee at a certain time of day, "that might tell you what time of the day this [slaying] occurred," Spitz said.
Laci Peterson's body washed ashore in Richmond, Calif., on April 14 - just a couple of miles away from where her husband, Scott Peterson, said he was fishing Dec. 24.
Cops believe Scott Peterson killed his pregnant wife in their home on Dec. 23 or 24 and then dumped her body while on his alleged fishing trip, according to a police document.
Scott Peterson, now charged in the murders of his wife and unborn son, says he is innocent.
ABC's story came a day after MSNBC reported the coroner's findings on Baby Conner's remains that showed that the infant's neck was wrapped in plastic tape.
"By releasing the autopsy reports the court will allow .....
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Songwriters offer tribute to Laci, son
Songwriters offer tribute to Laci, son
By GARTH STAPLEY
BEE STAFF WRITER
Published: May 30, 2003, 07:43:51 AM PDT
Moved by the Laci Peterson story, two songwriters 77 miles apart independently produced musical tributes to the slain Modesto woman and her unborn son, Conner. Although they do not know each other, both musicians said they were inspired by media reports of a May 4 public memorial in Modesto attended by about 3,000 people. Both songs draw heavily on images of mother and child safe and happy in heaven.
"Everyone has been moved by the events as they unfold," said Tony Handy, 50, of Oakland. "As the story went on, I wanted to get more involved."
The same goes for John Strand, 51, of Escalon, who said he wishes that he had been moved before the memorial service.
"You can't orchestrate inspiration," Strand said, "and I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that this was inspired."
Strand's song, "Remembering Laci," is a piano ballad that can be heard on The Bee's Web site, modbee.com. Sprinkled throughout the piece are references to Conner and flowers.
"I feel it's a song of comfort," Strand said.
Handy described his song, "Straight to Heaven," as a pop tune with strains of jazz and soul. Part of the chorus says, "Gone straight to heaven, where princess angels live on."
Both men previously wrote musical tributes about other tragic events.
Strand, a guard at Deuel Vocational Institution near Tracy, composed "Song for America," a patriotic folk song, four days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Handy, an activist who has worked for nonprofit agencies, once wrote a tune about a high school student killed in Los Angeles, his hometown, when a classmate's gun accidentally discharged at school.
A Follow up from Sacramento story in Jan this year
Aspiring Rapper Gets One Year for Murder Cover-up
Aspiring Rapper Gets One Year for Murder Cover-up
A Sacramento man was sentenced to one year in prison Friday for helping cover up the murder of a pregnant teenager.
During his sentencing, 21-year-old James Kaleo Ross apologized for his role in hiding the murder of Quinnisha Thomas. He said he decided to help in the crime because he was afraid of the accused gunman in the case, 17-year-old Deondre Terrell Hudson.
The body of Thomas, who was eight months pregnant, was discovered January 13 in Sojourner Truth Park in the Greenhaven area of Sacramento. She had been shot in the back of the head.
Prosecutors contend that Hudson, who was Thomas' boyfriend at the time, murdered the pregnant woman and her unborn child. They said Hudson and 20-year-old Kevin Duran Coleman then put Thomas' body in the trunk of Ross' car and disposed of it at the park while Ross remained in his car.
Hudson was purportedly angry about Thomas' pregnancy and worried it would hurt his goal of a career in rap music which he was pursuing with Ross and Coleman.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
California Probate Code §28. "Community property" means:
(a) Community property heretofore or hereafter acquired during marriage by a married person while domiciled in this state. (b) All personal property wherever situated, and all real property situated in this state, heretofore or hereafter acquired during the marriage by a married person while domiciled elsewhere, that is community property, or a substantially equivalent type of marital property, under the laws of the place where the acquiring spouse was domiciled at the time of its acquisition.
(c) All personal property wherever situated, and all real property situated in this state, heretofore or hereafter acquired during the marriage by a married person in exchange for real or personal property, wherever situated, that is community property, or a substantially equivalent type of marital property, under the laws of the place where the acquiring spouse was domiciled at the time the property so exchanged was acquired.
That code deals with a lot of legalese in regards to if you were married and lived in a Community Property State. You then sold your assets(Personal Property) and moved to a Non-Community Property State. While living there you buy a home with the proceeds from the Community Property sold in Calif. That portion upon your divorce or death in a Non Community State would still be devided as Community Property.
The mistake I made in my postings was in calling SEPARATE PROPERTY (Personal Property)
See defination below:
California Community Property Law:
1) What is community property?
California law defines community property as any asset acquired or income earned by a married person while living with his or her spouse.
Separate property is defined as anything acquired by a spouse before the marriage, or during the marriage by gift, devise or bequest.
The law requires that the community estate be divided equally if there is no written agreement to the contrary.
This means that from the total fair market value of the community assets, the joint obligations of the parties are subtracted, yielding the net community estate. Unless agreed otherwise, each spouse must receive ½ of the net community estate.
California Community Property
Scott gifted Laci her wedding rings so therefore they are her Separate Property
The only thing we know for sure is if Scott is convicted of killing Laci, he will have no right to any of the property that was Laci's share.
If he is not convicted without knowing what their Will says we don't know who she bequeathed her Separate Property to. In the absence of a Will and he is not convicted, I believe it all goes to him.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.