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The Changing Tide in the Defense Of Scott Peterson:
Findlaw.com ^ | June 10, 2003 | Jonna M. Spilbor

Posted on 06/10/2003 3:03:40 AM PDT by runningbear

The Changing Tide in the Defense Of Scott Peterson:
Why Doubt About His Guilt Is Seeming More and More Reasonable

The Changing Tide in the Defense Of Scott Peterson:
Why Doubt About His Guilt Is Seeming More and More Reasonable

By JONNA M. SPILBOR
----
Tuesday, Jun. 10, 2003

Barely two months ago, bailiffs marched so-called "monster in chains" Scott Peterson before a Modesto judge for arraignment on charges for the double murder of his wife, Laci, and unborn son, Conner. In the court of public opinion, Scott Peterson's guilt was a forgone conclusion.

The crowd outside the Stanislaus County Courthouse then was eerily reminiscent of a time in our history when angry townspeople gathered in the village square to mete out justice with stones and pitchforks. Piercing shouts of "Murderer!" could plainly be heard.

Last week, however, as defense attorneys and prosecutors headed back to court to argue motions, the tide of public opinion seemed to shift. The "monster in chains" had transformed into a clean-cut chap in a two piece suit. And press reports concerning information in the autopsy reports for Laci and her child had raised doubts in the minds of many.

According to reports, the baby's body was found with a knotted piece of tape wrapped tightly around its neck in a "noose-like" fashion. The terrible modus operandi seemed not to fit Peterson - who had been depicted as a cheating husband who might have wished his wife would disappear, not a twisted killer capable of using perverse means to kill a helpless unborn child.

Outside the courthouse were curious, quiet onlookers - many of whom were slowly starting to ponder not how Scott Peterson had committed such a heinous crime, but rather, had he indeed committed it in the first place?

The doubt in the public mind made the outcome of the motions at issue - one of which sought to unseal the very autopsy reports that had apparently been partially leaked - seem all the more momentous.

So far, as I will explain, all the rulings have been favorable to the defense. That suggests again - just as the leaked autopsy evidence did - that this will be a decidedly two-sided trial, not the walkover prosecutors had envisioned.

Meanwhile, there have been some dramatic new developments: Famed attorney Gloria Allred has appeared on behalf of Amber Frey. (Frey, as those who have followed the case will know, is the woman with whom Scott was cheating on Laci, and who says he told her he was single.) And members of Laci's family have reportedly moved her possessions out of the house she shared with Scott. I will also explain the likely legal consequences, if any, of these events.

The Controversy Over the Sealing of the Autopsy Results

Originally, prosecution and defense had agreed that the autopsy reports should remain sealed. But once the leak occurred, prosecutors - who blamed the leak on the defense, but did not provide evidence to support their suspicions - changed their mind, and sought to unseal the report on Conner Peterson.

Prosecutors argued that the leak had been a calculated defense tactic meant to bolster a recent theory that a malevolent third-party - perhaps affiliated with a "satanic cult" - committed the killings. The defense continued to support the sealing order, however, and Judge Girolami declined to lift it.

Autopsy findings are normally a matter of public record. However, a provision of California's Evidence Code allows the judge to keep the autopsy reports private. The provision states, in part, that disclosure of "official information" may be shielded from public consumption if there is a "necessity for preserving the confidentiality of the information that outweighs the necessity for disclosure in the interest of justice . . . ."

Defense counsel argued - successfully so - that disclosure of the autopsy findings could affect the arrest of the "real killers" who, according to the defense, "are still out there."

If this argument sounds familiar, it should. Earlier in the week, co-defense counsel Matt Dalton made the same argument before Judge Roger M. Beauchesne - the jurist assigned to handle requests by the media to unseal search warrants and related affidavits. (Incidentally, the search warrant issue was not before the court on Friday morning. Instead, a closed-door conference was conducted in Judge Beauchesne's chambers later in the day. Although neither side offered comment following the meeting, the search warrants and affidavits continue to remain sealed.)

Thus, for now, the status quo will continue. However, the public probably won't have to wait long to hear the full contents of the reports. On July 16, the preliminary hearing in this matter is set to occur. I, for one, am willing to bet the Modesto medical examiner will be one of the first faces we see on the witness stand.

Remember, prosecutors will need to prove Laci's death resulted from a criminal act - rather then being an accident. The cause of death for both victims reportedly remains undetermined. However, the medical examiner has classified the manner of Laci's death as a homicide - giving prosecutors the crucial "criminal act" proof they need. (Reportedly, no manner of death has been designated for baby Conner.)

The Judge Has Declined to Rule on the Gag Order Request Until a Later Time

Prosecutors have sought a gag order preventing the parties' attorneys from discussing the Peterson case. The defense has opposed such an order. Neither party's position is a surprise. After all, what good will it do Scott Peterson to have retained a media-savvy lawyer like Mark Geragos if he isn't allowed to be, well, media savvy?

The prosecution says they have sought a "limited" gag order, but it's not clear exactly what the limits would be. In any event, the judge has refused to put a lid on the leaks just yet - reserving his ruling on this issue for an undisclosed future date.

He was probably wise to do so. Gag orders in cases like these tend to be utterly unenforceable anyway, and thus only to underline the court's ineffectuality in this respect.

That is not - as the prosecution has suggested - because defense attorneys act in bad faith. Rather, it's because the huge press appetite for information in notorious cases like this one - with tabloids paying big money for scoops - creates strong incentives for anyone who's seen the evidence to leak. And how many people, at different levels of authority, likely had access to this autopsy report before it was sealed? It's a losing battle.

Wiretap Evidence: The Judge's Ruling May Turn Out to Be a Bombshell

Thus, the defense achieved two of its goals, at least for now: to seal the autopsy report, and to resist a gag order. The defense also had another goal: It sought evidence as to the government's wiretaps of Scott Peterson's telephone calls. It achieved that one, too. The court ordered all recordings, except those between Scott Peterson and journalists, to be turned over to defense counsel.

Police investigators intercepted more than 3800 telephone calls to or from Scott Peterson. Sixty-nine of them were calls between Peterson and his lawyers. Assuming that Peterson was seeking legal advice in these conversations, as he almost certainly was, they were protected by the attorney-client privilege.

If it is proven that police continued to listen in on these calls even when it was plain that there were protected by the privilege, that would be very serious indeed. A variety of possible sanctions would then be available to the judge.

It goes without saying that prosecutors should not be able to use privileged conversations as evidence in court. But the judge could also go further, to punish the misconduct.

He might for instance, suppress all of the wiretap evidence. Or he might prevent anyone with knowledge of the privileged conversations - or anyone involved in listening in - from testifying.

Indeed, he might even go so far as to disqualify the district attorney from prosecuting the case if the misconduct was grave. For instance, if there was an intentional - rather than merely mistaken or negligent - decision to ignore the attorney-client privilege, and especially if that decision was approved by higher-ups, a strong sanction could be appropriate.

The hearing on this issue will take place on June 26.

Gloria Allred Has Joined the Fray, for Frey

Just when you thought the most talked-about witness in this double-homicide, death penalty case could use a makeover, in walks Gloria Allred, representing Amber Frey.

Frey's image was tainted when she was initially pegged as the "other woman." Then it was purified when it became clear she probably did not know Scott was married when they were involved. But then, in the eyes of some, it was tainted again, when news reports this week mentioned her having posed - sans either pants or taste - in 1999 for a nudie magazine.

Gloria Allred has professed her dedication to protecting the reputation and character of this much-anticipated witness for the State. Under the circumstances, Allred may have the toughest job of all.

Of course, Frey doesn't really need a lawyer - the prosecution reportedly has ruled her out as any kind of suspect. Nor does she have a right to have one appointed for her, since she is not a defendant. But she does have the option to hire one, as she has done.

At Peterson's trial, Allred will be relegated to the cheap seats in the gallery like the rest of the spectators, but may be permitted to sit adjacent to the witness stand while Frey is testifying. Moreover, in the unlikely event that any questions to Frey did get into areas implicating her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, Allred could counsel her on whether to invoke that right.

The Rochas' Decision to Take Property from Peterson Home......

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

Speaking for Laci

June 9 — It was on June 9, one year ago, that Laci Peterson broke the news to her family and friends, joyous news, that she couldn’t wait to share: she was pregnant. Much later, of course, her family would receive a horribly different piece of news: a phone call on Christmas Eve, that something was wrong. Laci was missing. Ever since, the family of Laci Peterson has been enduring a very public kind of pain, from the months of fruitless searches and countless missing posters, to that terrible discovery on the California coast, to the arrest of their son-in-law Scott. Laci’s family spoke to NBC’s Katie Couric in their most extensive television interview to date, sharing new details about Laci’s life, her husband’s actions, and their own hopes for justice.

SHARON ROCHA: “It’s just moment by moment. I’ve said that since December 24, and it’s still that way. One minute I’m fine, and the next minute I’m not. It’s just, it’s an impossible situation. It’s hard to believe that this even happened.”

Katie Couric: “I bet you feel like you’re living in some kind of horrific nightmare.”

Sharon Rocha: “There’s many times I wake up in the middle of the night. I wake up and I just start crying because I realize that Laci’s gone and that I’ll never see her again.”

Not a day goes by that Sharon Rocha doesn’t think about her grandson, Connor, who’d be almost four months old now if he had lived.

Couric: “What do you imagine, when you allow yourself.”

Rocha: “I imagine to be holding her baby. I imagine her feeding her baby and calling me, and saying, Mom, say, now what do I do? She wanted so much to have that baby. She wanted to be a mother.”

They were just about to have another family get-together when it happened. A single word struck terror in this family. They heard it Christmas eve. Sharon rocha was preparing a big holiday dinner when the phone rang.

Sharon Rocha: “It was Scott. And he said, Hi, Mom. He said, is Laci over there? And I said, no. And he said, well, Laci’s missing. I thought that it was odd that he said Laci’s missing. Any other time, you know, you would have heard, I don’t know where she is, or I can’t find her or something to that effect. Scott said Laci’s missing. I mean I knew immediately, by hearing the word ‘missing’ that something terrible had happened.”

Something terrible had happened. For five and a half months now, an entire nation has been gripped by the story. A 27-year-old mother-to-be disappears on Christmas eve. Fourteen weeks later, her body and that of her unborn son wash up in San Francisco Bay. Her husband, Scott Peterson, is arrested on two counts of murder, and pleads not guilty.

In the meantime, “Laci” has become a household name. And for months, she’s been seen as a face in a photograph. But her family wants us to know the young woman behind the bright eyes and beaming smile, not just as victim, but as a daughter, sister and friend — someone who seemed to be born on a sunny day.

GROWING UP WITH LACI

Sharon Rocha: “I would go in in the morning to get her out of her crib and she’d just sit there grinning. Just always happy.”

Laci Rocha was born in 1975 and grew up in Modesto, Calif. But after her parents divorced when she was two, she spent weekends as a country girl on her father’s dairy farm just outside town.

Amy Rocha (half-sister): “You know, just even when you weren’t in the best of moods, you’d get together with her and be in a better mood.”

Couric: “Did you spend a lot of time together under the same roof?”

Amy Rocha: “We spent weekends with our dad on the dairy, and you know, did the country thing. So, I was always the tag-along with her and her friends.” Those who knew her say she liked being part of a blended family. And the fact she had a doting stepfather, Ron Grantski, who took her on family vacations.

Grantski: “My nickname for her, when she was growing up, was ‘J.J.’ for ‘Jabber Jaws.’ And we planned a trip, remember that trip, we went on a trip to the caverns up by Sonora. And she’s little, maybe five or six years old, and talking all the way up there. And I said, Laci, do you think you can be quiet for 30 seconds? And, sure, how long’s 30 seconds? Is it thirty 30 yet?”

Time goes by so slowly when you’re a kid. But before her family knew it, Laci had grown up. In high school, Van Morrison’s “Brown Eyed Girl” was her favorite.

She was a cheerleader and one of the most popular students in her class. By the time she was 16, Laci had become a striking brown-eyed girl, who’d left a striking and indelible impression on everyone at Downey High, like science teacher Bob Starling.

Starling: “My first impression, she was short with a bunch of hair that stuck really high and a big, huge smile. That was my first impression. She was one of those kind of special people, that you just never forget.”

Couric: “You have a book of photographs of your students in that book and there’s here picture in the very front.”

Starling: “She came in and she said, ‘Hey, I need to put my picture in your photo album.’ Then she came over and interrupted me and said, ‘Every time you open this book, you’ve got to smile.’”

Sharon Rocha: “From about the time she was two she loved to dance which at times could be a little embarrassing.”

Couric: “Because it didn’t matter where or when?”

Sharon Rocha: “Exactly. Exactly. Or who was there.”

Laci obviously wasn’t shy. She knew she wasn’t a great dancer or singer, but that didn’t stop her. Her friends remember another night she was doing a song from “Grease,” that time at a karaoke spot.

Kim: “She got up there and just absolutely tore this song apart. And we were all just looking at her going, oh my God, is she ever going to stop? When she couldn’t do something, she pretended like she could, and she had a good time doing it. And those nights were some of the best nights we had.”

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

Poll: Peterson, Rudolph Guilty

Poll: Peterson, Rudolph Guilty

Monday, June 09, 2003
By Rachel Sternfeld

While the law says "presumed innocent," majorities of Americans have already decided that Scott Peterson and Eric Rudolph (search) are guilty as charged. Both men are accused of murder and, if found guilty, may face the death penalty — a punishment favored by a solid majority of Americans in the case of premeditated murder.

Many Americans think Scott Peterson (search) was involved in the murder of his pregnant wife Laci, but fewer think so today than did a month ago. In the latest FOX News poll, conducted June 3-4 by Opinion Dynamics Corporation, 58 percent of the public think Peterson was involved, down from 67 percent in early May.

Similarly, the number saying he was “definitely involved” has dropped 12 percentage points (31 percent now, compared to 43 percent last month). Only five percent think he was not involved (four percent “probably” and one percent “definitely” not involved).

In addition, over a third of the public (37 percent) are withholding judgment today, up from 30 percent of respondents who said they were unsure of Scott’s involvement in early May.

Despite the large amounts of media attention to the case, a plurality of the public (47 percent) thinks Peterson will get a fair trial. Thirty-six percent say Peterson will not be able to get a fair trial and 17 percent are unsure.

In another case that has captured the attention of the country, 62 percent of Americans think Eric Rudolph is guilty of involvement in the various bombings he has been charged with committing. Thirty-three percent think Rudolph was “definitely involved” and 29 percent “probably involved” in the four Georgia and Alabama bombings, including the 1996 Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta.

Those living in the South Atlantic region of the country, which includes Georgia, the site of the Olympic bombing, as well as North Carolina where Rudolph was discovered, are the most likely to believe he was involved (74 percent).

Rudolph’s clean and healthy appearance when captured has led to speculation that he might have received aid from local people. In the case that Rudolph, a federal fugitive, was being helped, 74 percent of Americans believe those individuals should be charged as accessories to his crimes. Fourteen percent think such people should not be charged and 12 percent are unsure.

The Death Penalty as Punishment

In general, 69 percent say they favor the death penalty for persons convicted of premeditated murder and 23 percent oppose the punishment. Men are more likely than women to favor the death penalty (74 percent and 64 percent respectively), as are whites (70 percent) in comparison with nonwhites (59 percent).

However, the largest difference is found in the gap between the major political ....................

(Excerpt) Read more at writ.news.findlaw.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: avoidingchildsupport; baby; babyunborn; conner; deathpenaltytime; dontubelievemyalibi; getarope; ibefishing; laci; lacipeterson; smallbaby; smallchild; sonkiller; unborn; wifekiller
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To: ijcr
true indeed, but if public news worthy, then journalist do have a say of what gets printed or not to inform the community. 'o)
81 posted on 06/10/2003 9:41:42 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Jackie-O
Morning... :o)
82 posted on 06/10/2003 9:42:07 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: verity
yes, and minus a few pertintent areas unlike OJ....
83 posted on 06/10/2003 9:43:24 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Lanza
I was at Safeway yesterday afternoon, and People has a few pages on Laci/Rochas... Didn't buy it, but that dang Globe and scaughty's little victor/victoria story mag was just screaming to be noticed....LOL...

Yes, I remember Gillcetti(sp) trying to decide whether to seek the death penalty or life on OJ... Johnny does know how to work the jury....

84 posted on 06/10/2003 9:45:55 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: alwaysconservative
somtimes it gets that way. Almost like when Sean Hannity has those flamming 'rats' on his radio show and full out of control screaming ensues on the forum, yelling, and non stop chattering. Enough to want to kick the radio or tv when you see those 'rats' screaming like they do. MG is reminding me of that, and all involved in his team, including the Petersons.
85 posted on 06/10/2003 9:48:47 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Lanza
it happens.....lol.. ;o)
86 posted on 06/10/2003 9:49:15 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: runningbear
Ted Rolands, what's the latest? Understand sources have told you about what Scott might have done after Laci's disappearance?

TED ROLANDS, KTVU-TV: Yes, we've had it confirmed from multiple sources on both sides of this investigation that Scott Peterson on a number of occasions went to the San Francisco Bay at different times of the day after Laci was missing. Of course, he was picked up by surveillance, a couple of times he was reported to have been seen there. And then they had that GPS tracker on him, so they were watching his every move.

And obviously, from an investigation standpoint, this raised a red flag, because there would be no plausible explanation of why this individual would be at a fishing -- a place where he went fishing and should have no other significance. So they really took note to that.

The defense admits that, indeed, he did make some trips up there, but they point out he has a sister that lives in Berkeley, and he was using the Bay area as sort of a safe haven to get away from the media. And he knew that police were searching in the bay, and they -- he had been told that that is where they thought Laci was.

So he went there because of those reasons and wanted to monitor the search. So a very interesting development.

KING: Also, Nancy Grace, if he doesn't take the stand, that could never come up, could it?

NANCY GRACE, COURT TV; FORMER PROSECUTOR: Well, the fact that he went back and forth to the location (UNINTELLIGIBLE)...

KING: I mean, how would it come, how would it come up at a trial if he never took the stand in his own defense? Who would be bringing up where he went?

GRACE: Whoever did the surveillance as part of the investigation, it would come in that way. And Larry, this is not a cliche, that very often you will find criminal defendants go back to the scene of the crime. Larry, it's not part of their big plan. It's almost as if they can't help it that they have to go back.

In fact, at the very beginning, when Scott came under suspicion, you and I actually talked about whether he had been seen after the disappearance at Berkeley Marina. It's very typical.

KING: Chris Pixley, what do you make? Is it anything or nothing?

CHRIS PIXLEY, DEFENSE ATTORNEY: I think it's nothing right now, Larry. You know, the fact of the matter is that Scott was arranging search groups to look for Laci up and down the coast. He was as far south as Los Angeles looking for her. And he did know, in fact, that the bay was being searched, so he had reason to go by there. I think the defense's explanation of it for right now is very plausable

87 posted on 06/10/2003 9:57:06 AM PDT by joyce11111
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To: DB
what do you think the odds could be in dumping a body far from a place a victim is familiar with, a stranger, or someone known to the victim? Meaning, hearing this morning from San Jose Police, the kidnapping of Jennette Tamayo, they knew they had at least a 3 hour window if it was a stranger abduction, and that if so, she would be found dead, or anything beyond that window, that would be a person who knows or is known to the victim, and chances are she would still be alive. Which, SJPD looked intensely for the 9 yr old, and knew, as stated in the news, that after that 3 hour window, she was somewhere in the Bay Area, and would be a matter of time to find her, alive. Thank goodness, many common sense people and aware from the Alert, via media, Tamayo was drop off....most likely after that perp ordered and had pizza delivered from Little Ceasers, with the Child Missing Alert flyer...

Now that must of told the suspect, ah oh!

Just curious on the many factors of missing persons abductions, when each one is different. But in Laci Peterson's case, many tall tale factors indicate and point directly to Scott Peterson. Only by July 16th, hoping enough evidence presented will hold him to the charges to commence the murder(s) trial.

88 posted on 06/10/2003 9:59:32 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: joyce11111
It's all one big coincidence....;^(
89 posted on 06/10/2003 10:00:12 AM PDT by MEG33
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To: MizSterious
Oh boy, am I with you on that hil of the hun witch on TV.... gads, get her off! Better yet, might do some real harm in her book reminding the Republicans, et el, we turned the pages and moved on, but now they are trying to revist it, after they told the Nation/world, sex is a private thing... yadda yadda yadda.... ;o)

(Come voting, that stuff might still be refreshed in the voters minds, and vote out more 'rats') 'o)

90 posted on 06/10/2003 10:03:30 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Devil_Anse; Velveeta; All
Thanks guys. I missed a lot of pictures, if anyone sees that it's going to be repeated, that and the A&E Laci Special, please let me know. I'd like to get more photos from those programs.

Catherine Crier said she is doing a one hour Laci special this Thursday, 6/12 at 10pm EDT. That's from memory, if I'm wrong on that day or date someone please correct me.

Laci Peterson Disappearance

91 posted on 06/10/2003 10:03:41 AM PDT by hergus
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To: runningbear
Thanks very much, rb! Some really good info here!
92 posted on 06/10/2003 10:04:47 AM PDT by Sandylapper
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To: Devil_Anse
Dumb down education..... That is why...enough education taught to the people for what? 30 yrs?... People believe lots the liberal news tells us. ;o)
93 posted on 06/10/2003 10:05:53 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Velveeta; alexandria
wow, that is the first for me to hear for a judge who is assigned to this case... McAllister is making his name MUDD....

Thanks Vel for posting the article....

94 posted on 06/10/2003 10:07:42 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Helms
Not sure who is paying MG... scaughty as a santic cult... possibly... One lost puppy he is... lol...
95 posted on 06/10/2003 10:08:29 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Devil_Anse
"I can't believe there would be a law in CA that would require a court reporter to be present during proceedings to get a warrant."

I know here in NC where my son is LE and hubby is retired LE that the magistrates do warrants all the time w/o any court reporter.
You'd have to have a court reporter on duty 24/7 if things were done that way.
96 posted on 06/10/2003 10:09:26 AM PDT by hergus
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To: MEG33
Laci Peterson: An American tragedyP> NBC News

Laci Peterson's husband Scott stands accused of the crime of murdering his wife and unborn son. Meanwhile, earlier this week, in an exclusive interview, "Today" host Katie Couric sat down with Laci's mother Sharon Rocha, Laci's step-father Ron Grantski and Laci's half-sister Amy to talk about how their lives have been forever changed.

A DAUGHTER, SISTER AND FRIEND

"THERE ARE MANY times that I wake up in the middle of the night. I just wake up and I just start crying because I realize that… Laci's gone and that I'll never see her again," says Sharon Rocha.

Katie Couric: "What words would you use to describe her?"

Sharon Rocha: "Outgoing, she was full of life. Laci had a project going at all times, everyday."

Ron Grantski: "She was like a roman candle. She was always somewhere doing something."

Amy Rocha: "She made you feel good about yourself."

Couric: "How about her sense of humor I understand when she was little she did a video parody TV commercials with friends."

Sharon: "I just watched that recently. She liked to dance. It reminded me so much of when she was younger."

Laci had the all American life that many people envy. A cheerleader at Downey High School, her freshman science teacher Bob Starling remembers a "B" student with an "A" personality.

"I can just tell you when she came into a room it did brighten up. She'd come in and chat about anything. She was one of those special people that you never forget."

Laci was a distinguished student at college when she met her future husband Scott Peterson.

Sharon: "They were kind to each other. They seemed to enjoy each other."

Ron: "They did almost everything together."

They were married in 1997. After trying for more than a year, Laci got pregnant.

Sharon: "By 7:00 am on Sunday, June 9th, I think everyone of her friends and family knew."

Couric: "Everyone in Modesto?"

Sharon: "Everyone in Modesto knew Laci was pregnant."

Laci and her mother were always extremely close and now with the baby on the way, they were getting together several times a week.

"She couldn't wait to find out what sex the baby was, because she wanted to get the room decorated and it was like, the day she was told she was having a boy, she called me, okay mom. Now we can go shopping. Now, we can get everything we need for the boy's room," says Sharon.

She recalled the last time she saw Laci.

"She asked me to put my hand on her stomach to feel the baby kick and I did , but it never did feel him move so I put my face down to her stomach, my ear to her stomach and I said, 'hello little Connor,' I said, 'your nanna loves you.' [I] said, 'I'm waiting to see you,' and she said, 'we haven't completely decided on Connor yet,' she said they 'were thinking we might name him Logan' and then that was the last we talked about it."

A FAMILY'S GRIEF

Couric: "Many people think that the defense team is sort of letting things trickle out that will plant seeds of doubt in the minds of perspective jurors."

Ron: "That's… just another part of this nightmare, I guess."

Couric: "I guess the same might go for the theory that's been floated by the defense that perhaps a satanic cult was involved in Laci's disappearance."

Sharon: "Oh that's his theory."

Couric: "Sharon, you gave a heart wrenching statement, following Scott's arraignment. How tough was that for you?"

Sharon: "Extremely."

During her statement, Sharon says, "Laci and her unborn child didn't deserve to die."

Sharon: "I was determined to get through that. I think Laci was what got me through that, because at one point, I didn't think I was going to be able to finish, but… I felt she was there."

During Scott's arraignment, Sharon says, "I can only hope that the sound of Laci's voice begging for her life and begging for the life of her unborn child is heard over and over again in the mind of that person every day for the rest of his life."

Couric: "You never once mentioned Scott's name in that statement."

Sharon: "It wasn't about Scott. It was about Laci."

Couric: "You said, in a statement, that you felt sorry for Jack and Lee Peterson and their family and they didn't deserve this."

Ron: "There's two families that are suffering for different reasons, and we'll keep on suffering for a long time."

97 posted on 06/10/2003 10:10:46 AM PDT by joyce11111
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To: hergus
Nice work Hergus...

gads, Lee Peterson, he always has that mean face look upon him... Jackie, then looked way much better than now.

I saw a pic of Sharon where she works, then, almost much of Laci on her smile, and now, pain. ;o(

98 posted on 06/10/2003 10:12:44 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: joyce11111
The Rochas are a class act in the midst of a nightmare.
99 posted on 06/10/2003 10:13:02 AM PDT by MEG33
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To: cyncooper; clouda
To me, sounds like she misrepresented the facts of stories printed. That "Monster in Chains" was the NY Post caption to the story. That is a keeper...
100 posted on 06/10/2003 10:14:41 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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