Posted on 07/30/2003 5:46:56 AM PDT by runningbear
Taped Peterson calls heard
By JOHN COTÉ
BEE STAFF WRITER
Published: July 30, 2003, 05:28:12 AM PDT
About 30 journalists had listened as of Tuesday to their tapped phone calls to Scott Peterson, according to prosecutors who are making the recordings available under a court order.
The Stanislaus County district attorney's office set up appointments with journalists starting Monday, and four members of The Bee staff went in on the second day to listen to their calls, all made to Peterson's cellular phone.
According to documents on file in Superior Court, law enforcement captured hundreds of calls during two wiretapping operations amid the investigation into the disappearance and death of Peterson's pregnant wife, Laci.
Peterson told police that his wife was missing when he returned to their Modesto home on Christmas Eve after a daylong fishing trip to San Francisco Bay.
Her body and that of the couple's unborn son, Conner, were found in mid-April along the bay's eastern shore, within four miles of where Peterson said he launched his 14-foot aluminum boat.
Peterson is being held without bail in county jail, charged with two counts of murder in the slayings, and could receive the death penalty if convicted.
The district attorney's office, as required by law, notified journalists and others whose calls had been intercepted. According to the notices, one wiretap ran from Jan. 10 to Feb. 4, and the other from April 15 to April 18.
Peterson was arrested April 18, within a week after the bodies were recovered.
Many of the journalists caught in the wiretap operations sought to keep the calls from being shared with the prosecution and defense, arguing that they were privileged communications protected by state and federal law.
Superior Court Judge Al Giro-lami disagreed, but allowed the wiretapped parties to listen to their individual calls.
Neither prosecution nor defense attorneys objected to reporters listening to their own calls.
Lead defense counsel Mark Geragos characterized the calls as "embarrassing" to journalists. "I listened to as many of the media calls as I could stomach," he said during a July 9 court hearing.
Roughly 60 journalists had arranged as of Tuesday to listen to their calls, Chief Deputy District Attorney John Goold said. Time slots run through Thursday afternoon.
He declined to say how many notices had been sent out in connection with the wiretaps, which captured calls between Peterson and a woman whom he had an affair with, his attorney, family members and others.
Tuesday, reporters sat in a small office at the district attorney's office to listen to the calls, in digital format, played on a computer.
Some reporters heard themselves leave voice mail messages, and then heard those messages again as someone -- apparently Peterson -- played them, sometimes all the way through, other times deleting them before hearing the call-back numbers, some Bee reporters said.
Peterson appeared to listen to an entire message on Feb. 3 seeking comment before The Bee ran an article about Peterson's having traded in his wife's Land Rover as part of his purchase of a 2002 Dodge pickup.
He apparently picked up the message about two minutes after reporter Patrick Giblin left it.
"You could hear background noise," Giblin said. "It was noisy, and you ......
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Mon Jul 28 08:37:22 2003 Pacific Time
ADVISORY for Fri., Aug 1, 10 a.m.
University of San Francisco Moot Court to Consider Kobe Bryant Case; Students to Argue Appropriate Punishment, Should NBA Star be Found Guilty
SAN FRANCISCO, July 28 (AScribe Newswire) -- If National Basketball Association star Kobe Bryant is found guilty of felony sexual assault, what should his punishment be? That's the question facing law students at the University of San Francisco on Friday, Aug. 1 as they hold a moot court to consider theories of punishment in the high-profile case.
The moot court will begin at 10 a.m. in the Moot Court Room, University of San Francisco School of Law, Kendrick Hall, 2199 Fulton Street located at the corner of Fulton and Shrader streets.
"The goal is to challenge the students with the same question that will challenge a court," said Robert Talbot, USF professor of law. "The Bryant case is unusual in many ways. One of the extremely difficult questions a court will have to face if Bryant is found guilty is what should the punishment be in such a highly visible case where there is no prior history of wrongdoing."
Talbot said sentencing in criminal cases is based on various theories of punishment such as retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation. Each of these theories of punishment might call for a different sentence in a particular case. In the Bryant case, if he is found guilty, Bryant's punishment could range from probation to life in prison. USF law students will deliver arguments for the prosecution and the defense as to what theory of punishment should apply and what an appropriate sentence should be if Bryant is actually found guilty.
The exercise is the culmination of a four-day intensive course in criminal law and moot court. It is also part of what has become a special criminal law series at the university. For the past six years, Talbot has chosen high-profile cases to mix in with fictitious cases to challenge the new students in moot court.
"I try to present a series of problems that will test their arguing skills," Talbot said. "It ......
(Excerpt) Read more at modbee.com ...
Article Last Updated: Wednesday, July 30, 2003 - 5:33:24 AM PST
Law now is life insurance policies can't be in secret
Legislation signed by Davis arose from the death of Laci Peterson and her unborn son
By Amber Prochaska, STAFF WRITER
Gov. Gray Davis has signed legislation that obligates insurance companies to inform clients if either spouse could financially gain from the death of the other. "This is just one more thing we have to notify people about. Frankly, I'm not in favor," said insurance broker Pat Tuohy of San Ramon Insurance Agency.
"This is the kind of legislation that there is no pressing demand for. I do not think there are a bunch of husbands and wives out there secretly buying life insurance -- it is highly unlikely."
Officials said the legislation stems from the death of Modesto resident Laci Peterson.
Prior to her death, her husband Scott Peterson took out a$250,000 policy on her life. Scott Peterson was arrested on suspicion of murder in connections with the deaths of his wife and their unborn son, and has pleaded innocent to the charges.
"This bill would give married couples the assurance that no financial gains are hidden from spouses," Gov. Davis said.
The legislation, introduced as Assembly Bill 1083, prohibits an insurer from issuing life insurance with a face value of $50,000 or more unless the spouse has been notified or has signed the application.........
How about ex spouses? My ex had a 200K policy on me while we were married. He suddenly was flush with cash, according to the kids, about 3 months after his mother passed away(we think the vulture took a policy out on her knowing whe was dying). Of course, a brother of his had to pick up the cost of the funeral. I've been advised to investigate the possiblility. Any way to do that?
Great! That's how it should be. If the journalists don't want to be embarrassed, then they shouldn't be making embarrassing calls in the first place?! (gee whiz ..... duh......)
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