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Slaying theories involve devil, Nazis, art
The Mercury News ^ | Oct 6, 2003 | Julia Prodis Sulek

Posted on 10/06/2003 5:46:03 AM PDT by runningbear

Slaying theories involve devil, Nazis, art

Posted on Mon, Oct. 06, 2003

Slaying theories involve devil, Nazis, art

HEARING OCT. 20 IN CASE OF MODESTO HOMEMAKER

By Julia Prodis Sulek
Mercury News

MODESTO - Nazi Low Riders named Dirty and Skeeter, an old Satanic cult called the Order of Lion, and bizarre paintings of decapitated women and floating fetuses. These are the latest surreal elements in the Laci Peterson murder case.

Who could have guessed that the death of this pregnant homemaker who watched ``Martha Stewart Living'' each morning and had a wine-of-the-month club membership would be intertwined with such seamy images?

But no theory, it seems, is too far-fetched for a case that feeds tabloid headlines and talk show debates. Two especially macabre scenarios have arisen as the Oct. 20 preliminary hearing approaches.

One centers on a jailhouse informant who passed a lie-detector test after claiming two gang thugs were hired to kill Peterson's wife. The other resurrects a decade-old quadruple homicide outside Modesto by devil worshipers who believed the purest sacrifice is the killing of a newborn baby.

One scenario could send Peterson to the death chamber. The other could set him free. Could either be true? Or has a thirst for the sensational spawned titillating tales when the reality may be something far simpler: a cheating husband killing his wife to be with his mistress?

The prosecution is expected to push that more simple theory when it lays out its case for the first time at Peterson's preliminary hearing in Modesto. But until then the focus has shifted to bald, tattooed gangsters and robe-clad Satanists.

The Nazi Low Riders

It was only two weeks ago that Cory Carroll, a Fresno jail inmate, issued a startling statement: Scott Peterson used him to set up a murder-for-hire.

According to Carroll's lawyer, Frank Muna, it started in early November last year at a Fresno strip club called City Lights. After seeing Carroll's prison identification card when he paid for a drink, Peterson struck up a conversation. They spent the next several hours together watching the dancers, shooting pool and bar hopping.

``Scott mentioned he would like to buy his wife a new car for Christmas,'' but if he sold the old one he didn't think he would get much money for it, said Muna, who grew up in East San Jose. ``He asked my client if he knew anyone willing to steal the car so he could claim it on his insurance.''

Peterson offered him $300 to make an introduction, Muna said. A couple of weeks later, on Nov. 29, Carroll brought Peterson together with Dirty and Skeeter, members of the Nazi Low Riders, a notorious prison gang known for murder, extortion and drug running.

The foursome gathered at Best Budget motel, where Carroll lived and worked as a maintenance man, Muna said. There, Peterson made a far more sinister proposal.

``He solicited the two guys, Dirty and Skeeter, to get rid of his wife -- first to kidnap his wife, then to get rid of her,'' Muna said. ``My client didn't want any part of that so he left. He ran into Dirty and Skeeter a half-hour later, and they told my client they were going to take care of what Scott wanted.''

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Frequent phone companions

Frequent phone companions

By GARTH STAPLEY and JOHN COTÉ

BEE STAFF WRITERS

Published: October 4, 2003, 07:27:19 AM PDT

Scott Peterson and his lover exchanged at least 37 telephone calls in the four weeks after she revealed their relationship at a Jan. 24 televised news conference, according to partial phone records. Authorities secretly taped their conversations for 3 1/2 weeks. Amber Frey's calls to the married man would continue for 15 days after the wiretaps stopped on Feb. 4, according to the records.

Whether Frey knew about the wiretaps -- or knew when they ended -- is not clear.

But the records suggest that Frey, who first contacted Modesto police on Dec. 30, cooperated with authorities. She appears to have regularly called Modesto police Detective Jon Buehler upon hanging up with Peterson, even after authorities stopped bugging his phones.

Peterson, 30, is charged with killing his wife, Laci, and their unborn son. Prosecutors believe Peterson pretended to know nothing about their deaths as thousands searched for the pregnant woman after she was reported missing Dec. 24. The bodies of mother and son were found in mid-April.

Though he had steadfastly denied Bee reports of the affair, Peterson reversed course in a half-dozen media interviews starting four days after Frey's Jan. 24 news conference. He admitted lying about his relationship with the 28-year-old massage therapist from Fresno, and said he had discussed it with his wife in early December. Frey has said she didn't know Peterson was married when they met Nov. 20.

The phone records show Peterson and Frey exchanged at least 76 calls over nine turbulent weeks that started nine days before Laci Peterson's disappearance. The calls stretched through the holidays, emotional news conferences, her birthday and the due date for Peterson's son before apparently ending Feb. 19.

On Feb. 10, Frey dialed Peterson's numbers four times -- and didn't call Buehler at all. The night before, the former lovers spoke for 34 minutes. Feb. 10 held significant events for both:

It was Frey's 28th birthday.

It marked Laci Peterson's due date.

Friends and family of Laci Peterson prayed in East La Loma Park, which volunteers had searched many times. Peterson was at home that evening, a short walk from the park.

Nude photos of Frey taken four years earlier first hit some National Enquirer newsstands.

Frey has spoken privately about receiving seven calls from Peterson on Valentine's Day. Phone records show she called Peterson once that day as well, and again at 2:42 a.m. the following day. Frey didn't immediately report either call to Buehler.

The phone records show:

Frey called Buehler's office phone, cell phone and home phone 191 times in a three-month stretch ending March 14, totaling more than 19 hours of conversation. Many of the calls came immediately after Frey's conversations with Peterson.

Frey and Buehler averaged nearly 16 calls and 1 1/2 hours of phone time per week.

Frey didn't call Peterson on Jan. 24. That evening, she stunned observers by going public with their relationship. The next day, they exchanged at least three calls.

The two spoke at least once on Jan. 27, the day Peterson taped his mea culpa for ABC's "Good Morning America." After the show aired the first segment of a two-part interview with Diane Sawyer the next day, Frey called Peterson's cell phone for a call that lasted 23 minutes.

That night, she phoned him again -- and the call lasted 52 minutes.

Frey also phoned Sawyer's office on Feb. 22. An assistant to Sawyer said the show has been trying for months to book an interview with Frey, without success.

Though police reported no new developments Feb. 1, records show a flurry of calls that day between Frey and Peterson, and Frey and Buehler.

Frey called Peterson's number nine times on two of his cell phones and spoke for almost 90 minutes. She called Buehler 19 times the same day, with the calls lasting a total of 61 minutes.

She also placed two calls that morning to Melvin King, a former Fresno police lieutenant who operates a polygraph and private investigation service. King refused Friday to say why Frey called.

King popped onto the Peterson media scene two weeks ago in connection with another aspect of the case. At a lawyer's request, he gave a lie-detector test earlier in the month to a jail inmate who claims that before his arrest he heard Scott Peterson discussing a plot to kidnap Laci Peterson with two members of a vicious neo-Nazi gang.

King has said that Cory Lee Carroll passed the polygraph.

In the nine weeks reflected in the partial phone records, Frey and Peterson totaled more than 8 1/2 hours in phone conversations -- an average of nearly one hour per week of phone time.

Frey's fingers busy dialing

Frey, who has shunned interviews, had at least some contact with several media companies from mid-January through mid-March.

Records show that in addition to phoning ABC's Sawyer, she called CNN's Connie Chung, a Fox News affiliate in Santa Monica and Fortune magazine. She also placed five calls to People magazine.

Frey last called Peterson on Feb. 19 at 7:36 a.m., the second day of a two-day search by police of Peterson's home. Investigators carried out dozens of bags of items.

The day before, police drove Peterson's white Dodge pickup away and returned it several hours later. State Attorney General Bill Lockyer would later say that police used global positioning satellite devices in the case and were tracking Peterson's truck.

Prosecutors might have put out information in an attempt to induce Peterson into making damaging statements that the wiretaps would pick up, Assistant San Francisco District Attorney James Hammer has said.

A week after a judge approved wiretaps on two of Peterson's cell phones, The Bee reported Peterson was having an affair with an unknown woman. That day, Frey dialed Peterson's phones twice -- and called Bueh- ler seven times.

At some point in January, prosecutors also confronted Peterson with a rare pre-arrest plea offer: They would take a possible death penalty off the table if Peterson would lead investigators to the body.

"It's called tickling," Hammer said. "They are going to dangle the death penalty and see if he gets scared enough to say stupid things."

DA nipped wiretap

But information from the wiretaps appears to have been of limited value to prosecutors.

According to court documents, the district attorney's office had asked a judge to cut off the first wiretap early, saying "further progress in the investigation would not be gained through additional interception."

State law allows a wiretap to run for up to 30 days, but a judge can grant an extension.

Court documents show the first wiretap was approved on Jan. 10 and ran to Feb. 4, the day a car dealer gave Laci Peterson's Land Rover to her family. Scott Peterson had traded the vehicle in toward the purchase of the Dodge truck.

Also Feb. 4, Frey phoned Peterson at 9:20 p.m. and again at 10:02 p.m.; the second call lasted 15 minutes. She then phoned Bueh- ler and spoke for 23 minutes -- the last of four calls to the detective that day. At 11:19 p.m., she called Peterson back and spoke for two minutes........

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Fresno attorney promotes Peterson story

Fresno attorney promotes Peterson story

His client in county jail alleges a conspiracy to kidnap, kill Laci Peterson.

By John Coté and Garth Stapley
The Modesto Bee
(Published Sunday, October 5, 2003, 5:29 AM)

A Fresno attorney has been making the interview rounds with a story that his client has crucial information linking Scott Peterson to the murder of his wife and unborn son.

During the last two weeks Frank Muna has appeared on ABC's "Good Morning America" and Fox News' "On the Record" with Greta Van Susteren and been interviewed by the press about his version of the Laci and Conner Peterson deaths -- that they were victims of one of several contract kidnap and killing scenarios.

Little information has surfaced to corroborate his accounts, and questions about his motivation have been raised.

Muna repeatedly has said his client, Fresno jail inmate Cory Lee Carroll, is not asking for anything in return for the information.

But Muna was in contact with tabloid news outlets to sell Carroll's story, two sources said. Muna called that untrue.

According to the sources, Muna sought more than $75,000 for the story from The National Enquirer.

Enquirer Senior Editor Charlie Montgomery confirmed his publication pays for stories, but he would not comment on whether Muna had contacted them or sought payment.

Muna said Wednesday he had not shopped the story. He said tabloids contacted him after The Bee reported the story Sept. 20.

"The National Enquirer made the offer, and we turned it down," Muna said. "This sounds more like there is some law enforcement -- some third party -- trying to influence credibility. We don't have anything to sell. All the information we have has been released."

Muna's information has come in distinct batches. He first said his client arranged a meeting between Peterson and two neo-Nazi gang members to discuss stealing Laci Peterson's vehicle for insurance money, but the talk soon turned to kidnapping.

The next week, Muna added to that account, saying Carroll heard Scott Peterson arranging to pay the gang members, identified as "Dirty" and "Skeeter," $22,000 to abduct and murder his pregnant wife. To this date, "Dirty" and "Skeeter" have not been publicly identified.

Muna suggested Scott Peterson failed to pay the money after he came under intense police scrutiny, and Laci Peterson died while being held. The disgruntled kidnappers could have dumped the bodies where Peterson said he went fishing to implicate him, Muna said.

Credibility was lent to the original car theft story because Carroll passed a lie-detector test administered by a veteran Fresno investigator.

But polygraph tests are not admissible in court because they are unreliable, and other parts of the story remain uncorroborated.

The identities and whereabouts of people named as key players in the scenarios remain elusive.

Authorities are refusing to comment on Muna's information, citing a sweeping gag order imposed in the case...........

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


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: avoidingchildsupport; baby; babyunborn; conner; deathpenaltytime; dontubelievemyalibi; getarope; ibefishing; laci; lacipeterson; nlr; occult; smallbaby; smallchild; sonkiller; unborn; wifekiller
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Comment #41 Removed by Moderator

To: Tijeras_Slim
Keep your scandals straight. Arnold didn't know anything.

This was another of those deals that Rush sent his maid out to do. Rush was so overcome with grief that he developed a 90 pill a day drug habit taking pain killers. He later confessed to his buddy President Bush. The big question is "When did Bush know?!!!" < /sarcasm off >

42 posted on 10/06/2003 5:19:40 PM PDT by weegee
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To: Aussie Cattledog
Well...this year they're a baseball team!
43 posted on 10/06/2003 5:25:27 PM PDT by Jackie-O (How 'bout those Central Division Champion Cubs!!!)
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To: Jackie-O
I confess I went hunting with my Dad too. Mostly duck hunting. He bought me my own little 16 gauge shotgun. He didn't appreciate me blasting one of his decoys off the water tho. LOL Shooting is fun. The rest of it BAAAAAAAHHH!! I did curl in my teen years tho. That was fun.
44 posted on 10/06/2003 5:44:15 PM PDT by Canadian Outrage (All us Western Canuks belong South)
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To: Devil_Anse
Whew, glad someone is on my side. Hockey season is NUT season in my house!! Even when I was growing up my Dad was a hockey nut.
45 posted on 10/06/2003 5:46:10 PM PDT by Canadian Outrage (All us Western Canuks belong South)
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To: Canadian Outrage
I loved watching the curling events at the last olympics..only they were usually on at an odd hour because it wasn't a real heavy draw for the viewing audience. I loved to hunt as a child, mostly phesant and deer, but I could not bring myself to shoot anything now. I love to trap shoot tho. Also enjoy the crossbow. My little guy wants to join an archery club. I think that may be pretty cool. He and his older brother are my brainy kids. Little man has never been real sporty, but my Michael was into football and karate besides having his nose in a book all the time. I'm glad Bobby is starting to show some competitive interest.
46 posted on 10/06/2003 5:55:46 PM PDT by Jackie-O (How 'bout those Central Division Champion Cubs!!!)
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To: Canadian Outrage
Us too! My father was a Detective in the town that Bobby Hull lived in and used to see him shoveling snow with no shirt on back in the day! My brothers all played hockey in high school. My one brother has been on a semi pro team for years (besides being in the Navy and a blues musician in San Diego) His sons are on teams and his oldest has been scouted to play pro, but my brother is insisting that he finishes school first.
47 posted on 10/06/2003 6:06:58 PM PDT by Jackie-O (How 'bout those Central Division Champion Cubs!!!)
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To: Spunky
Actully, I think it likely the motive was pure freedom. I think Scott had been planning this, and was already in the "single" mode when he met Amber. As to when the actual day the event would happen, that may have been somewhat up in the air, but he was running out of time.

I have a feeling getting pregnant sealed Laci's fate, sad to say.
48 posted on 10/06/2003 6:33:17 PM PDT by Rusty Roberts (RB and RG have memories like elephants, thankfallully for those of us who read but post infrequently)
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To: Rusty Roberts
I think you've depicted Scott's state of mind (around the time of the murder) very accurately.
49 posted on 10/06/2003 9:13:32 PM PDT by Devil_Anse
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To: runningbear
Right, the Nazis did it, who else?

It's possible Peterson is innocent, but it sure don't look that way.

50 posted on 10/06/2003 9:55:13 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: hobbes1
heeheee.... ;o)
51 posted on 10/07/2003 2:17:56 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Spunky
could ...but who knows.... all to come out after next week...
52 posted on 10/07/2003 2:18:44 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: texasbluebell
she is a good one, and came out from the beginning on scaughty.....
53 posted on 10/07/2003 2:20:11 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Jackie-O
been also caught up in the slime of the "recall" election campaigning, news.... Ah....after today, done on the smear campaigning stuff. Next, to hope for the California change! o)
54 posted on 10/07/2003 2:22:20 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Reaganwuzthebest
a good juror..... ;o)
55 posted on 10/07/2003 2:24:15 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Tijeras_Slim
LOL... I'm surprised they already haven't!

Sorry I'm just seeing this...I was sick over the weekend and yesterday; just returning to the office today.
Sinusitis and bronchitis... how fun.

56 posted on 10/07/2003 5:11:53 AM PDT by Constitution Day (Eschew exclamatory abuse.)
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To: All
Laci Peterson Had $250,000 Life Insurance Policy

Laci Peterson Had $250,000 Life Insurance Policy

POSTED: 4:31 p.m. PDT October 6, 2003
UPDATED: 5:13 p.m. PDT October 6, 2003

MODESTO, Calif. -- In court fillings, the Principal Life Insurance Co. has asked a Stanislaus County Superior Court judge to withhold a $256,429.02 payment to Laci Peterson's estate until the murder charges against her husband, Scott Peterson, are adjudicated.

According to the insurance company's filing with the court, the policy was taken out on Laci Peterson's life on or about June 25, 2001 -- a year before the Modesto couple would have found out that the school teacher was pregnant with the couple's first child. The only beneficiary of the policy is Scott Peterson.

The company asked the court to rule that it does not have pay Peterson if he is found guilty of the double murder charges he faces in his wife and unborn child's death. Until the case is completed, the company asked that it be able to invest the money in an interest-bearing account.

The Rocha family attorney, Adam Stewart, told the Modesto Bee that her family would make a claim on the money.

"We're obviously going to make a claim to funds on behalf of her family and her estate," Stewart told the paper. "We obviously have a dispute as to who's entitled to them."

Laci Peterson disappeared from the couple's Modesto home sometime on Christmas Eve day. At the time, Scott Peterson claims he was fishing on San Francisco Bay near the Berkeley Marina. In mid-April, the partial remains of the Modesto woman and that of her unborn son were found on the shoreline park in Richmond, Calif., only a few miles north of Berkeley. .......

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Peterson's attorneys want hair strand tossed from case

Peterson's attorneys want hair strand tossed from case

Defense also questions DNA testing and a variety of other evidence.

By John Coté
The Modesto Bee
(Published Tuesday, October 7, 2003, 4:05 AM)

Scott Peterson's defense is alleging two detectives mishandled key evidence -- a single "black colored hair" attached to a pair of pliers found in Peterson's boat -- after a second strand of hair appeared before the items were taken to a crime lab.

Peterson's attorneys want the judge to keep the hair and a range of other evidence out of the double-murder case, according to more than 70 pages of documents faxed to Stanislaus County Superior Court late Monday.

DNA tests have shown that the hair may belong to Peterson's slain wife, Laci, a source said before a sweeping gag order was imposed in the case.

The defense also is seeking to exclude testimony from a hypnotized neighbor and evidence from tracker dogs and Global Positioning System tracking devices hidden in vehicles Peterson owned, rented or borrowed from family members, according to the defense documents.

Scott Peterson is charged with two counts of murder in the deaths of his wife and the couple's unborn son, Connor. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The 30-year-old fertilizer salesman told police he last saw his wife before taking his boat Dec. 24 to go fishing in San Francisco Bay.

Her body and that of their son were found in April along the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay.

Prosecutors could not be reached Monday evening to comment. They are scheduled to file written responses to the defense motions next Monday.

The hair could be a critical physical link. Police found a single 5- to 6-inch hair in a pair of needle-nose pliers at the bottom of Peterson's boat during a Dec. 27 search of a warehouse he used for his business, according to the defense documents.

The pliers were photographed with "one hair and a specific numbered placard in the picture." Multiple police reports refer to a single hair being found, the defense contends.

Detectives Al Brocchini and Dodge Hendee "spontaneously decided to review" the hair Feb. 12, lead defense attorney Mark Geragos wrote in the documents...........

57 posted on 10/07/2003 5:25:04 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: All
Minute Order re Remittitur from the 5th District Court of Appeal

Complaint in Interpleader

Case Cover Sheet

Notice of Application and Application to Invest Interpleader Funds in Insured, Interest-Bearing Account

A few new docs on the Court filings...

58 posted on 10/07/2003 5:31:18 AM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Jackie-O
Vel, dontcha just love it??!!

Simply amazing!

59 posted on 10/07/2003 5:35:42 AM PDT by Velveeta
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To: Jackie-O
maybe she was at the game on Sat when they came back to town

Don't I wish!! Can't get anywhere near the place anymore for under $250.00 for standing room only tickets. We got lucky with last Saturday's tickets since we drew those early from a pool at my husband's company. Earlier in the year we were at one of the Cubs/Marlins games when we whipped the Marlins and Sammy homered. We're gonna do it, Jackie!

60 posted on 10/07/2003 5:50:44 AM PDT by Velveeta
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