Scott Peterson Death Sentence Overturned

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Scott Peterson's death sentence in murder of pregnant wife overturned by California Supreme Court
Laci Peterson and their unborn son, Conner, were killed over 15 years ago



The California Supreme Court on Monday overturned the death penalty sentence for Scott Peterson, convicted in the Christmas Eve murder of his pregnant wife, Laci, and their unborn son, Conner.

The court's decision came more than 15 years after Laci, a Modesto, Calif., school teacher, was killed. Investigators said Peterson dumped his wife's body from his fishing boat into the San Francisco Bay in 2002. The bodies of Laci and Conner surfaced months later.

While the murder conviction against Peterson stayed in place, the court ordered a new penalty phase trial.


"Peterson contends his trial was flawed for multiple reasons, beginning with the unusual amount of pretrial publicity that surrounded the case," the court found. "We reject Peterson's claim that he received an unfair trial as to guilt and thus affirm his convictions for murder."

SCOTT PETERSON: 'I HAD NO IDEA' CONVICTION IN LACI PETERSON MURDER WAS COMING

However, the court ruled the trial judge in Peterson's case "made a series of clear and significant errors in jury selection that, under long-standing United States Supreme Court precedent, undermined Peterson's right to an impartial jury at the penalty phase."

The court also agreed that potential jurors improperly were dismissed from the jury pool after saying they personally disagreed with the death penalty but would be willing to impose it per California law.

Peterson, now 47, also claimed on appeal that he couldn't get a fair trial because of the massive publicity that surrounded his case, even though his trial was held nearly 90 miles away from his Central Valley home of Modesto to San Mateo County, south of San Francisco.


SCOTT PETERSON: 15 YEARS LATER, A LOOK BACK AT A CASE THAT GRIPPED A NATION

Stanislaus County District Attorney Birgit Fladager did not immediately say if she would seek the death penalty again.

Peterson has been housed on San Quentin State Prison's death row since he was sentenced to death by lethal injection in 2005.

Peterson's case grabbed national headlines and intense pressure was put on investigators to find her killer. They chased nearly 10,000 tips and considered parolees and convicted sex offenders as possible suspects.

On Dec. 24, 2002, Peterson called his mother-in-law, Sharon Rocha, in the early evening to ask if Laci was with her. He told Rocha he had returned from a day of fishing and when he got home, Laci's car was in the driveway and their dog was in the backyard with his leash on.


The call to Rocha around 5:15 p.m. would set off a chain of events that would move an entire community, which jumped into action to find the missing mom to be. As the days and weeks went on, the search for Laci, who was 8 1/2 months pregnant when she disappeared, became more desperate.

Peterson claimed she was home the morning he left for his fishing trip in the San Francisco Bay and that was the last time he saw her.



Laci's family went on television, pleading for her safe return and for any information to help find her.

"Please bring my daughter home," Rocha asked the public in one news conference.

Attention soon turned to Peterson who has maintained he had nothing to do with Laci's disappearance.

One month after Laci's disappearance, police revealed her husband was living a double life, having an affair with a massage therapist who was living in Fresno by the name of Amber Frey.

SCOTT PETERSON MISTRESS AMBER FREY SUED OVER 'MEMOIRS OF A SEX ADDICT,' 'MYTHS OF THE FLESH'

Frey, a single mother, went to police once she became aware that the man she thought was her boyfriend was quickly becoming a prime suspect in a nationally televised case.

She eventually would go on to wear a wire and helped police record her conversations with Peterson, which would play a key role in the trial.


On April 13, 2003, the body of a baby boy was discovered along the shore of San Francisco Bay. The next day, the body of an adult female wearing maternity clothes was found nearby. The bodies were positively identified as those of Laci and her unborn son Conner.

Peterson was arrested in San Diego just days after the bodies were discovered.


He had dyed his hair blonde, grown a goatee and had many items in his car which led investigators to believe he may have been ready to run.

The double murder trial would take more than a year to begin, but at the end Scott Peterson was found guilty of first-degree murder for killing his wife, and second-degree murder for killing Conner.

Peterson, who pleaded not guilty, has always maintained his innocence.


He had dyed his hair blonde, grown a goatee and had many items in his car which led investigators to believe he may have been ready to run.

The double murder trial would take more than a year to begin, but at the end Scott Peterson was found guilty of first-degree murder for killing his wife, and second-degree murder for killing Conner.

Peterson, who pleaded not guilty, has always maintained his innocence.

 
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Scott Peterson resentenced: Laci Peterson's family berates convicted killer for first time in 17 years​

Their statements came Wednesday during a hearing for Scott Peterson​


Laci Peterson's family on Wednesday addressed convicted murderer Scott Peterson for the first time in nearly 17 years while giving emotional statements inside a San Mateo, California, courtroom.

Their statements came Wednesday before San Mateo County Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo ordered Scott Peterson — who was convicted in 2004 of murdering Laci Peterson, his pregnant wife and their unborn son — to serve the rest of his life in prison without parole.

"It's been 19 years, and there's not a day that goes by that I don't think about my sister," Amy Rocha, Laci's sister, said Wednesday.

Peterson was sentenced to death nearly 17 years ago and was ordered Wednesday to serve the remainder of his life in prison after the Supreme Court overruled his death sentence in August 2020 amid allegations of juror misconduct. Laci's family members were allowed to give statements on her behalf.

Amy, who choked up while giving her statement, said she feels "cheated" out of a relationship with her sister, who would be 49 years old today , and her unborn son Conner, who would be 18.

"I don't know how you go on living," Amy said, adding that she hopes Peterson is "punished in this life and after."

Brent Rocha, Laci's brother, said his family has been "devastated and traumatized," describing his sister as "a vibrant young woman who was living her life to the fullest" as an expectant mother.

He added that he believes Peterson "deserves death" and "the most severe sentence possible."

Sharon Rocha, Laci's mother, did not get teary while giving her statement; her voice remained steady as she declared Peterson a "coward" and a "murderer."

 
Are they looking for an executioner?. I'll do it. I like the way justice was served before. Executed pretty quickly. Now I agree to make sure that person is guilty and don't have innocent people put to death. But their decades of appeals is ridiculous, And sometimes outlive the families waiting for that justice.
 
Are they looking for an executioner?. I'll do it. I like the way justice was served before. Executed pretty quickly. Now I agree to make sure that person is guilty and don't have innocent people put to death. But their decades of appeals is ridiculous, And sometimes outlive the families waiting for that justice.
:highfive: You have that right. Making sure a defendant gets a logical fair shake is one thing but this has gone so far the other way it isn't even funny.
 

Published December 15, 2022 3:55pm EST
By Stephanie Pagones | Fox News

<snip>
California Judge Anne-Christine Massullo gave attorneys until Friday to correct errors related to personal information that was left unredacted in recent exhibits, which will eventually be unsealed.

The jurist was scheduled to release her announcement by Friday regarding whether Peterson would be granted a new trial but suspended the deadline on Dec. 8 until attorneys could meet for the Wednesday status conference. At the time, Massullo had eight days left to reach a decision, which she said she had not finalized as of Wednesday.

It was not clear if Massullo planned to release her final decision immediately after the court was notified of the clerical fixes this week or whether she planned to take the remaining eight days to mull her decision.

If Massullo does lift the suspension on Friday without a ruling, and uses the remaining eight days, her deadline would fall on Dec. 24 – 20 years to the day since Laci Peterson disappeared, a relative noted to Fox News Digital.
 

Dec. 20, 2022, 2:55 PM EST / Updated Dec. 20, 2022, 4:31 PM EST
By Minyvonne Burke

Convicted murderer Scott Peterson was denied a new trial in the 2002 death of his pregnant wife, Laci Peterson, a judge ruled Tuesday.

The decision comes more than a year after the California Supreme Court ordered Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo to consider whether juror misconduct denied Peterson a fair trial.
 

BY ERIN TRACY
UPDATED MAY 03, 2023 10:26 AM

Scott Peterson’s quest for a new trial was dealt a significant blow in December when a judge rejected his claim that a biased juror served on his 2004 murder trial. His case is far from over, though.

Peterson last month filed a new petition for habeas corpus in California’s First District Court of Appeal. It has six claims, including that new witnesses have come forward with information supporting the defense’s theory that Laci was abducted and killed by men she saw burglarizing a neighbor’s home.

Scott Peterson’s quest for a new trial was dealt a significant blow in December when a judge rejected his claim that a biased juror served on his 2004 murder trial.

His case is far from over, though. Peterson last month filed a new petition for habeas corpus in California’s First District Court of Appeal. It has six claims, including that new witnesses have come forward with information supporting the defense’s theory that Laci was abducted and killed by men she saw burglarizing a neighbor’s home.

After walking her dog on Christmas Eve 2002, she “confronted the burglars by threatening to call the police,” The petition reads. “They then killed her and, after learning Scott, the primary suspect, had been fishing in the San Francisco Bay, dumped her body there.”

In early January 2003, Modesto police issued a press release saying they had arrested Steven Wayne Todd and Donald Glen Pearce for the burglary across from the Peterson home on Covina Avenue in Modesto.

Police said the burglary occurred two days after Laci Peterson went missing and they had no reason to believe the men were connected to her disappearance.

That was the information the jury heard in Scott Peterson’s 2004 trial.

Peterson’s trial attorney Mark Geragos told the jury in opening statements he would prove that Peterson was “stone cold innocent” based on evidence that Laci was alive when Scott drove to the San Francisco Bay. But the jury never heard from any of the 12 people who reported to police that they saw Laci Peterson walking her dog that morning, after Scott left to go fishing, or evidence that she had witnessed the burglary.
 

BY ERIN TRACY
UPDATED MAY 03, 2023 10:26 AM

Scott Peterson’s quest for a new trial was dealt a significant blow in December when a judge rejected his claim that a biased juror served on his 2004 murder trial. His case is far from over, though.

Peterson last month filed a new petition for habeas corpus in California’s First District Court of Appeal. It has six claims, including that new witnesses have come forward with information supporting the defense’s theory that Laci was abducted and killed by men she saw burglarizing a neighbor’s home.

Scott Peterson’s quest for a new trial was dealt a significant blow in December when a judge rejected his claim that a biased juror served on his 2004 murder trial.

His case is far from over, though. Peterson last month filed a new petition for habeas corpus in California’s First District Court of Appeal. It has six claims, including that new witnesses have come forward with information supporting the defense’s theory that Laci was abducted and killed by men she saw burglarizing a neighbor’s home.

After walking her dog on Christmas Eve 2002, she “confronted the burglars by threatening to call the police,” The petition reads. “They then killed her and, after learning Scott, the primary suspect, had been fishing in the San Francisco Bay, dumped her body there.”

In early January 2003, Modesto police issued a press release saying they had arrested Steven Wayne Todd and Donald Glen Pearce for the burglary across from the Peterson home on Covina Avenue in Modesto.

Police said the burglary occurred two days after Laci Peterson went missing and they had no reason to believe the men were connected to her disappearance.

That was the information the jury heard in Scott Peterson’s 2004 trial.

Peterson’s trial attorney Mark Geragos told the jury in opening statements he would prove that Peterson was “stone cold innocent” based on evidence that Laci was alive when Scott drove to the San Francisco Bay. But the jury never heard from any of the 12 people who reported to police that they saw Laci Peterson walking her dog that morning, after Scott left to go fishing, or evidence that she had witnessed the burglary.
So a DOZEN people now saw her walking the dog AFTER he went fishing...?

But she witnessed the burglary and threatened the burglars however she was missing two days prior? Huh?

Not for one minute will I ever believe he is innocent.

And Geragos is a puke.

Here's one for you. These burglars murdered her because she threatened to call police. Okay. Let's just say that's true. Then they keep her body and wait and are all worried but when later they hear her husband was fishing when she went missing, they take her body which they still have and dumped her in the bay. Okayyyy....

That is so far fetched and I can't even detail the timeline right now but it is right up there with it was aliens who dropped her from their spaceship into the bay. Sure, they still had her body with no idea what to do with it oh my. They find out hub was fishing in the bay. At that point common sense would dictate cops would be checking the bay story and the bay but the burglars take the chance of driving right out there (or NO maybe they BOATED from out in the sea to the bay with her body??) and dumping the very woman they were looking for and probably checking out her husband's story!

That is RIDICULOUS Mark Geragos.
 

By KELLY MCCLURE

Nights & Weekends Editor

PUBLISHED JANUARY 18, 2024 8:10PM (EST)​


In 2004, Scott Peterson was convicted in the deaths of his wife, Laci Peterson, and their unborn child, facing a death sentence that later became life in prison without parole in a reversal by the California Supreme Court "after finding that jurors were erroneously dismissed, partly because they expressed objections to the death penalty on a questionnaire," per CNN's reporting.

Currently serving his sentence at the Mule Creek State Prison in Ione, California, his case is being taken on by The Los Angeles Innocence Project, which provides pro bono investigatory services and legal representation to people who were convicted of crimes they did not commit, in an effort to examine the possibility of a wrongful conviction.

On Wednesday, a motion was filed to the court for an order directing the testing of evidence from the original trial for DNA, according to NBC Los Angeles, and Pat Harris, Peterson's attorney, told the network, "I will confirm that we are thrilled to have the incredibly skilled attorneys at the LA Innocence Project and their expertise becoming involved in the efforts to prove Scott’s innocence."

Since being charged with first-degree murder of his wife, who was 27-years-old and eight months pregnant with their child at the time, Peterson has maintained his innocence, and attorneys with LAIP claim that "numerous specific items of post-conviction discovery" supports that.
 

By KELLY MCCLURE

Nights & Weekends Editor

PUBLISHED JANUARY 18, 2024 8:10PM (EST)​


In 2004, Scott Peterson was convicted in the deaths of his wife, Laci Peterson, and their unborn child, facing a death sentence that later became life in prison without parole in a reversal by the California Supreme Court "after finding that jurors were erroneously dismissed, partly because they expressed objections to the death penalty on a questionnaire," per CNN's reporting.

Currently serving his sentence at the Mule Creek State Prison in Ione, California, his case is being taken on by The Los Angeles Innocence Project, which provides pro bono investigatory services and legal representation to people who were convicted of crimes they did not commit, in an effort to examine the possibility of a wrongful conviction.

On Wednesday, a motion was filed to the court for an order directing the testing of evidence from the original trial for DNA, according to NBC Los Angeles, and Pat Harris, Peterson's attorney, told the network, "I will confirm that we are thrilled to have the incredibly skilled attorneys at the LA Innocence Project and their expertise becoming involved in the efforts to prove Scott’s innocence."

Since being charged with first-degree murder of his wife, who was 27-years-old and eight months pregnant with their child at the time, Peterson has maintained his innocence, and attorneys with LAIP claim that "numerous specific items of post-conviction discovery" supports that.
Oh God help us. Scott Peterson innocent? Right along with OJ and Casey. Sure let's dismantle the one gotten right.

Leaving Casey out of it, we could talk just about LA. I'd have a lot to say. LAPD for starters. And there is an LA Innocence Project? Just for the innocents in LA? Wow. Must be a ton of them probably due to Mark Furhman and others like him.

Scott Peterson killed his wife and baby. Imo. NOTHING will ever convince me otherwise. Not about him. Not about OJ. Not about Casey.

Why is it these "projects" seem to mainly take on high profile defendants? Do they ever get the local drug dealer accused and convicted of battering his baby mama to death out of prison? If so, I sure never hear of such. Just the high profile.
 

By Alex Arger
Posted: 4:09 p.m. EST Mar 8, 2024

It's been nearly 21 years since Scott Peterson was arrested for the murder of his wife Laci and their unborn son, and next week, he'll go before a judge with the intent to clear his name.

According to court records, a judge in San Mateo County, California, has scheduled a status hearing in Peterson's case for March 12, which will include a remote appearance from the convicted murder while his counsel, the Los Angeles Innocent Project, will appear in person.

The Los Angeles Innocence Project confirmed just under two months ago that it had taken up Peterson's case to investigate "his claim of actual innocence," it said in a statement to Scripps News at the time. And per court filings since then, including a motion for DNA testing, it appears the nonprofit found what it needed to support that claim.

"New evidence now supports Mr. Peterson's longstanding claim of innocence and raises many questions into who abducted and killed Laci and Conner Peterson," the filings, obtained by ABC News, state.
 
A reminder that this creep has a hearing tomorrow as said above.

I note that post says nonprofit which was an easy guess now confirmed.
 

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