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5:04 p.m.: REDWOOD CITY - Laci Petersons mother confronted her daughters convicted killer this afternoon, shouting at her son-in-law, her eyes full of tears, that divorce was always an option, not murder.
Sharon Rocha took the witness stand and recalled the agony of waiting 116 days - unable to sleep, wracked by nightmares, sometimes imagining her daughter standing before her - until the bodies of a dismembered Laci Peterson and the unborn son she had carried washed ashore separately along San Francisco Bay.
You knew were she was, Rocha said turning to glare at Scott Peterson. Instead, you just let us go through this every day.
Peterson sat emotionless at the defense table.
Laci Petersons family and friends erupted in tears as Rocha recounted moments before her daughters funeral.
I knew that I needed to spend some time with her, Rocha said, clutching a tissue. I knew she was in the casket and I knew the baby was there and I knew she didnt have arms to hold him. ... She should have had her arms.
Two female jurors put their heads in their hands and sobbed. Another juror, a husky Teamster, closed his eyes, thrust his head back, exhaled and wiped at his eye with a tissue.
Laci didnt deserve to die, Rocha said. She was the last of four family members to testify today in the penalty phase of Petersons murder trial.
The deserving fate for Scott Peterson is at the sharp end of a deadly syringe, prosecutor Dave Harris told jurors this morning in a brief but gripping opening statement as the trials penalty phase got under way after a 2½-hour delay.
The only appropriate and just punishment would be death, Harris said as Peterson sat impassively a few feet away. He was convicted Nov. 12 of murdering his pregnant wife, Laci, and their unborn son, Conner.
Harris ended 18 days of speculation when he said that Laci Petersons mother, surrogate stepfather, sister and brother will testify about how there is a hole in their heart that can never be repaired. One will take the witness stand when the trial resumes at 1:30 p.m.
They will describe 116 days of horror, Harris said, referring to the time that elapsed from Laci Petersons Christmas Eve 2002 disappearance until the victims remains were recovered near her husbands fishing route.
The entire time, with the defendant in their midst, Harris continued.
Youre going to hear they actually feel guilty because they didnt protect Laci from the one person they didnt think she needed protection from.
The trial, delayed several times since testimony began June 2, was put on hold this morning when a bartender was summoned to court and escorted behind closed doors. Rumors swirled that the man might have heard jurors talking at some point of the trial, now nearly six months old.
His San Francisco attorney, Ian Loveseth, called his client Gino, but both men refused to reveal his last name. Gino the bartender sounds perfect, Loveseth said.
Judge Alfred Delucchi said nothing upon emerging from his private chamber, other than to apologize for another delay.
Outside the courthouse, legal analyst and former prosecutor Dean Johnson said, Its obvious the judge who listened to this supposed bartenders testimony has decided that whatever he had to say really isn't material.
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