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Special Reports - The Peterson Case - Peterson: Trial Updates

Monday, Dec. 13, 2004

Judge gives final decision on Feb. 25

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REDWOOD CITY - Scott Peterson should die for killing his pregnant wife, Laci, and unborn son, jurors recommended today in a dramatic ending to the Modesto man’s murder trial.

Sharon Rocha, Laci Peterson's mother, cried quietly after the verdict was read about 1:45 p.m.

Before the verdict was read, Juror 7, a mother of four with dyed pinkish-red hair, winked at the Rocha family from the jury box.

  • REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) - Repelled by Scott Peterson's seeming lack of sorrow and remorse, a jury decided Monday that he deserves the death penalty for murdering his pregnant wife, Laci, almost two years ago to the date.

    A cheer went up outside the courthouse as the jury announced its decision after 11 1/2 hours of deliberations over three days. Inside court, Peterson reacted with the same tight-jawed look that some jurors said turned them off after seeing little emotion out of Peterson since his wife's disappearance two years ago.

    "I still would have liked to see, I don't know if remorse is the right word," juror Steve Cardosi said at a news conference following the sentence. "He lost his wife and his child - it didn't seem to faze him. While that was going on ... he is romancing a girlfriend."

    A crowd of several hundred gathered outside the courthouse for the verdict - a scene reminiscent of when about 1,000 people showed up last month to hear the conviction. The San Francisco Examiner came out with a special edition within minutes of the sentence, with the giant headline "DEATH."

    Laci Peterson's mother, Sharon Rocha, cried quietly - her lips quivering after the verdict was read. Scott Peterson's mother, Jackie, showed no apparent emotion.

    The jury had two options in deciding the 32-year-old former fertilizer salesman's fate: life in prison without parole or death by injection.

    Judge Alfred A. Delucchi will formally sentence Peterson on Feb. 25. The judge will have the option of reducing the sentence to life, but such a move is highly unlikely.

    If the judge agrees with the jury's verdict, Peterson will be sent to death row at San Quentin State Prison outside San Francisco, the infamous lockup overlooking the same bay where Laci Peterson's body was discarded.

    But Peterson still might not be executed for decades - if ever - and it can take years for even the first phase of the appeals process to begin. Since California brought back capital punishment in 1978, only 10 executions have been carried out. The last execution, in 2002, was for a murder committed in 1980. The state's clogged death row houses 641 prisoners.

    The sentence marked one of the final chapters in a soap opera-like saga that began nearly two years ago with the Christmas Eve disappearance of Laci Peterson, a 27-year-old substitute teacher who married her college sweetheart and was soon to be the proud mother of a baby boy named Conner.

    The tale of adultery and murder quickly set off a tabloid frenzy as suspicion began to swirl around Scott Peterson, who claimed to have been fishing by himself on Christmas Eve and was carrying on an affair with a massage therapist at the time.

    The remains of Laci and the fetus washed ashore about four months later, just a few miles from where Peterson said he was fishing in San Francisco Bay.

    The case made more People magazine covers than any murder investigation in the publication's history. Court TV thrived on the case, providing countless hours of coverage on the investigation and gavel-to-gavel commentary throughout the trial. CNN's Larry King hosted show after show with pundits picking apart legal strategies, testimony and even Scott Peterson's demeanor.

    Trial regulars showed up by the hundreds to participate in the daily lottery for the coveted 27 public seats inside the courtroom.

    The case went to trial in June, and the jury of six men and six women convicted Peterson Nov. 12 of two counts of murder before issuing its death recommendation on Monday.

    "There are so many things, so many things," juror Richelle Nice said in describing how the jury came to its decisions. "Scott Peterson was Laci's husband, Conner's daddy - the one person that should have protected them."

    Jurors said they were swayed as much by Peterson's lack of emotions as by any of the testimony during the trial.

    "For me, a big part of it was at the end - the verdict - no emotion. No anything. That spoke a thousand words - loud and clear," Nice said, responding to a reporter's question about whether they wanted to hear a statement from Peterson. "I heard enough from him."

    Juror Greg Beratlis said the jury was convinced of Peterson's guilt by "many, many things."

    "Those bodies were found in the one place he went prior to her being missing," he said. "I played in my mind over and over conspiracies: Was somebody trying to set up Scott? Was somebody after Laci? It didn't add up."

    The jury's decision followed seven days of tearful testimony in the penalty phase of the trial. In arguing for death last week, prosecutors called Peterson "the worst kind of monster" and said he was undeserving of sympathy. Defense attorney Mark Geragos begged of jurors: "Just don't kill him. That's all I am asking of you. End this cycle."

    Prosecutors spent months portraying Peterson as a cheating husband and cold-blooded killer who wooed his lover even as police searched for his missing wife. They said he wanted to murder Laci to escape marriage and fatherhood for the pleasures of the freewheeling bachelor life.

    The prosecution put on a short, but emotional case in the penalty phase, calling just four witnesses.

    "Every morning when I get up I cry," Rocha, Laci's mother, told jurors. "It takes me a long time just to be able to get out of the house ... I miss her. I want to know my grandson. I want Laci to be a mother. I want to hear her called mom."

    Rocha would later rise halfway out of her seat and scream at Scott Peterson, who was seated impassively at the defense table: "Divorce was always an option," she said. "Not murder!"

    Defense attorneys argued during the trial's guilt phase that Peterson was framed and that the real killers dumped Laci's body in the water after learning of Peterson's widely publicized alibi. The defense fought hard to save Peterson's life, calling 39 witnesses over seven days in the penalty phase.

    In a brief news conference after the verdict, Geragos said he was "very disappointed."

    "Obviously, we plan on pursuing every and all appeals, motions for a new trial and everything else," he said.

    Defense attorneys seized on anything from Scott Peterson's past in an attempt to spare his life, including testimony that he never cheated or lost his temper on the golf course.

    They told jurors of the Scott Peterson who was a smiling, snuggling toddler. He was the high school golf captain who tutored younger students. He sang to seniors on Sundays and once broke up a dog fight. He cared for mentally retarded children. He was the highly motivated son who worked his way through college.

    And finally, he was the young professional who married the woman he fell in love with in college.

    In the end, jurors were unconvinced. They concluded Peterson sought to break free of his domesticated life in California's Central Valley, then planned and executed the murders.

    "I don't think divorce was an option," Beratlis said. "I think it was freedom."

Juror 9, whose husband was killed in prison after he was convicted of murder, wiped away tears after the judge had polled jurors individually - at the defense's request - to confirm the verdict was unanimous.

Two female jurors nodded their heads slightly and smiled faintly at Sharon Rocha as they left the jury box.

Judge Alfred Delucchi can reduce the sentence to life in prison without possibility of parole at Peterson’s sentencing Feb. 25.

In the prosecution’s closing argument Thursday, Dave Harris said, “He lies, he fools, he manipulates. He is not a person who deserves your sympathy.”

Sharon Rocha delivered a searing rebuke of her son-in-law during the trial’s penalty phase, screaming that “divorce was always an option, not murder.”

Thirty-nine defense witnesses tried to overcome Rocha’s unforgettable testimony by describing Scott Peterson as warm, caring and respectful, and some openly disagreed with the jury’s Nov. 12 conviction.

The same six-woman, six-man jury, after a five-month trial, had declared Peterson guilty of first-degree murder in the slaying of his wife, Laci, and second-degree murder for killing his unborn son, Conner Peterson.

Scott Peterson strangled or smothered his wife on or just before Christmas Eve 2002, prosecutors said, and dumped her body into San Francisco Bay. Peterson had claimed he went fishing alone Christmas Eve. The remains of mother and son were recovered near his boating route four months later.

Peterson was a candidate for a death sentence because there were multiple victims. Death Row inmates in California are subject to lethal injection, though executions are rare and typically delayed many years by appeals.

Details of today’s action will appear at this Web site as they become available, followed by complete coverage in Tuesday's Bee and Modbee.com.

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