Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
from cnn
REDWOOD CITY, California (CNN) -- Jurors found Scott Peterson guilty Friday of first-degree murder in the death of his pregnant wife and second-degree murder in the death of their unborn son.
The verdict leaves Peterson facing a possible sentence of death or life in prison without parole. A penalty phase of the trial is set to begin November 22.
Tension was high in the courtroom before the verdict was announced, said CNN's Rusty Dornin, who was in the room at the time.
The side of the courtroom with family members and friends of Peterson's wife Laci erupted into sighs and cries when the verdict was announced.
Scott Peterson -- though he was smiling confidently before the verdict -- looked "straight ahead, and not to either side," after the announcement, Dornin said. The Peterson family said nothing after the verdict was read.
Neither Peterson's father nor Peterson's defense attorney, Mark Geragos, were in the courtroom Friday.
Laci Peterson's relatives did not speak to reporters after the verdict.
Prosecutors had accused Peterson of killing 27-year-old Laci on or around December 24, 2002. They said he dumped her body, weighted with homemade cement anchors, in San Francisco Bay. He had bought a boat not long before her death.
After 184 witnesses testified over a period of 23 weeks, Geragos said in closing arguments that prosecutors had introduced no direct evidence that Peterson killed anyone, and he admonished jurors to weigh only the evidence and to put aside their feelings about his client.
"I don't care if you hate Scott Peterson," Geragos had said.
During his closing arguments, prosecutor Rick Distaso told jurors that it was a common-sense case in which a man killed his wife and that Peterson was the only one who could have killed Laci.
The verdict came after San Mateo Superior Court Judge Alfred Delucchi's dismissal and replacement Tuesday of juror No. 7, a woman who reportedly did her own research on the case. On Wednesday, the judge dismissed juror No. 5, a doctor and lawyer who was the panel's foreman. The reason for his dismissal was not given.
Replacement juror No. 6, a firefighter, was named the new jury foreman. Court watchers observed that he took few notes during the trial and appeared bored at times. Dornin reported that sources said the new foreman may have been able to smooth over tensions in the jury room.
During the trial, the defense maintained that police bungled the investigation and targeted Peterson to the exclusion of other viable suspects. Geragos claimed Peterson was framed, possibly by a homeless person or a burglar.
Distaso also theorized that Peterson's motive was not to continue an admitted affair with massage therapist Amber Frey, but freedom from the burden of a wife and son, or if he became divorced, freedom from paying child support.
Geragos said his client would never kill his wife to be with a woman he had gone out with only a few times, even telling jurors of Peterson's two previous affairs.
Geragos pointed out that those weights were never found.
"If there were anchors, why didn't they find them?" Geragos asked jurors in his summation.
Laci Peterson was about eight months pregnant when she disappeared.
Scott Peterson was arrested April 18, 2003, just days after the remains of Laci and their unborn son, whom they planned to name Conner, washed ashore separately in San Francisco Bay near the marina where Peterson said he launched his boat on a fishing trip he took Christmas Eve 2002.
He had dyed his hair blonde and had nearly $15,000 in cash. Prosecutors said he was preparing to flee to Mexico.
On January 24, 2003, Frey stepped up to a microphone and told reporters that she had been having an affair with Peterson before and after his wife went missing.
She said she began cooperating with police when she found out her lover had lied to her about many things, including his marital status.
During his trial, the prosecution played tapes of phone calls Peterson made to Frey while searches were under way for his missing wife.
The calls between Peterson and Frey revealed a web of lies by the defendant, including his statement to her that he celebrated New Year's 2003 near the Eiffel Tower.
In fact, the day that call was made he attended a candlelight vigil for his wife in Modesto.
Jury selection in the trial began March 4, and opening statements started June 1.
Before the six men and six women began deliberating November 3, the judge told jurors they had two choices if they decided to convict: first-degree murder, carrying a possible death sentence or life without parole; and second-degree murder, with the potential of two sentences of 15 years to life.
Delucchi explained, "First-degree murder you need ... expressed malice and intent to kill and premeditation."
Second-degree, he said, means Peterson killed them but didn't plan it. The judge added the lesser charge after finding there was ample evidence to support a case that did not involve premeditation.
The option of the lesser charge was a victory for prosecutors, because evidence against Peterson was largely circumstantial.
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
Did anyone here really give a fuck about the case? This years "Crime of the Century" was kind of a letdown...I wanted the cult theory to be true...hearing the same uninspired case on every news station cause those bastards decided this was important ruined the year for me in terms of media attention crime...the dude from Utah was much creepier.
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
what i really hate are all the girls who are hot for scott because he has been on television too much. who was the dude from Utah?
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
Quote:
Originally Posted by karyn
what i really hate are all the girls who are hot for scott because he has been on television too much. who was the dude from Utah?
I think it was Utah...that other guy who killed his wife...seems he was living a double life. Everyone thought he was this fine upstanding guy going to law school or something...ended up snapping due to the fact he'd not only been out of school for years but had been up to some other stuff...very odd case. He ended up killing his wife in an equally brutal way.
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tequila Zaire
Did anyone here really give a fuck about the case? This years "Crime of the Century" was kind of a letdown...I wanted the cult theory to be true...hearing the same uninspired case on every news station cause those bastards decided this was important ruined the year for me in terms of media attention crime...the dude from Utah was much creepier.
well were only four years into the century so give it some time
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
in terms of what the guy deserves i think a lifetime of getting annaly ***** would be much worse than death and he definetely deserves it
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
Why is OJ free? That's what I want to know. And no one is trying to find out who killed Nicole. I guess that being a football star makes it OK to kill people. Obviously.
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
yeah obviously fuck the fame!!!
Re: Jury finds Peterson guilty of killing wife, son, life sentence or death penalty
the guilty is guilty the Inasent is inesent no matter who they are the should all be punished the same way no special treatments...