American Murder: Laci Peterson (2024) s01e03 Episode Script
Nothing Can Change the Truth
[waves lapping]
[mysterious music playing]
[Sharon Rocha] Laci worked in Pismo Beach,
so she decided to have
her wedding around there.
She was she was excited.
She was really excited.
She wanted everything to be just perfect.
She called me after the rehearsal dinner,
but she'd been
you know, had a couple cocktails
with dinner,
and so, of course,
she was feeling a little
getting a little nervous at that time.
And she's a little concerned that she
might be too young to be getting married.
She was asking me those questions,
if I thought she was
too young to get married.
And I just told her
Yes, whatever whatever she wanted to do.
It was up to her.
[mysterious music continues playing]
[Sharon Rocha] I remember,
before I met Scott,
Laci telling me
all these things about him,
all these things that he had done.
I remember turning to Ron and saying,
"I hope he's not filling her
with a lotta crap about himself."
I said, "Because that just
doesn't sound plausible
to have done that much, and he's, what?"
Whatever age he was at the time, 22 or
But then, when I met him,
you know, he seemed very nice
and, like I said, respectful and pleasant,
and I didn't think much about that again.
I have learned to go with a gut feeling.
[helicopter whirring]
[newscaster] Just this afternoon,
a badly decomposed body
was found near Point Isabel in Richmond,
and last night, the body of a male fetus
was found just a few miles away,
if that far.
Gloria Gomez joins us live from the scene
with more on this story. Gloria?
Paul, this could be
a major break in the Laci Peterson case.
I can tell you that investigators
from Modesto PD are here.
We, of course, will be here, Paul,
and bring you the very latest
when we have it.
Her torso had washed up.
And so we were right back out there,
basically telling the audience
that the worst-case scenario has happened.
It was heartbreaking to tell it.
I had to keep myself composed
because I knew that I was delivering
some hard news to the community
that was really rooting
for Laci to be alive.
And I knew that.
I saw it on the news,
and I immediately called the detective,
and I said, "Is it her?"
And he says, "I can't say."
He said, "But" And I said, "Okay."
[helicopter whirring]
- Devastating.
- Knew right away.
- I think we got phone calls.
- Devastating.
- Yeah.
- 'Cause we knew.
We knew right away.
Laci made that happen. She came back.
She wanted us to know
that things were going to be okay,
as well as they could be.
And that the person responsible
was going to
face his
- Justice.
- Yeah.
[melancholic music playing]
The chief of police called me.
[inhales sharply]
Yeah.
Yeah. Um
[Gloria] And so this is now
a murder investigation.
It's no longer a missing case.
It is a complete
fast-forward investigation.
[suspenseful music playing]
He did it. I mean,
that's where I'm at right now.
My focus is we've caught Scott,
and his alibi is so blown up
because on December 24th,
during my interview with Scott Peterson,
he told me
he went to Brooks Island fishing.
When you got in your boat,
and you took off, did you go very far or
[Scott] Maybe a couple miles.
I went north, um
Found a like,
a little island kinda deal there, um
The island had a bunch of trash on it.
I remember a big sign
that said, "No landing."
[Al] Four months later, Laci and Conner
were found near Brooks Island.
That's a huge thing to overcome.
[Sharon Hagan] The bodies coming up
in the bay solidified in my mind
what we actually believed all along.
In my opinion, and this is based
on my experience in many homicides,
I believe that this was
what I would call a soft kill,
um, that he either suffocated her
or he strangled her,
and there would be two reasons
that he would choose to do that.
One is that it's very quiet.
Secondly, it doesn't make a mess.
[Al] Then, I think,
between the 23rd or the 24th,
he wraps her in the tarp,
drags her through the house.
It's all tile floors
except for when you get to that one door,
and that's where the rug
is all scrunched up.
I think he, on purpose,
left the dog on the leash.
He put her in the back of the truck,
puts these umbrellas in a blue tarp,
probably covered her with it.
He took her over to the warehouse.
He backed his truck into the warehouse
where the boat was.
He put her in the boat.
- Then he drove her to the bay.
- [seagulls crying]
[Sharon Hagan] And he put the boat
in the water with Laci's body in the boat.
He went out to Brooks Island,
and he dumped
her weighted body into the water,
hoping that it would never, ever come up.
He tried to make this look
like a disappearance,
but the story just didn't
didn't stand up.
[Jon] This case doesn't have a witness,
doesn't have a video,
it doesn't have a confession,
but it's got everything else
that you're lookin' for.
And then once the bodies were found,
we had a complete case.
[dramatic music playing]
But we knew that to confirm
the identification of the bodies,
it had to be done by DNA.
[Al] Us, the cops, the homicide guys,
we know it's Conner.
I mean, where it came up
compared to where, uh, Scott said he was,
we know it's Conner.
When Laci came up,
she had maternity clothes on.
We pretty much knew.
[dramatic music continues playing]
And that's when we went to the judge.
We got the warrant for Scott's arrest.
We had a tracker on his little truck,
and we found the truck,
but somebody else was driving it,
so we couldn't find him by tracker,
but we did find him by wiretap.
- [man] Hey.
- [Scott] Hey, Joe.
[Joe] Brother. What's up?
I saw the picture in The Modesto,
where everybody's leaving flowers
and stuffed animals and everything
in front of your house.
- [Scott] Oh yeah.
- [Joe] Yeah.
I mean, people are just leaving
a lot of stuff.
You know, like, gosh. Yeah.
[Al] He was in San Diego,
and that's only about less than an hour
from the Mexico border.
That's why we wanted
to keep an eye on him.
[Susan] Scott was staying at my house
in San Diego that day.
He had left early that morning
to meet up with my dad
and my brothers, Mark and Joe,
to go golf, do something
that was normal for them to do.
Kind of take the pressure off.
[suspenseful music playing]
[Jon] He's up and running early
in the morning, and we're following him.
We've got DOJ agents in cars.
We've got an aircraft up,
and we're following him in our two cars.
[suspenseful music continues playing]
[tires screech]
That morning,
he's noticing he's being followed,
and Scott spends
the next three to four hours
trying to shake this tail he's got
that he thinks is media.
[Al] And he is driving worse
than any drug dealer I've ever followed.
I mean, it's getting dangerous.
He is driving so bad
that the helicopter even lost him.
But we could keep finding him
by his phone.
- [Joe] Where you at?
- [Scott] On Genesee.
- I don't think I should come play golf.
- [Joe] Oh gosh. Oh brother.
And we knew he knew he was being followed
because we could hear him on the phone,
but he thought we were the media.
[Scott] These guys know I'm onto them.
I stopped on the highway,
and they, you know, stopped behind me.
I better skip it 'cause I don't think
I want a picture of me
in the press playing golf.
Finally, we got to the point
where this is dangerous,
so we decided we have to arrest him.
[tires screech]
[Janey] It's when he's pulling up
to the Torrey Pines Golf Course,
one of those cars puts a siren on top.
[siren wailing]
[Jon] We were in a long caravan of cars.
We pulled up just as the DOJ guys
were handcuffing Scott.
We got out,
we told him that he was under arrest.
[Al] He had orange hair.
He had an orange goatee.
I walk up, and he's, "Al, tell me
it wasn't my wife and baby." You know?
I'm like, "That's ridiculous."
I mean, you know, come on, Scott.
You know better than that.
[theme music plays]
And hello, everyone.
I'm Arthel Neville in the CNN Newsroom
with the headlines at this hour.
CNN has confirmed that Scott Peterson
is under arrest tonight,
arrested in San Diego
We begin tonight with breaking news.
There's a break
in the case of Laci Peterson
The arrest of Scott Peterson right now
[newscaster] Police have taken
Scott Peterson into custody.
From Torrey Pines, we drove him over
to the Department of Justice,
where we searched him
and searched his car.
It was a little two-seater, a Mercedes.
He was prepared for anything in the car.
He had over
almost 15,000 dollars in cash.
I think he had four or five cell phones.
He had several knives.
I mean, he had some Viagra.
He had a shovel.
He had rope, a cooking grill.
He had credit cards for himself,
but he also had
family-member credit cards in the car.
He also had his brother's ID
right on the center console
that actually he similarly looked like
with the new hairdo he had.
The fact that Scott Peterson is arrested
30 miles from the Mexican border
created this perception
that Scott was in flight
when he was arrested, and
But that's just not the case.
He'd been to San Diego multiple times
while Laci was missing,
so the notion
that Scott was trying to evade the police
is just it just isn't accurate.
[tense music playing]
He agreed and signed off
to come home with us to Modesto.
Scott was sitting behind me, Craig Grogan
was sitting next to him in the back seat,
and we drive back to Modesto,
a five, six-hour drive.
[Al] We had to arrest him
before the DNA was confirmed.
Then we got a call, and it was confirmed.
That's Conner and Laci's DNA.
So then Scott Craig told me
he just kind of lowered his head.
He said he saw a tear,
but he didn't say anything.
He was just quiet.
[tense music continues playing]
It was time to get some gas
and use the bathroom,
and then probably get a bite to eat.
He asked where I was goin', and I said,
"Well, there's an In-N-Out
up the road here a little ways."
"We're gonna probably stop there."
I've got the transcript right here.
And Scott goes, "I'll have
a double-double with cheese, fries."
"A small vanilla shake would be great."
And to me, that was an enormous red flag
on the fact that the notification
didn't surprise him,
that he already knew the results of this
from four months earlier,
and that he really didn't care.
He was ready to eat.
[suspenseful music playing]
[crowd cheering]
[Al] We got to Modesto,
and it was, like, midnight or even after,
but there was
a crowd of people with signs.
I've never had that happen before,
other than this case,
where somebody cheers,
you know, after an arrest.
We're outside the gate
of the Stanislaus County jail.
This is where Scott Peterson
will be held until his arraignment.
Look at this,
all the people who have gathered
to catch a glimpse of Peterson
as he was driven here
from San Diego by detectives.
[Gloria] All of these reporters lined up
right in front
of the Modesto Police Department.
All of a sudden, you have
members of the public showing up.
They had lived this case
for so many months.
Now they wanted to see
a villain firsthand.
[tense music playing]
[crowd cheering]
I think I watched
because it was broadcast live,
him driving in the back seat
of the detectives' car
and the gauntlet of people
that had come out
in the middle of the night.
I was horrified.
It looked like he was being taken
to the slaughterhouse.
You know, it was
it was just a a terrible scene.
[distant chatter]
[Gloria] I'd never seen
anything like that ever.
In a crazy way,
internally, I was like, "Wow."
"We kind of created this."
We, the media, created this.
[theme music plays]
[Larry King]Tonight, what's going on
with Scott Peterson's defense?
There are reports
that none other than Mark Geragos,
the high-profile attorney who's been
a frequent guest on this program,
could be the new lawyer.
The moment I hear it's Mark Geragos,
I'm like, "Oh wow, that's a big name.
That's a big lawyer from LA."
[reporter] He's one
of the most well-known attorneys.
It's a position he earned by taking on
some of the highest-profile cases,
vigorously defending his clients
both inside and outside the courtroom.
[man] Mark and I started working together
on trials about two years before Scott.
The way that it happened that
that we came to represent Scott Peterson
was that Mark was on Larry King.
Uh, pretty much every night, Larry King
was now running a Scott Peterson segment.
Condemn him as a narcissist.
- [woman 1] No.
- Condemn his character flaws.
But that does not make him a murderer.
Condemn him because he might be
guilty of adultery.
- [woman 2] Wendy, Mark
- Mark
- Why do you make him a murderer?
- Mark
[Susan] My parents got to be familiar
with him through seeing him on TV.
All of Mark's points resonated with them,
so when it came time to look at attorneys,
he was one of the first.
[Gloria] The judge says
this can move forward,
and right when that hearing is over,
Mark Geragos, along with the Petersons,
come right outside the courthouse steps
and give a press conference.
And he says he is going to prove
that Scott Peterson
had nothing to do with this,
that this is a witch hunt.
We are happy that Mark, uh, is in place
as Scott's attorney,
and, um, we do look forward
to proving his innocence.
[tense music playing]
[indistinct chatter]
[man] I was one of the two attorneys
that basically packed up
and moved to Modesto
to start working on this case.
This case was just
your garden-variety homicide.
It didn't involve any celebrities,
yet it turned
into this media feeding frenzy.
[Amber] I had no idea
how I was supposed to
deal with the stories coming out,
and so I started looking for an attorney.
So my dad gave me a number of an attorney.
Her name was Gloria Allred.
Women who find themselves
in high-profile scandals
with the famous and powerful
flock to Gloria Allred for legal counsel.
Allred represented
the family of Nicole Brown Simpson.
Allred also represents
two of Tiger Woods' mistresses,
Joslyn James and Rachel Uchitel.
[Amber] So I called Gloria's office,
and we made arrangements
for her to come out to meet with me
so we could have a face-to-face.
She had offered to retain me pro bono.
There was a good connection.
I felt good about Gloria.
[Gloria Allred] In addition
to being a witness,
Amber is also a victim
of Scott's deception.
Victims are entitled to attorneys,
as are witnesses.
I had been commenting
on the case on television,
particularly on Fox News,
and I was very concerned.
It seemed as though every day
there were stories about Amber coming out,
and, of course, it would be
and was in the interest
of the defense
and supporters of the defense
to undermine her credibility.
That was key.
If she's going to be
the key prosecution witness,
the court of public opinion
is also very important
because, after all,
the jurors who were ultimately going
to be chosen for the jury pool
would likely have been hearing
or reading or seeing or all of the above
quite a bit about this case
before they ever sat in the courtroom.
We were just chomping at the bit
[indistinct chatter]
to get information.
People were eating it up.
- Come on, be human beings.
- [man] Leave her alone.
But keep in mind, the more stories I do
and the more stories that end up
in national news and everywhere,
it became such a toxic community
for Scott Peterson to get a fair trial,
and so at that point,
they made a motion to move the case.
[reporter 1] Now his fate is in the hands
of the people of San Mateo County.
[reporter 2] It's taken months
to get to this point,
but jury selection has finally started
in Scott Peterson's murder trial.
The judge told prospective jurors
that they'll know within an hour
whether they'll be sitting
on the Peterson case
that is now set to start on June 1st.
[man 1] When I heard
about Scott Peterson and Laci,
I didn't really follow it until,
I think, the last thing I'd heard
is when they found the bodies,
and later on, I'd gotten a jury summons,
and it wasn't even clicking.
When I got there, when I walked
into the lobby and I saw all the people,
there must've been hundreds of people,
and it was like,
"What's going on? This is crazy."
And then we got shuffled
into this courtroom,
and then I remember
Scott Peterson stood up,
and then I was just like, "Oh my."
[man 2] I promised myself one thing,
that I would do everything I could
to assure that this gentleman
got a good trial.
I'm looking at this young man,
and I'm saying,
"I've got a son about his age."
I looked at this guy,
and I said, "No way."
You know, "Show me what you have."
"Convince me
that this young man did
what you're accusing him of doing."
He's a cad.
He cheated on his wife. Whoopee!
Yeah, that a dollar won't buy you
a cup o' coffee at Starbucks.
It's just that simple.
It doesn't matter. It's not relevant.
What's relevant is,
"Show me what would lead me
to conclude he was guilty,"
and if you don't have that,
have a nice day.
It's been nice talking to ya.
[reporter] More than a year
after Scott Peterson's arrest,
he is finally getting his day in court.
[newscaster] Let's get to our top story.
It is here in California this morning.
Opening statements begin today
in the double-murder trial
of Scott Peterson.
[reporter] Now, there are expected
to be a hundred witnesses or more
over the next five months or so,
a marathon case that has just begun.
[Sharon Rocha] I went every day.
The police weren't telling us anything
because they couldn't.
That's why I desperately wanted
to be in that courtroom. I
I found out more information
during the trial than I even knew existed.
I I could not not be there.
[indistinct conversation]
[Susan] I absolutely felt helpless.
And that's why I wanted
to get on a plane and be there,
and I didn't want
to go through that experience,
but I knew I wanted to be
in the courtroom.
[reporter] In opening statements,
Mark Geragos said
the case against Peterson
was flimsy and circumstantial,
adding his client was,
quote, "stone-cold innocent."
[Nareg] There was no direct evidence
connecting Scott to these murders.
The government essentially relied
on circumstantial evidence.
The prosecutor is not able to prove
where the crime occurred,
how the crime occurred,
and when the crime occurred.
[gavel bangs]
All rise and come to order.
It was like a real-life soap opera
happening in your living room.
It was always being compared
to OJ Simpson, right?
Well, Scott Peterson became
the new OJ Simpson.
The only difference was
that this case was not televised.
This was basically left up
for journalists to tell the story
based on what they observed,
and I was there every day for the trial
to find the hook for the day,
find the headline of the day.
Sources tell us,
during the course of the hearing,
prosecutors are likely to call
close to 30 witnesses.
The only issue
[reporter 1] Prosecutors laid out
their circumstantial case for jurors
brick by brick.
From the moment
Laci Peterson was reported missing,
prosecutors say Scott Peterson
couldn't keep his story straight.
Be that as it may
[Ted] The lead prosecutors
for Stanislaus County
were Rick Distaso and Dave Harris.
[inaudible speech]
And and [sighs]
they just felt a little bit
Well, not a little bit.
They were outmatched. Let's face it.
Stanislaus County is not LA County.
These guys were now up against
probably, you know, arguably,
one of the best attorneys in the state.
[reporter 2] The first point
scored against prosecutors
came from an unlikely source,
a Martha Stewart cooking show
featuring meringue.
[Ted] The State
basically called Scott a liar,
saying that he made up
he and Laci were watching TV
the morning that she disappeared
and that they were watching
this Martha Stewart program.
And one of the major points
they were gonna hit on
in their opening was
there was no meringue on that show.
Well, we got the video of the 24th,
and, lo and behold, at almost exactly
the same time as Scott said,
there's Martha Stewart
talking about meringue.
So what are we going to do
with all the egg whites?
- Ooh, you wanna make little meringues?
- Oh, that would be nice.
That was the end of the meringue.
You never heard
from the prosecution again.
[Ted] I mean,
how do you make that mistake?
And Geragos was ripping
the first few witnesses apart
on cross-examination.
[Al] I am one of the first witnesses.
There's a lot of people out there,
and the front row
is Sharon and the family,
and Lee's family on this side,
and then all the media, the Fox people,
people I see on TV who I don't know,
they're all looking at me.
First question. I've always done this.
I turn to the jury,
and I'm answering to the jury.
Geragos is like, "Look at me!
Look at me when I'm talking to you!"
And I I looked at him, and Distaso
Everybody's, like, in shock,
and Distaso's "I object, Your Honor."
"He can look
wherever he wants when he's talking."
And he asked me another question.
I started turning.
He goes, "You're afraid to look at me!"
I mean, he's screaming at me.
And he's I guess he's just trying
to intimidate the crap out of me.
[dramatic music playing]
[Al] Geragos wants to play something.
We don't know what.
I'm sitting on the witness stand waiting,
and they go back
in the judge's chambers for a while,
and when they come out,
I could see Distaso and Harris.
They're looking a little nervous.
So I don't know what's gonna be played.
I have no idea.
But they sit down,
and then they let Geragos do it.
So what we do in Modesto
is we dictate a police report,
and on this one day,
I'm talking to a neighbor of Scott's shop.
When I got home, I dictated that John Doe
said he heard through the grapevine
that Laci used the other neighbor,
Peggy O'Donnell's, bathroom.
So when I was testifying,
he plays my tape,
and it's typing at the same time.
Then he puts my police report up there.
Same thing, types it out.
But that one line is gone.
And everybody in the courtroom
is like, "Ooh!"
Like that is really
I'm hiding s evidence.
Then Geragos is like, "Your Honor,
I think we should call it a the weekend,"
so that could just sit there for
and percolate.
A blistering attack.
They're trying to put
the finger on Brocchini.
How can you believe
what a police officer said?
[reporter] His attack on the credibility
of police investigators
It's unclear at this point
why Detective Brocchini actually deleted
that information from his report,
but you can bet prosecutors on Monday
will try to rehabilitate him for the jury.
[Al] What happened was, on this one day,
after I dictated it, turned it in,
now we all sit down together, and I tell
all the detectives what I heard,
and Detective Dennis Holmes,
he says, "Whoa, I interviewed Peggy."
So he could testify to what Peggy said.
Mine was through the grapevine,
and so I deleted that sentence
because it was in his report.
Could look wrong to the jury.
It could look wrong
to the, you know, Rochas.
I mean, I I was feeling
When I was seeing
Sharon and Ron and the kids,
it was a tough it was
it was a tough cross-examine for me.
Listening in at the beginning,
I thought it was going nowhere.
I thought this was gonna be
a waste of taxpayer dollars.
I knew the death penalty was on the table,
but, for me, Scott Peterson was innocent,
so I didn't think
it was going to get to that point.
I really thought
that this was going nowhere.
It was stressful,
but, you know, it was intense.
But I needed to know
everything that they knew.
It was only a couple days I wasn't there.
One morning, I had a really bad cold,
but I ended up going in the afternoon.
The other time was when they were talking
about the conditions of her body.
I didn't go to to trial that day.
[Gloria Gomez] In a case
that lacks physical evidence,
most believe there is one powerful piece.
Don't trip.
[Gloria] A medical examiner's testimony
would come down to one critical question.
Was baby Conner born alive?
Prosecutors want the jury to believe
Conner died with his mother
on December 24th.
The defense wants them
to see it another way.
[Jon] What the coroner determined
on Conner's age
was an estimate
of between 33 and 38 weeks.
Again, this is an estimate only,
and there's not an exacting science
that's gonna be able to pin that down,
but that does put it outside of, uh,
and a bit later than, uh, December 24th,
when we believe Laci was actually killed.
Not being able to hone in
to a specific time of death
did hurt the prosecution's case
because it opened up
a whole different theory
of, uh, potentially someone kidnapping
a pregnant woman
because they want the baby.
This is not good
for the State of California.
Scott Peterson
is gonna be found not guilty.
And then Amber Frey
completely changed all that.
[suspenseful music playing]
[Gloria Gomez] Amber Frey.
Everybody wanted to hear
Amber Frey's story.
She was the prosecution's star witness.
This case is either gonna win or lose
on Amber Frey's testimony.
If she flops on the stand,
and if the defense starts
chipping away at her credibility,
they're gonna lose this case.
[Pat] Our strategy had always been
that we were gonna have to sort of admit
Scott had this affair.
Essentially try and make Scott
seem more human
so that we could then argue, "Look,
just because you hate somebody
or somebody does
it doesn't make them a murderer."
[suspenseful music continues playing]
[Amber] The first day of trial,
I'm walking in the courtroom.
It was completely packed
and as silent as can be.
[voice breaking] And when I first sat
on the stand,
I wasn't just sitting there alone.
[inhales sharply]
But I was sitting there for Laci
and her unborn child.
[indistinct news reporting]
[Amber] I I feel like Geragos
got a little agitated with me at times.
I didn't answer in the way
he thought I would or anticipated.
Like, "Did Scott ever say he loved you?"
And in reality, my answer was valid.
Not in those words.
I mean, his actions,
the things he did, the thoughtfulness, um
I mean, those are all actions of
But, ultimately, the answer was no.
But I think
it kind of got under Geragos's skin
[chuckles]because I didn't answer
straightforward.
It wasn't necessarily a straightforward
question either, in my opinion, so
She held her head high
when she did testify.
I think she earned
the respect of the jury.
They saw the real Amber Frey,
not the mistaken stereotypes.
[Amber] I was not a mistress.
If you read the definition,
that is a woman
knowingly in a relationship
with a married man,
and I was not knowingly.
For the first time, there was clarity
as far as who I was
and my relationship with Scott.
[phone line crackling]
[recording plays]
Those tapes were essential.
Scott Peterson invoked
his Fifth Amendment privilege
against self-incrimination
and chose not to testify in the case.
But his voice was still in the courtroom
on the tapes that Amber had recorded.
I had no idea
that those were gonna be play
played publicly for other people to hear.
People were hearing conversations
that I thought were only meant
for the police department and
possibly attorneys, but not everyone,
meaning, like,
pretty much anyone in the world.
That was a little
that was a little hard.
[recording plays]
[Mike] A lot of people believe
that the affair was a big deal.
No, I I didn't see it as a big deal,
and I don't think
anybody on the jury did either.
What we did see as a big deal
is what he said and what he did.
It was damning. It was absolutely damning.
And not only the phone calls but the lies.
Yes, the the charade.
What was particularly startling
about Scott's style of lying
is that he was very shortsighted.
Um, it was obvious to me
that he did not think
these things through carefully.
He is emotionally detached
to the point where he believed
that investigators and Laci's family
and friends and the public
would lose interest in her disappearance
in a few short weeks.
It was startling and shocking
that he seemed to sincerely believe
that he would be free
to go on with his new life.
So Scott's behaviors are what told us
that this is
a planned, premeditated homicide.
He told Amber he had lost his wife,
that he needed to be away,
and that when he got back,
they could start their life together.
He bought a boat.
He bought this boat in secret.
When he came home on the 24th,
her car was in the driveway,
her purse was in the closet,
he did laundry, he ate pizza,
he took a shower,
and then he called Laci's parents.
There is no sense of urgency.
Nothing taken from the house,
nothing damaged, nothing disturbed.
He sold Laci's car.
He he wanted to sell the house.
He turned the nursery into a storage area.
These are all inappropriate behaviors.
This is not a man
who's waiting for Laci to come home.
And this was
the evidence presented by the prosecutor.
Laci didn't just disappear.
This was actually
planned, premeditated murder.
You know, the Scott Peterson case,
you can't take a part of it
and look at it and say, "Aha,"
'cause there is no "aha" moment.
But you take the bits and pieces,
and you put them all together,
then it draws a picture.
It paints a portrait.
[judge] Members of the jury,
you have heard all the evidence
and the arguments of the attorneys.
[Gloria Gomez] After being instructed
by the judge for nearly an hour,
the six men and six women of the jury
will now decide Scott Peterson's fate.
There is a verdict
in the Scott Peterson trial,
and it will be announced
at 1:00 p.m. Pacific time.
- [indistinct chatter]
- [dramatic music playing]
[Al] They gave us 90 minutes
from when the the jury came back
before they were gonna read it.
We're going to have a live audio feed
of the verdict in this case.
There's a huge gathering of folks
from the public that have gathered here.
It sends everybody scrambling.
It fills up the courtyard
outside the Redwood City courthouse.
Everybody just waited with bated breath.
[newscaster] What kind of reaction
do you think we'll have out here?
[Ted] I think the majority of the public
thinks that Scott Peterson is guilty,
and I think if this jury comes back
with a not-guilty verdict,
there is going to be
a sense of despair and anger.
[Al] Modesto to Redwood City
is about 75, 80 miles,
and all the detectives
went lights and sirens
from Modesto to Redwood City
to get there in time.
They said the verdict
was coming in two hours,
so, at one o'clock, it was gonna be
you know, we were gonna hear Scott's fate,
and we were pretty much
in very good spirits.
I just kind of had felt a sense
of, "This is finally coming to an end."
It was very fortunate that Jackie, Janey,
and Joe were in Redwood City,
but there was no way my dad and I
were gonna make it from San Diego.
[suspenseful music playing]
[Janey] We were excited.
We thought Scott was coming home,
and we thought this was it.
[indistinct chatter]
[suspenseful music continues playing]
[Sharon Rocha] I didn't know enough
about the legal system to
One way or the other, I just couldn't help
but have a little bit of a doubt.
You don't know
what these 12 people are thinking.
[indistinct background conversation]
[Sharon Rocha] I remember
getting the call to say,
"We have a verdict."
[Gloria Gomez] We were all rushing
into the courtroom to get in there,
and they're filing in,
they're filing in, they're filing in.
They all take a seat,
and the first thing I see
was one of the jurors.
She looks right at Laci's mom,
and she gives her a wink.
And I'm like [gasps]
The gesture seemed to indicate,
"We got him."
And then the verdict was read.
[indistinct chatter]
[jury foreperson] State of California
versus Scott Peterson.
We, the jury, in the above-entitled cause,
find the defendant, Scott Lee Peterson,
guilty of the crime of murder
of Laci Denise Peterson.
[foreperson] We, the jury,
in the above-entitled cause,
find the defendant, Scott Lee Peterson,
guilty of the crime of
- [crowd cheering]
- [soft music playing]
I just remember the relief
hearing the word "guilty."
I mean, it was like, you know,
being inflated all this time,
and all of a sudden, all the air
just comes out of your body.
It's It was just a relief. A huge relief.
It wasn't You know, I can't say
we were all excited and happy about it.
That's not the feeling that I had at all.
Um, just a relief.
Yeah, when they read the verdict,
I just I I just
I thought my heart beat really loud,
and I missed the word "not."
I just was like, you know, I
And and then they said it again
with Conner, "guilty,"
and then it felt very quiet
in the courtroom
and very surreal
and kinda out of body, like
Um
- [distant cheering]
- But you could hear the crowd outside.
- [cheering]
- [foreperson] Penal Code Section 187A
We, the jury, further find
the degree of the murder
to be that of the first degree.
[cheering continues]
[cheering intensifies]
[indistinct chatter, shouting]
[woman] Hope you're proud of your son!
[woman shouts]
[indistinct chatter]
[Janey] I remember
being taken into a back hallway.
They were gonna escort us outside
because there was such a huge crowd.
And we we come out a door,
and we're way at the other end
of the courthouse from our car.
And they walk us the whole way
in front of the whole crowd.
It felt like we were paraded
in front of them to our car.
[indistinct chatter]
[woman] No, right
[man] Burn in hell!
[indistinct chatter continues]
[Janey] With people hollering
and screaming and jeering.
I just remember looking out
at the sea of people and thinking,
"They have no idea."
"They have they have no idea
what just happened the last four months
in this courtroom. No idea."
[woman] Everybody in?
[indistinct speech]
[engine starts]
[indistinct shouting]
[man] Wow.
[reporter] Today, the judge ruled
that the same jury
that convicted Scott Peterson
of murdering his pregnant wife
will also determine
whether he lives or dies for his crimes,
and the case will stay in Redwood City.
The biggest moment had to have been
when Sharon took the stand.
If you did not cry during that
or at least shed a tear during Sharon's
you just weren't there.
It was really
her only time to address Scott.
Like, face to face.
I remember her looking right at him.
[reporter 1] Many in the room began to cry
as Laci's mother, Sharon Rocha, asked
if Laci knew she was being murdered.
Then she imagined Laci's unborn baby
begging for its life, saying
"Daddy, please don't do this to me.
Please. There's another way."
[reporter 2] One other thing she said,
"The fact that you no longer wanted Laci
did not give you the right to murder her."
"She was my daughter.
I trusted you, and you betrayed me."
"You betrayed everybody."
[sobbing] She may be physically gone,
but she's not gone out of our hearts.
She still lives with all of us.
[exhales softly]
[indistinct chatter]
[reporter 1] The jury
that convicted Scott Peterson
of killing his wife and unborn son
came in with its decision on a sentence.
[foreperson] We, the jury,
in the above-entitled cause,
fix the penalty at death, dated
- [woman 1 screams]
- [woman 2] Death! Oh my God!
[reporter 2] Some jumped
in the air and clapped.
Christmas comes early.
[reporter 3] People around the world are
applauding your decision. How do you feel?
They have to answer to themselves on that.
Tell somebody, "You did a good job.
You just put somebody to death."
Yeah.
I don't see anything good about that.
That would be like me telling you,
"That person, you pull the trigger."
It eats me up to hear that
because I say, "You don't even know
what death means, then."
It's so easy for you to say that?
It's not it's not that easy.
[shouting and cheering]
[tense music playing]
[indistinct chatter]
Come on. Let's keep going.
[applause]
- [cheering]
- [indistinct shouting]
Our family's going to make it make it.
We're stronger because of this.
- And Scott got what he deserved.
- [distant siren wailing]
He not only took her away from us,
but, you know,
he's destroyed a lot of lives.
His family's lives and
I'm not gonna say he destroyed our lives.
He upset our lives.
But I wouldn't give him the credit
for destroying our lives.
[indistinct chatter]
[Al] I remember, later,
I saw Sharon and Ron and the family and
and, uh, we you know, I hugged them and
[sighs]
Kind of apologized, you know,
how it started, and that
But she said, "I never lost
you know, I never lost, uh, faith
or anything in you or that,"
and so it was kinda hard.
I kinda stayed close with them
for a little while,
and then I realized after a while that
I'm, uh I'm not a good memory.
I mean, you know, I'm kind of
When you see me, maybe you think
of that incident all the time.
And so I didn't
I kind of pulled away a little bit.
[Ted] Scott's off to San Quentin,
and the Petersons continued to fight.
They immersed themselves
in this fight for Scott,
and he never admitted guilt on any level.
[tense music playing]
[Janey] We didn't have time to grieve Laci
when we found out she was gone
because Scott was arrested.
Laci was part of our family.
Laci was my sister-in-law.
Conner was my nephew.
We went from looking for her
And the moment we found out she was dead,
he was arrested,
and we're fighting for his life.
And here we are 20 years later,
trying to right this injustice.
[Sharon Hagan] I really believe
that it's very difficult
for Scott's family to believe
that he would ever do this.
The severity of the crime
is an important factor here.
You know, is there anything worse
than killing your wife
and your unborn child?
You know, what
what would be the consequences of
of acknowledging
that he must have done this?
I think, at the end of the day,
they both know what they know.
And and the Rochas know
that he killed her,
and they live with that pain every day,
and the Petersons know
that he didn't kill her,
and they live with that pain.
[melancholic music playing]
[Sharon Rocha] There are times
I look back, and I think, "Gosh."
"It's hard to believe
it was 20 years ago."
And on the other hand,
it seems like it wasn't 20 years ago.
I've always said, "You don't get over it.
You just get through it."
You just have to muddle through it
because you're never going to get over it.
It's always gonna be there.
Always. It'll always be there.
[melancholic music continues playing]
[Sharon] We have a whole different life
than we did before.
It's the before and the after,
and that's the way I refer to it.
When I talk about different things,
it'll be before Laci and after Laci
because it does, it changes your life.
There's no doubt about that.
Changes everybody's lives
that are involved.
[soft music playing]
[muted speech]
[Lori] What the last 20 years
has brought to me
is that, um, we check in
with each other more a lot more often.
Good, the bad, the ugly.
We have tougher conversations.
We promised each other
that it doesn't matter who knows.
- One of us knows
- Yeah.
what's happening in each other's lives.
You just realize when you're questioned
about your best friend,
like, how little you knew. [sniffs]
And yet we And then
So
That's, I think, why we just
make sure that we're all
in the know.
[soft music playing]
She was in love.
There's no doubt about that.
She was just really excited.
She was in love with him.
And we always liked him.
He always treated her well.
Until he didn't.
With a low-risk victim such as Laci,
who was very much a homebody,
um, whose world was
very small and and condensed
[inhales deeply]the most likely person
who will harm someone like her
is her intimate partner.
And the statistics
that we keep on homicide bear this out.
In fact, not only
does pregnancy increase the risk
of victimization for women,
but it is the number one cause of death
for pregnant women.
[soft music continues playing]
Hmm.
This was from her actual memorial.
And this is her. This just
I love this picture 'cause this just
captures her spirit so perfectly.
Her laugh was just so infectious.
[melancholic music playing]
[muted conversation]
[Sharon Rocha] She would've loved
to have had her child
and raised him,
and she would've been a good mother.
We would've had something else
to tease her about. [chuckles]
Wow, she's been gone
almost as long as she was here.
I just want her
to be remembered as a person
and not as a victim of murder.
Um, she was alive.
She's still alive to all of us.
I see dragonflies, and I think of her.
This time of the year,
as a matter of fact.
Her legacy is just
that she was a loving person.
She loved her husband. She trusted
her husband, and he betrayed her.
He betrayed her,
and he betrayed everybody else.
His family, our family, everybody.
Over the years, I've received
many, many, many letters from people,
from women
who are in a similar situation with
They didn't know their husband.
They thought they did.
And how many I can't tell you that,
because of Laci, they left in time,
that they were still alive
because of Laci.
- [girl 1] Hi, Laci!
- [girl 2] Let's dance, baby!
[melancholic music playing]
[muted singing]
[soft piano music playing]
[mysterious music playing]
[Sharon Rocha] Laci worked in Pismo Beach,
so she decided to have
her wedding around there.
She was she was excited.
She was really excited.
She wanted everything to be just perfect.
She called me after the rehearsal dinner,
but she'd been
you know, had a couple cocktails
with dinner,
and so, of course,
she was feeling a little
getting a little nervous at that time.
And she's a little concerned that she
might be too young to be getting married.
She was asking me those questions,
if I thought she was
too young to get married.
And I just told her
Yes, whatever whatever she wanted to do.
It was up to her.
[mysterious music continues playing]
[Sharon Rocha] I remember,
before I met Scott,
Laci telling me
all these things about him,
all these things that he had done.
I remember turning to Ron and saying,
"I hope he's not filling her
with a lotta crap about himself."
I said, "Because that just
doesn't sound plausible
to have done that much, and he's, what?"
Whatever age he was at the time, 22 or
But then, when I met him,
you know, he seemed very nice
and, like I said, respectful and pleasant,
and I didn't think much about that again.
I have learned to go with a gut feeling.
[helicopter whirring]
[newscaster] Just this afternoon,
a badly decomposed body
was found near Point Isabel in Richmond,
and last night, the body of a male fetus
was found just a few miles away,
if that far.
Gloria Gomez joins us live from the scene
with more on this story. Gloria?
Paul, this could be
a major break in the Laci Peterson case.
I can tell you that investigators
from Modesto PD are here.
We, of course, will be here, Paul,
and bring you the very latest
when we have it.
Her torso had washed up.
And so we were right back out there,
basically telling the audience
that the worst-case scenario has happened.
It was heartbreaking to tell it.
I had to keep myself composed
because I knew that I was delivering
some hard news to the community
that was really rooting
for Laci to be alive.
And I knew that.
I saw it on the news,
and I immediately called the detective,
and I said, "Is it her?"
And he says, "I can't say."
He said, "But" And I said, "Okay."
[helicopter whirring]
- Devastating.
- Knew right away.
- I think we got phone calls.
- Devastating.
- Yeah.
- 'Cause we knew.
We knew right away.
Laci made that happen. She came back.
She wanted us to know
that things were going to be okay,
as well as they could be.
And that the person responsible
was going to
face his
- Justice.
- Yeah.
[melancholic music playing]
The chief of police called me.
[inhales sharply]
Yeah.
Yeah. Um
[Gloria] And so this is now
a murder investigation.
It's no longer a missing case.
It is a complete
fast-forward investigation.
[suspenseful music playing]
He did it. I mean,
that's where I'm at right now.
My focus is we've caught Scott,
and his alibi is so blown up
because on December 24th,
during my interview with Scott Peterson,
he told me
he went to Brooks Island fishing.
When you got in your boat,
and you took off, did you go very far or
[Scott] Maybe a couple miles.
I went north, um
Found a like,
a little island kinda deal there, um
The island had a bunch of trash on it.
I remember a big sign
that said, "No landing."
[Al] Four months later, Laci and Conner
were found near Brooks Island.
That's a huge thing to overcome.
[Sharon Hagan] The bodies coming up
in the bay solidified in my mind
what we actually believed all along.
In my opinion, and this is based
on my experience in many homicides,
I believe that this was
what I would call a soft kill,
um, that he either suffocated her
or he strangled her,
and there would be two reasons
that he would choose to do that.
One is that it's very quiet.
Secondly, it doesn't make a mess.
[Al] Then, I think,
between the 23rd or the 24th,
he wraps her in the tarp,
drags her through the house.
It's all tile floors
except for when you get to that one door,
and that's where the rug
is all scrunched up.
I think he, on purpose,
left the dog on the leash.
He put her in the back of the truck,
puts these umbrellas in a blue tarp,
probably covered her with it.
He took her over to the warehouse.
He backed his truck into the warehouse
where the boat was.
He put her in the boat.
- Then he drove her to the bay.
- [seagulls crying]
[Sharon Hagan] And he put the boat
in the water with Laci's body in the boat.
He went out to Brooks Island,
and he dumped
her weighted body into the water,
hoping that it would never, ever come up.
He tried to make this look
like a disappearance,
but the story just didn't
didn't stand up.
[Jon] This case doesn't have a witness,
doesn't have a video,
it doesn't have a confession,
but it's got everything else
that you're lookin' for.
And then once the bodies were found,
we had a complete case.
[dramatic music playing]
But we knew that to confirm
the identification of the bodies,
it had to be done by DNA.
[Al] Us, the cops, the homicide guys,
we know it's Conner.
I mean, where it came up
compared to where, uh, Scott said he was,
we know it's Conner.
When Laci came up,
she had maternity clothes on.
We pretty much knew.
[dramatic music continues playing]
And that's when we went to the judge.
We got the warrant for Scott's arrest.
We had a tracker on his little truck,
and we found the truck,
but somebody else was driving it,
so we couldn't find him by tracker,
but we did find him by wiretap.
- [man] Hey.
- [Scott] Hey, Joe.
[Joe] Brother. What's up?
I saw the picture in The Modesto,
where everybody's leaving flowers
and stuffed animals and everything
in front of your house.
- [Scott] Oh yeah.
- [Joe] Yeah.
I mean, people are just leaving
a lot of stuff.
You know, like, gosh. Yeah.
[Al] He was in San Diego,
and that's only about less than an hour
from the Mexico border.
That's why we wanted
to keep an eye on him.
[Susan] Scott was staying at my house
in San Diego that day.
He had left early that morning
to meet up with my dad
and my brothers, Mark and Joe,
to go golf, do something
that was normal for them to do.
Kind of take the pressure off.
[suspenseful music playing]
[Jon] He's up and running early
in the morning, and we're following him.
We've got DOJ agents in cars.
We've got an aircraft up,
and we're following him in our two cars.
[suspenseful music continues playing]
[tires screech]
That morning,
he's noticing he's being followed,
and Scott spends
the next three to four hours
trying to shake this tail he's got
that he thinks is media.
[Al] And he is driving worse
than any drug dealer I've ever followed.
I mean, it's getting dangerous.
He is driving so bad
that the helicopter even lost him.
But we could keep finding him
by his phone.
- [Joe] Where you at?
- [Scott] On Genesee.
- I don't think I should come play golf.
- [Joe] Oh gosh. Oh brother.
And we knew he knew he was being followed
because we could hear him on the phone,
but he thought we were the media.
[Scott] These guys know I'm onto them.
I stopped on the highway,
and they, you know, stopped behind me.
I better skip it 'cause I don't think
I want a picture of me
in the press playing golf.
Finally, we got to the point
where this is dangerous,
so we decided we have to arrest him.
[tires screech]
[Janey] It's when he's pulling up
to the Torrey Pines Golf Course,
one of those cars puts a siren on top.
[siren wailing]
[Jon] We were in a long caravan of cars.
We pulled up just as the DOJ guys
were handcuffing Scott.
We got out,
we told him that he was under arrest.
[Al] He had orange hair.
He had an orange goatee.
I walk up, and he's, "Al, tell me
it wasn't my wife and baby." You know?
I'm like, "That's ridiculous."
I mean, you know, come on, Scott.
You know better than that.
[theme music plays]
And hello, everyone.
I'm Arthel Neville in the CNN Newsroom
with the headlines at this hour.
CNN has confirmed that Scott Peterson
is under arrest tonight,
arrested in San Diego
We begin tonight with breaking news.
There's a break
in the case of Laci Peterson
The arrest of Scott Peterson right now
[newscaster] Police have taken
Scott Peterson into custody.
From Torrey Pines, we drove him over
to the Department of Justice,
where we searched him
and searched his car.
It was a little two-seater, a Mercedes.
He was prepared for anything in the car.
He had over
almost 15,000 dollars in cash.
I think he had four or five cell phones.
He had several knives.
I mean, he had some Viagra.
He had a shovel.
He had rope, a cooking grill.
He had credit cards for himself,
but he also had
family-member credit cards in the car.
He also had his brother's ID
right on the center console
that actually he similarly looked like
with the new hairdo he had.
The fact that Scott Peterson is arrested
30 miles from the Mexican border
created this perception
that Scott was in flight
when he was arrested, and
But that's just not the case.
He'd been to San Diego multiple times
while Laci was missing,
so the notion
that Scott was trying to evade the police
is just it just isn't accurate.
[tense music playing]
He agreed and signed off
to come home with us to Modesto.
Scott was sitting behind me, Craig Grogan
was sitting next to him in the back seat,
and we drive back to Modesto,
a five, six-hour drive.
[Al] We had to arrest him
before the DNA was confirmed.
Then we got a call, and it was confirmed.
That's Conner and Laci's DNA.
So then Scott Craig told me
he just kind of lowered his head.
He said he saw a tear,
but he didn't say anything.
He was just quiet.
[tense music continues playing]
It was time to get some gas
and use the bathroom,
and then probably get a bite to eat.
He asked where I was goin', and I said,
"Well, there's an In-N-Out
up the road here a little ways."
"We're gonna probably stop there."
I've got the transcript right here.
And Scott goes, "I'll have
a double-double with cheese, fries."
"A small vanilla shake would be great."
And to me, that was an enormous red flag
on the fact that the notification
didn't surprise him,
that he already knew the results of this
from four months earlier,
and that he really didn't care.
He was ready to eat.
[suspenseful music playing]
[crowd cheering]
[Al] We got to Modesto,
and it was, like, midnight or even after,
but there was
a crowd of people with signs.
I've never had that happen before,
other than this case,
where somebody cheers,
you know, after an arrest.
We're outside the gate
of the Stanislaus County jail.
This is where Scott Peterson
will be held until his arraignment.
Look at this,
all the people who have gathered
to catch a glimpse of Peterson
as he was driven here
from San Diego by detectives.
[Gloria] All of these reporters lined up
right in front
of the Modesto Police Department.
All of a sudden, you have
members of the public showing up.
They had lived this case
for so many months.
Now they wanted to see
a villain firsthand.
[tense music playing]
[crowd cheering]
I think I watched
because it was broadcast live,
him driving in the back seat
of the detectives' car
and the gauntlet of people
that had come out
in the middle of the night.
I was horrified.
It looked like he was being taken
to the slaughterhouse.
You know, it was
it was just a a terrible scene.
[distant chatter]
[Gloria] I'd never seen
anything like that ever.
In a crazy way,
internally, I was like, "Wow."
"We kind of created this."
We, the media, created this.
[theme music plays]
[Larry King]Tonight, what's going on
with Scott Peterson's defense?
There are reports
that none other than Mark Geragos,
the high-profile attorney who's been
a frequent guest on this program,
could be the new lawyer.
The moment I hear it's Mark Geragos,
I'm like, "Oh wow, that's a big name.
That's a big lawyer from LA."
[reporter] He's one
of the most well-known attorneys.
It's a position he earned by taking on
some of the highest-profile cases,
vigorously defending his clients
both inside and outside the courtroom.
[man] Mark and I started working together
on trials about two years before Scott.
The way that it happened that
that we came to represent Scott Peterson
was that Mark was on Larry King.
Uh, pretty much every night, Larry King
was now running a Scott Peterson segment.
Condemn him as a narcissist.
- [woman 1] No.
- Condemn his character flaws.
But that does not make him a murderer.
Condemn him because he might be
guilty of adultery.
- [woman 2] Wendy, Mark
- Mark
- Why do you make him a murderer?
- Mark
[Susan] My parents got to be familiar
with him through seeing him on TV.
All of Mark's points resonated with them,
so when it came time to look at attorneys,
he was one of the first.
[Gloria] The judge says
this can move forward,
and right when that hearing is over,
Mark Geragos, along with the Petersons,
come right outside the courthouse steps
and give a press conference.
And he says he is going to prove
that Scott Peterson
had nothing to do with this,
that this is a witch hunt.
We are happy that Mark, uh, is in place
as Scott's attorney,
and, um, we do look forward
to proving his innocence.
[tense music playing]
[indistinct chatter]
[man] I was one of the two attorneys
that basically packed up
and moved to Modesto
to start working on this case.
This case was just
your garden-variety homicide.
It didn't involve any celebrities,
yet it turned
into this media feeding frenzy.
[Amber] I had no idea
how I was supposed to
deal with the stories coming out,
and so I started looking for an attorney.
So my dad gave me a number of an attorney.
Her name was Gloria Allred.
Women who find themselves
in high-profile scandals
with the famous and powerful
flock to Gloria Allred for legal counsel.
Allred represented
the family of Nicole Brown Simpson.
Allred also represents
two of Tiger Woods' mistresses,
Joslyn James and Rachel Uchitel.
[Amber] So I called Gloria's office,
and we made arrangements
for her to come out to meet with me
so we could have a face-to-face.
She had offered to retain me pro bono.
There was a good connection.
I felt good about Gloria.
[Gloria Allred] In addition
to being a witness,
Amber is also a victim
of Scott's deception.
Victims are entitled to attorneys,
as are witnesses.
I had been commenting
on the case on television,
particularly on Fox News,
and I was very concerned.
It seemed as though every day
there were stories about Amber coming out,
and, of course, it would be
and was in the interest
of the defense
and supporters of the defense
to undermine her credibility.
That was key.
If she's going to be
the key prosecution witness,
the court of public opinion
is also very important
because, after all,
the jurors who were ultimately going
to be chosen for the jury pool
would likely have been hearing
or reading or seeing or all of the above
quite a bit about this case
before they ever sat in the courtroom.
We were just chomping at the bit
[indistinct chatter]
to get information.
People were eating it up.
- Come on, be human beings.
- [man] Leave her alone.
But keep in mind, the more stories I do
and the more stories that end up
in national news and everywhere,
it became such a toxic community
for Scott Peterson to get a fair trial,
and so at that point,
they made a motion to move the case.
[reporter 1] Now his fate is in the hands
of the people of San Mateo County.
[reporter 2] It's taken months
to get to this point,
but jury selection has finally started
in Scott Peterson's murder trial.
The judge told prospective jurors
that they'll know within an hour
whether they'll be sitting
on the Peterson case
that is now set to start on June 1st.
[man 1] When I heard
about Scott Peterson and Laci,
I didn't really follow it until,
I think, the last thing I'd heard
is when they found the bodies,
and later on, I'd gotten a jury summons,
and it wasn't even clicking.
When I got there, when I walked
into the lobby and I saw all the people,
there must've been hundreds of people,
and it was like,
"What's going on? This is crazy."
And then we got shuffled
into this courtroom,
and then I remember
Scott Peterson stood up,
and then I was just like, "Oh my."
[man 2] I promised myself one thing,
that I would do everything I could
to assure that this gentleman
got a good trial.
I'm looking at this young man,
and I'm saying,
"I've got a son about his age."
I looked at this guy,
and I said, "No way."
You know, "Show me what you have."
"Convince me
that this young man did
what you're accusing him of doing."
He's a cad.
He cheated on his wife. Whoopee!
Yeah, that a dollar won't buy you
a cup o' coffee at Starbucks.
It's just that simple.
It doesn't matter. It's not relevant.
What's relevant is,
"Show me what would lead me
to conclude he was guilty,"
and if you don't have that,
have a nice day.
It's been nice talking to ya.
[reporter] More than a year
after Scott Peterson's arrest,
he is finally getting his day in court.
[newscaster] Let's get to our top story.
It is here in California this morning.
Opening statements begin today
in the double-murder trial
of Scott Peterson.
[reporter] Now, there are expected
to be a hundred witnesses or more
over the next five months or so,
a marathon case that has just begun.
[Sharon Rocha] I went every day.
The police weren't telling us anything
because they couldn't.
That's why I desperately wanted
to be in that courtroom. I
I found out more information
during the trial than I even knew existed.
I I could not not be there.
[indistinct conversation]
[Susan] I absolutely felt helpless.
And that's why I wanted
to get on a plane and be there,
and I didn't want
to go through that experience,
but I knew I wanted to be
in the courtroom.
[reporter] In opening statements,
Mark Geragos said
the case against Peterson
was flimsy and circumstantial,
adding his client was,
quote, "stone-cold innocent."
[Nareg] There was no direct evidence
connecting Scott to these murders.
The government essentially relied
on circumstantial evidence.
The prosecutor is not able to prove
where the crime occurred,
how the crime occurred,
and when the crime occurred.
[gavel bangs]
All rise and come to order.
It was like a real-life soap opera
happening in your living room.
It was always being compared
to OJ Simpson, right?
Well, Scott Peterson became
the new OJ Simpson.
The only difference was
that this case was not televised.
This was basically left up
for journalists to tell the story
based on what they observed,
and I was there every day for the trial
to find the hook for the day,
find the headline of the day.
Sources tell us,
during the course of the hearing,
prosecutors are likely to call
close to 30 witnesses.
The only issue
[reporter 1] Prosecutors laid out
their circumstantial case for jurors
brick by brick.
From the moment
Laci Peterson was reported missing,
prosecutors say Scott Peterson
couldn't keep his story straight.
Be that as it may
[Ted] The lead prosecutors
for Stanislaus County
were Rick Distaso and Dave Harris.
[inaudible speech]
And and [sighs]
they just felt a little bit
Well, not a little bit.
They were outmatched. Let's face it.
Stanislaus County is not LA County.
These guys were now up against
probably, you know, arguably,
one of the best attorneys in the state.
[reporter 2] The first point
scored against prosecutors
came from an unlikely source,
a Martha Stewart cooking show
featuring meringue.
[Ted] The State
basically called Scott a liar,
saying that he made up
he and Laci were watching TV
the morning that she disappeared
and that they were watching
this Martha Stewart program.
And one of the major points
they were gonna hit on
in their opening was
there was no meringue on that show.
Well, we got the video of the 24th,
and, lo and behold, at almost exactly
the same time as Scott said,
there's Martha Stewart
talking about meringue.
So what are we going to do
with all the egg whites?
- Ooh, you wanna make little meringues?
- Oh, that would be nice.
That was the end of the meringue.
You never heard
from the prosecution again.
[Ted] I mean,
how do you make that mistake?
And Geragos was ripping
the first few witnesses apart
on cross-examination.
[Al] I am one of the first witnesses.
There's a lot of people out there,
and the front row
is Sharon and the family,
and Lee's family on this side,
and then all the media, the Fox people,
people I see on TV who I don't know,
they're all looking at me.
First question. I've always done this.
I turn to the jury,
and I'm answering to the jury.
Geragos is like, "Look at me!
Look at me when I'm talking to you!"
And I I looked at him, and Distaso
Everybody's, like, in shock,
and Distaso's "I object, Your Honor."
"He can look
wherever he wants when he's talking."
And he asked me another question.
I started turning.
He goes, "You're afraid to look at me!"
I mean, he's screaming at me.
And he's I guess he's just trying
to intimidate the crap out of me.
[dramatic music playing]
[Al] Geragos wants to play something.
We don't know what.
I'm sitting on the witness stand waiting,
and they go back
in the judge's chambers for a while,
and when they come out,
I could see Distaso and Harris.
They're looking a little nervous.
So I don't know what's gonna be played.
I have no idea.
But they sit down,
and then they let Geragos do it.
So what we do in Modesto
is we dictate a police report,
and on this one day,
I'm talking to a neighbor of Scott's shop.
When I got home, I dictated that John Doe
said he heard through the grapevine
that Laci used the other neighbor,
Peggy O'Donnell's, bathroom.
So when I was testifying,
he plays my tape,
and it's typing at the same time.
Then he puts my police report up there.
Same thing, types it out.
But that one line is gone.
And everybody in the courtroom
is like, "Ooh!"
Like that is really
I'm hiding s evidence.
Then Geragos is like, "Your Honor,
I think we should call it a the weekend,"
so that could just sit there for
and percolate.
A blistering attack.
They're trying to put
the finger on Brocchini.
How can you believe
what a police officer said?
[reporter] His attack on the credibility
of police investigators
It's unclear at this point
why Detective Brocchini actually deleted
that information from his report,
but you can bet prosecutors on Monday
will try to rehabilitate him for the jury.
[Al] What happened was, on this one day,
after I dictated it, turned it in,
now we all sit down together, and I tell
all the detectives what I heard,
and Detective Dennis Holmes,
he says, "Whoa, I interviewed Peggy."
So he could testify to what Peggy said.
Mine was through the grapevine,
and so I deleted that sentence
because it was in his report.
Could look wrong to the jury.
It could look wrong
to the, you know, Rochas.
I mean, I I was feeling
When I was seeing
Sharon and Ron and the kids,
it was a tough it was
it was a tough cross-examine for me.
Listening in at the beginning,
I thought it was going nowhere.
I thought this was gonna be
a waste of taxpayer dollars.
I knew the death penalty was on the table,
but, for me, Scott Peterson was innocent,
so I didn't think
it was going to get to that point.
I really thought
that this was going nowhere.
It was stressful,
but, you know, it was intense.
But I needed to know
everything that they knew.
It was only a couple days I wasn't there.
One morning, I had a really bad cold,
but I ended up going in the afternoon.
The other time was when they were talking
about the conditions of her body.
I didn't go to to trial that day.
[Gloria Gomez] In a case
that lacks physical evidence,
most believe there is one powerful piece.
Don't trip.
[Gloria] A medical examiner's testimony
would come down to one critical question.
Was baby Conner born alive?
Prosecutors want the jury to believe
Conner died with his mother
on December 24th.
The defense wants them
to see it another way.
[Jon] What the coroner determined
on Conner's age
was an estimate
of between 33 and 38 weeks.
Again, this is an estimate only,
and there's not an exacting science
that's gonna be able to pin that down,
but that does put it outside of, uh,
and a bit later than, uh, December 24th,
when we believe Laci was actually killed.
Not being able to hone in
to a specific time of death
did hurt the prosecution's case
because it opened up
a whole different theory
of, uh, potentially someone kidnapping
a pregnant woman
because they want the baby.
This is not good
for the State of California.
Scott Peterson
is gonna be found not guilty.
And then Amber Frey
completely changed all that.
[suspenseful music playing]
[Gloria Gomez] Amber Frey.
Everybody wanted to hear
Amber Frey's story.
She was the prosecution's star witness.
This case is either gonna win or lose
on Amber Frey's testimony.
If she flops on the stand,
and if the defense starts
chipping away at her credibility,
they're gonna lose this case.
[Pat] Our strategy had always been
that we were gonna have to sort of admit
Scott had this affair.
Essentially try and make Scott
seem more human
so that we could then argue, "Look,
just because you hate somebody
or somebody does
it doesn't make them a murderer."
[suspenseful music continues playing]
[Amber] The first day of trial,
I'm walking in the courtroom.
It was completely packed
and as silent as can be.
[voice breaking] And when I first sat
on the stand,
I wasn't just sitting there alone.
[inhales sharply]
But I was sitting there for Laci
and her unborn child.
[indistinct news reporting]
[Amber] I I feel like Geragos
got a little agitated with me at times.
I didn't answer in the way
he thought I would or anticipated.
Like, "Did Scott ever say he loved you?"
And in reality, my answer was valid.
Not in those words.
I mean, his actions,
the things he did, the thoughtfulness, um
I mean, those are all actions of
But, ultimately, the answer was no.
But I think
it kind of got under Geragos's skin
[chuckles]because I didn't answer
straightforward.
It wasn't necessarily a straightforward
question either, in my opinion, so
She held her head high
when she did testify.
I think she earned
the respect of the jury.
They saw the real Amber Frey,
not the mistaken stereotypes.
[Amber] I was not a mistress.
If you read the definition,
that is a woman
knowingly in a relationship
with a married man,
and I was not knowingly.
For the first time, there was clarity
as far as who I was
and my relationship with Scott.
[phone line crackling]
[recording plays]
Those tapes were essential.
Scott Peterson invoked
his Fifth Amendment privilege
against self-incrimination
and chose not to testify in the case.
But his voice was still in the courtroom
on the tapes that Amber had recorded.
I had no idea
that those were gonna be play
played publicly for other people to hear.
People were hearing conversations
that I thought were only meant
for the police department and
possibly attorneys, but not everyone,
meaning, like,
pretty much anyone in the world.
That was a little
that was a little hard.
[recording plays]
[Mike] A lot of people believe
that the affair was a big deal.
No, I I didn't see it as a big deal,
and I don't think
anybody on the jury did either.
What we did see as a big deal
is what he said and what he did.
It was damning. It was absolutely damning.
And not only the phone calls but the lies.
Yes, the the charade.
What was particularly startling
about Scott's style of lying
is that he was very shortsighted.
Um, it was obvious to me
that he did not think
these things through carefully.
He is emotionally detached
to the point where he believed
that investigators and Laci's family
and friends and the public
would lose interest in her disappearance
in a few short weeks.
It was startling and shocking
that he seemed to sincerely believe
that he would be free
to go on with his new life.
So Scott's behaviors are what told us
that this is
a planned, premeditated homicide.
He told Amber he had lost his wife,
that he needed to be away,
and that when he got back,
they could start their life together.
He bought a boat.
He bought this boat in secret.
When he came home on the 24th,
her car was in the driveway,
her purse was in the closet,
he did laundry, he ate pizza,
he took a shower,
and then he called Laci's parents.
There is no sense of urgency.
Nothing taken from the house,
nothing damaged, nothing disturbed.
He sold Laci's car.
He he wanted to sell the house.
He turned the nursery into a storage area.
These are all inappropriate behaviors.
This is not a man
who's waiting for Laci to come home.
And this was
the evidence presented by the prosecutor.
Laci didn't just disappear.
This was actually
planned, premeditated murder.
You know, the Scott Peterson case,
you can't take a part of it
and look at it and say, "Aha,"
'cause there is no "aha" moment.
But you take the bits and pieces,
and you put them all together,
then it draws a picture.
It paints a portrait.
[judge] Members of the jury,
you have heard all the evidence
and the arguments of the attorneys.
[Gloria Gomez] After being instructed
by the judge for nearly an hour,
the six men and six women of the jury
will now decide Scott Peterson's fate.
There is a verdict
in the Scott Peterson trial,
and it will be announced
at 1:00 p.m. Pacific time.
- [indistinct chatter]
- [dramatic music playing]
[Al] They gave us 90 minutes
from when the the jury came back
before they were gonna read it.
We're going to have a live audio feed
of the verdict in this case.
There's a huge gathering of folks
from the public that have gathered here.
It sends everybody scrambling.
It fills up the courtyard
outside the Redwood City courthouse.
Everybody just waited with bated breath.
[newscaster] What kind of reaction
do you think we'll have out here?
[Ted] I think the majority of the public
thinks that Scott Peterson is guilty,
and I think if this jury comes back
with a not-guilty verdict,
there is going to be
a sense of despair and anger.
[Al] Modesto to Redwood City
is about 75, 80 miles,
and all the detectives
went lights and sirens
from Modesto to Redwood City
to get there in time.
They said the verdict
was coming in two hours,
so, at one o'clock, it was gonna be
you know, we were gonna hear Scott's fate,
and we were pretty much
in very good spirits.
I just kind of had felt a sense
of, "This is finally coming to an end."
It was very fortunate that Jackie, Janey,
and Joe were in Redwood City,
but there was no way my dad and I
were gonna make it from San Diego.
[suspenseful music playing]
[Janey] We were excited.
We thought Scott was coming home,
and we thought this was it.
[indistinct chatter]
[suspenseful music continues playing]
[Sharon Rocha] I didn't know enough
about the legal system to
One way or the other, I just couldn't help
but have a little bit of a doubt.
You don't know
what these 12 people are thinking.
[indistinct background conversation]
[Sharon Rocha] I remember
getting the call to say,
"We have a verdict."
[Gloria Gomez] We were all rushing
into the courtroom to get in there,
and they're filing in,
they're filing in, they're filing in.
They all take a seat,
and the first thing I see
was one of the jurors.
She looks right at Laci's mom,
and she gives her a wink.
And I'm like [gasps]
The gesture seemed to indicate,
"We got him."
And then the verdict was read.
[indistinct chatter]
[jury foreperson] State of California
versus Scott Peterson.
We, the jury, in the above-entitled cause,
find the defendant, Scott Lee Peterson,
guilty of the crime of murder
of Laci Denise Peterson.
[foreperson] We, the jury,
in the above-entitled cause,
find the defendant, Scott Lee Peterson,
guilty of the crime of
- [crowd cheering]
- [soft music playing]
I just remember the relief
hearing the word "guilty."
I mean, it was like, you know,
being inflated all this time,
and all of a sudden, all the air
just comes out of your body.
It's It was just a relief. A huge relief.
It wasn't You know, I can't say
we were all excited and happy about it.
That's not the feeling that I had at all.
Um, just a relief.
Yeah, when they read the verdict,
I just I I just
I thought my heart beat really loud,
and I missed the word "not."
I just was like, you know, I
And and then they said it again
with Conner, "guilty,"
and then it felt very quiet
in the courtroom
and very surreal
and kinda out of body, like
Um
- [distant cheering]
- But you could hear the crowd outside.
- [cheering]
- [foreperson] Penal Code Section 187A
We, the jury, further find
the degree of the murder
to be that of the first degree.
[cheering continues]
[cheering intensifies]
[indistinct chatter, shouting]
[woman] Hope you're proud of your son!
[woman shouts]
[indistinct chatter]
[Janey] I remember
being taken into a back hallway.
They were gonna escort us outside
because there was such a huge crowd.
And we we come out a door,
and we're way at the other end
of the courthouse from our car.
And they walk us the whole way
in front of the whole crowd.
It felt like we were paraded
in front of them to our car.
[indistinct chatter]
[woman] No, right
[man] Burn in hell!
[indistinct chatter continues]
[Janey] With people hollering
and screaming and jeering.
I just remember looking out
at the sea of people and thinking,
"They have no idea."
"They have they have no idea
what just happened the last four months
in this courtroom. No idea."
[woman] Everybody in?
[indistinct speech]
[engine starts]
[indistinct shouting]
[man] Wow.
[reporter] Today, the judge ruled
that the same jury
that convicted Scott Peterson
of murdering his pregnant wife
will also determine
whether he lives or dies for his crimes,
and the case will stay in Redwood City.
The biggest moment had to have been
when Sharon took the stand.
If you did not cry during that
or at least shed a tear during Sharon's
you just weren't there.
It was really
her only time to address Scott.
Like, face to face.
I remember her looking right at him.
[reporter 1] Many in the room began to cry
as Laci's mother, Sharon Rocha, asked
if Laci knew she was being murdered.
Then she imagined Laci's unborn baby
begging for its life, saying
"Daddy, please don't do this to me.
Please. There's another way."
[reporter 2] One other thing she said,
"The fact that you no longer wanted Laci
did not give you the right to murder her."
"She was my daughter.
I trusted you, and you betrayed me."
"You betrayed everybody."
[sobbing] She may be physically gone,
but she's not gone out of our hearts.
She still lives with all of us.
[exhales softly]
[indistinct chatter]
[reporter 1] The jury
that convicted Scott Peterson
of killing his wife and unborn son
came in with its decision on a sentence.
[foreperson] We, the jury,
in the above-entitled cause,
fix the penalty at death, dated
- [woman 1 screams]
- [woman 2] Death! Oh my God!
[reporter 2] Some jumped
in the air and clapped.
Christmas comes early.
[reporter 3] People around the world are
applauding your decision. How do you feel?
They have to answer to themselves on that.
Tell somebody, "You did a good job.
You just put somebody to death."
Yeah.
I don't see anything good about that.
That would be like me telling you,
"That person, you pull the trigger."
It eats me up to hear that
because I say, "You don't even know
what death means, then."
It's so easy for you to say that?
It's not it's not that easy.
[shouting and cheering]
[tense music playing]
[indistinct chatter]
Come on. Let's keep going.
[applause]
- [cheering]
- [indistinct shouting]
Our family's going to make it make it.
We're stronger because of this.
- And Scott got what he deserved.
- [distant siren wailing]
He not only took her away from us,
but, you know,
he's destroyed a lot of lives.
His family's lives and
I'm not gonna say he destroyed our lives.
He upset our lives.
But I wouldn't give him the credit
for destroying our lives.
[indistinct chatter]
[Al] I remember, later,
I saw Sharon and Ron and the family and
and, uh, we you know, I hugged them and
[sighs]
Kind of apologized, you know,
how it started, and that
But she said, "I never lost
you know, I never lost, uh, faith
or anything in you or that,"
and so it was kinda hard.
I kinda stayed close with them
for a little while,
and then I realized after a while that
I'm, uh I'm not a good memory.
I mean, you know, I'm kind of
When you see me, maybe you think
of that incident all the time.
And so I didn't
I kind of pulled away a little bit.
[Ted] Scott's off to San Quentin,
and the Petersons continued to fight.
They immersed themselves
in this fight for Scott,
and he never admitted guilt on any level.
[tense music playing]
[Janey] We didn't have time to grieve Laci
when we found out she was gone
because Scott was arrested.
Laci was part of our family.
Laci was my sister-in-law.
Conner was my nephew.
We went from looking for her
And the moment we found out she was dead,
he was arrested,
and we're fighting for his life.
And here we are 20 years later,
trying to right this injustice.
[Sharon Hagan] I really believe
that it's very difficult
for Scott's family to believe
that he would ever do this.
The severity of the crime
is an important factor here.
You know, is there anything worse
than killing your wife
and your unborn child?
You know, what
what would be the consequences of
of acknowledging
that he must have done this?
I think, at the end of the day,
they both know what they know.
And and the Rochas know
that he killed her,
and they live with that pain every day,
and the Petersons know
that he didn't kill her,
and they live with that pain.
[melancholic music playing]
[Sharon Rocha] There are times
I look back, and I think, "Gosh."
"It's hard to believe
it was 20 years ago."
And on the other hand,
it seems like it wasn't 20 years ago.
I've always said, "You don't get over it.
You just get through it."
You just have to muddle through it
because you're never going to get over it.
It's always gonna be there.
Always. It'll always be there.
[melancholic music continues playing]
[Sharon] We have a whole different life
than we did before.
It's the before and the after,
and that's the way I refer to it.
When I talk about different things,
it'll be before Laci and after Laci
because it does, it changes your life.
There's no doubt about that.
Changes everybody's lives
that are involved.
[soft music playing]
[muted speech]
[Lori] What the last 20 years
has brought to me
is that, um, we check in
with each other more a lot more often.
Good, the bad, the ugly.
We have tougher conversations.
We promised each other
that it doesn't matter who knows.
- One of us knows
- Yeah.
what's happening in each other's lives.
You just realize when you're questioned
about your best friend,
like, how little you knew. [sniffs]
And yet we And then
So
That's, I think, why we just
make sure that we're all
in the know.
[soft music playing]
She was in love.
There's no doubt about that.
She was just really excited.
She was in love with him.
And we always liked him.
He always treated her well.
Until he didn't.
With a low-risk victim such as Laci,
who was very much a homebody,
um, whose world was
very small and and condensed
[inhales deeply]the most likely person
who will harm someone like her
is her intimate partner.
And the statistics
that we keep on homicide bear this out.
In fact, not only
does pregnancy increase the risk
of victimization for women,
but it is the number one cause of death
for pregnant women.
[soft music continues playing]
Hmm.
This was from her actual memorial.
And this is her. This just
I love this picture 'cause this just
captures her spirit so perfectly.
Her laugh was just so infectious.
[melancholic music playing]
[muted conversation]
[Sharon Rocha] She would've loved
to have had her child
and raised him,
and she would've been a good mother.
We would've had something else
to tease her about. [chuckles]
Wow, she's been gone
almost as long as she was here.
I just want her
to be remembered as a person
and not as a victim of murder.
Um, she was alive.
She's still alive to all of us.
I see dragonflies, and I think of her.
This time of the year,
as a matter of fact.
Her legacy is just
that she was a loving person.
She loved her husband. She trusted
her husband, and he betrayed her.
He betrayed her,
and he betrayed everybody else.
His family, our family, everybody.
Over the years, I've received
many, many, many letters from people,
from women
who are in a similar situation with
They didn't know their husband.
They thought they did.
And how many I can't tell you that,
because of Laci, they left in time,
that they were still alive
because of Laci.
- [girl 1] Hi, Laci!
- [girl 2] Let's dance, baby!
[melancholic music playing]
[muted singing]
[soft piano music playing]