DEFENSE OUTLINES
CULT THEORY

August 13, 2003 - FULL STORY

Scott Peterson's defense team Tuesday briefed two forensic experts on a statanic cult theory,
including
paintings and artwork near San Francisco Bay and an experiment showing that the
pregnant
Laci Peterson's body could have been placed in the water at the art site. Attorney Matt
Dalton, using a laptop computer, showed artwork that he said depicted ritualistic killings and
occult practices, and said the artwork could be found near the end of a peninsula in the bay.


Dalton also said that the defense team placed weighted flotation devices in the water at
the end of the peninsula, and they ended up in the Richmond Inner Harbor, not far from
where Laci Peterson's body and that of her unborn son,
Conner, came ashore in mid-April.

Scott Peterson is in Stanislaus County Jail, charged with both their murders.

Dalton gave the briefing to criminalist Dr. Henry Lee and forensic pathologist Dr. Cyril Wecht
while the three waited to review prosecution evidence held at the state crime laboratory in Ripon.


Tuesday afternoon, the bayside presented evidence of its own: more than a dozen paintings
on plywood and scrap lumber mounted on wooden frames at what East Bay residents call
The Bulb, the rounded point at the end of the peninsula that holds the Albany Waterfront
Trail, an area popular with dog owners.


Some of the artwork features decapitation and devil figures. Many of the paintings portray
sexual activity, and several show pregnant women.


But, if the defense is trying to link the painters to Peterson's death, "that's utterly  ridiculous," said
Bruce Rayburn, a member of an artist collective known as Sniff.  "That's reaching for straws."

He said he and three friends painted much of The Bulb artwork over the past five years.

Rayburn, a 50-year-old general contractor, said Tuesday from his El Sobrante home:
"We're regular guys with full-time jobs who go down there once a week on
Saturday mornings with our families."


Rayburn said neither law enforcement nor defense investigators had contacted him
about the paintings.One shows a man with an ax beheading a man in a rowboat on a
body of water; a topless woman kneels next to the beheaded man.


Another shows a devil figure beheading a well-dressed couple in a theater balcony. And
another portrays three children, their umbilical cords attached, in a body of water as a
giant octopus wraps its tentacles around a naked woman.


"This is all done in fun and games," Rayburn said. "We've had a lot of criticism by certain
groups of people who are offended by some of the paintings. There's a lot of good themes
going on, but if you're looking for something to criticize, you can find it."


On the inside of a concrete structure on the peninsula, Rayburn's group painted a
goat-headed figure spearing a caged man as a demonic image lurks.


"We called the inside of that place hell, because that's what it was to paint," he said.
"You had to lay on a board in a foot of water to paint it."


The Bulb for years was a landfill at the edge of the city of Albany. The dump closed, and
the land evolved into an encampment for homeless people before becoming part of a plan
for a waterfront park between Richmond and Emeryville.


Albany police Sgt. John Geissberger said he was not aware of any ritualistic activity at
The Bulb -- but that does not mean that it has not occurred, he quickly added.
"There are things that happen that we never hear about," Geissberger said.


Karla LaVey, founder of the San Francisco-based First Satanic Church, said the
Peterson defense team was using the satanic tactic as an attempt to deflect
blame on a misunderstood and unfairly vilified group.


"Satanism does not involve any type of sacrifice or ritualistic killing," LaVey said. "Satanism
obviously is a subject people are ignorant of, and so they tend to be biased and prejudicial."


The experiment
Dalton, in his briefing with Lee and Wecht, said defense investigators experimented
with flotation devices -- putting them in the water at the end of The Bulb, between
Berkeley Marina and Point Isabel. The current then carried them away.


Laci Peterson's body was found at Point Isabel, and her son's body was found about
a mile away in south Richmond.


Scott Peterson has told police that he launched his 14-foot aluminum boat from Berkeley
Marina on Christmas Eve, then went fishing for sturgeon off
Brooks Island.

Dalton, an attorney with lead defense counsel Mark Geragos' Los Angeles law firm, hinted
at another possible defense strategy -- telling Lee and Wecht about a man accused of
killing and dismembering a woman in Las Vegas.


Geragos said little as he and his team left the Ripon lab less than an hour after arriving,
apparently without viewing prosecution evidence.


Geragos entered the lab carrying a manila envelope labeled "evidence" and
accompanied by Lee. He declined to comment on what took place inside
other than to say, "We accomplished something."


Chief Deputy District Attorney John Goold said a gag order in the case prevented him
from talking about what specifically occurred in the lab but said no arrangements had
been confirmed for the defense to view prosecution evidence Tuesday.


"If they're going to look at the evidence, I imagine we're going to be present,"
Goold said. "Nobody (from the prosecution) was out there today."


GERAGOS TO EXAMINE BODIES

HENRY LEE EXAMINES BODIES

LARRY KING LIVE DISCUSSION

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