From:  RICKAMORTI1

              
NATIONAL ENQUIRER
              
September 23, 2003
                         
Cops Have Fingerprints of Laci's Murderer!
      
by Don Gentile and Michael Hanrahan
{synopsis}

Blockbuster new Evidence found on Duct Tape used to Wrap Laci!  Police have uncovered
startling new evidence in the murder case-  the fingerprints of the killer!


The NE has learned that the prints were lifted from duct tape attached to a black tarp
that washed up on the San Francisco Bay shoreline where Laci's body was found.


Authorities in Modesto, Calif., are keeping the fingerprint discovery top secret but
one source has heard that cops believe the prints belong to
Scott Peterson.

Tests were being done to determine if there are eight so-called "minutiae points" to the
prints found on the tape, the minimum number under California Department of Justice
standards, to declare them a match to a specific person.


But a source close to the case called the fingerprint discovery "the ultimate smoking gun".

The 42 inch wide by 20-foot-long tarp washed up near Point Isabel in the city of
Richmond on April 15.  It was found about 50 yards south of the spot where Laci's badly
decomposed body had
come ashore the day before- and about a mile south of the spot
where dog walkers came upon the body of Laci's unborn son
Conner on April 13.

The recovery sites are 3 miles north of the Berkeley Marina, where Scott says he was
fishing in his boat last Dec. 24th.

A LE source said, that the tarp was initially taken to the crime lab at Contra Costa
Sheriff's department, a forensic testing facility considered one of the best in the world.
"You need a lab like Contra Costa's lab to lift the prints," said a close source.


"The duct tape has to be carefully removed because it tends to stretch and the prints can
be distorted.  You essentially have to remove the tarp from the duct tape and not the other
way around."  "It can take weeks to perform such a procedure."


Duct tape can hold fingerprints even if it has been submerged in water for a long
period, say experts.  "You can still lift prints from the sticky side of it," crime scene
expert Hal Sherman, a former New York City detective, told the NE.


"Examiners use certain stains such as Gentian violet or iodine to bring out the prints.  There's also
something called Sticky-Side Powder that investigators use to lift prints from various kinds of tape."


Internationally known scientist Dr. Kobilinsky noted, "If Scott handled that tape, he may
have left a pattern that you could definitely find after four months in the water."


The strips of duct tape from the tarp were also being compared to tape that was attached to
Laci's remains and duct tape police found during searches of the Peterson home in
Modesto and the nearby warehouse,  Scott used for his job.  The fingerprint and duct
tape revelations will be only the latest to rock Scott Peterson's defense.


The blood reported in the brown van turned out to be B-B-Q sauce, and the cult theory
of beheading also
turned out to be false. Laci's obstetrician, Dr. James Y.K. Yip has
revealed that he did see Laci on Dec.23rd, but she did not have a sonogram that day.


Geragos showed that other evidence obtained by police is causing him worry when he
said he was going to move in court to suppress mitochondrial DNA testing done by LE.


To Kobilinsky, that means one thing: hair found jammed into needlenose pliers that were discovered
in Scott's boat has definitely been identified as Laci's hair, as reported first in the NE.  Mitochondrial
DNA is DNA inherited only from a person's mother and is found outside the nucleus of a cell.


Testing for such DNA is done when evidence samples from within the
nucleus of the cell- which contain DNA from both parents- are not present.


"Mitochondrial testing is very accurate, says Kobilinsky, explaining that it's difficult to obtain nuclear
DNA from a hair.  "Geragos could argue that Laci's hair got onto Scott's clothing and when he got
the boat, it somehow wound up in the pliers.  But is that something a
jury would believe?

The source close to the case said Geragos is realizing "the evidence is looking
more bleak..that it is not a good case for Scott."


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