Detective: Peterson told friend
                   how he'd dispose of body

                      
Tuesday, June 29, 2004
                        By BRIAN SKOLOFF


A detective testified Tuesday at Scott Peterson's double-murder trial that Peterson talked
to a friend nine years ago about how he would dispose of a body if he killed someone.


Detective Allen Brocchini said Peterson had a conversation with a friend in 1995
"where Peterson told him how he would get rid of a body" if he committed murder.


"He said he would tie a bag around the neck with duct tape," weight the body down and
dump it into the ocean and "fish activity would eat away the neck and hands and the body
would float up, no fingers, no teeth," making it impossible to identify
, Brocchini said.
He did not elaborate on how he learned of the conversation.

 
The testimony could be crucial given that prosecutors allege Peterson, 31, murdered
his pregnant wife, Laci, on or around Dec. 24, 2002. They say he weighted her
body down with
concrete anchors and dumped her in San Francisco Bay.

Defense lawyers say he was fishing on the bay when Laci Peterson disappeared,
and that someone else abducted her near their Modesto home as she walked the dog,
and held her captive before killing her and dumping her body to frame Peterson.


The remains of Laci Peterson - just her torso - and her fetus washed ashore four months
after she vanished just two miles from where Peterson claims to have been fishing.


Defense attorneys have attacked Brocchini's investigation as shoddily executed and
designed from the start to implicate Peterson during their four days of questioning.


Brocchini, the first investigator assigned to the report that Laci  had vanished,
returned to the stand Tuesday. Defense lawyer Mark Geragos
immediately told the judge he was finished questioning Brocchini.


Prosecutor Rick Distaso then began his redirect. He asked Brocchini about Peterson's explanation of how
he would dispose of a body and about the numerous tips police received in the days after Laci vanished.


"Is it fair to say there were tips coming in that people saw Laci  all over the world?" Distaso asked.

"Yes," Brocchini said.

He added that police did not follow every lead, saying that
"sometimes you could tell by the tip it was a crack pot."


In his cross-examination Monday, Geragos accused Brocchini of ignoring important leads,
questioning him about several tips police received early in the investigation, including
one on Dec. 26, 2002 - two days after Laci was reported missing - that she was
being held in a storage bin about 30 miles from her hometown of Modesto.


Brocchini said he knew of it, but did not have much information.

Geragos said police flew over the area with a helicopter equipped with a heat-seeking device
and discovered what could have been a sign of life, but officers never searched the area.


Geragos then asked the detective about a report from police in nearby Tracy that a man of Pacific
Island descent had tried to kidnap a 15-year-old girl a few days before Laci's disappearance.


Witnesses have said they saw a van with three "dark-skinned" men in the Petersons' neighborhood
around the time Laci vanished. It's a detail Geragos has continually brought up in the trial as he works
to create reasonable doubt and tries to show police ignored any leads that didn't point to Peterson.


Brocchini said he never followed up on that tip, despite the man's description as dark-skinned.

Then there was the burglary of the Petersons' home on Jan. 19.

Brocchini testified that a woman admitted robbing the Petersons' home and said she was infatuated with
Scott Peterson. Geragos pointed out several lies the woman told Brocchini, including details about
items she stole from the house and how she said she was working on Dec. 24 when, in fact, she wasn't.


"At that point did you become suspicious of her?" Geragos asked.

"No," Brocchini said.

But the detective acknowledged asking the woman her whereabouts on Dec. 23 and Dec. 24, as if
indicating he had at least some suspicions she may have been involved in Laci's disappearance.


The woman told Brocchini she had been visiting with her ex-boyfriend and
some of his friends, men of Hawaiian descent; Geragos again alluded to
suspicious "dark-skinned" men seen in the Petersons' neighborhood.


Geragos then moved on to questioning about Peterson's mistress, Amber Frey, who first
phoned police on Dec. 30 about her affair with Peterson - a day after a $500,000
reward was posted in the case. Geragos hinted she might have hoped to profit.


Brocchini also acknowledged that police investigated Frey.

Trial watchers say Geragos is working to create other reasonable explanations
for Laci Peterson's murder and trying to undo the prosecution's case.


"Now, he's got this woman who was obsessed with Peterson ... maybe it could cast a little doubt,"
said Robert Talbot, a professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law. "But his strategy
also forces the prosecution to deal with all these other avenues and breaks up their case."


Dean Johnson, a former San Mateo County prosecutor and now a criminal defense
attorney who has watched most of the trial from inside the courtroom, said
Geragos' style is stealing momentum from the prosecution.


"Their own case is getting buried," Johnson said.

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