Judge rejects media's request to hear wiretaps
June 6, 2003

The judge ruled Friday that autopsy results
for
Laci Peterson and her unborn son
would remain sealed. He declined to issue
a gag order on the lawyers involved.


After extensive news leaks of the autopsy results, prosecutors had
asked that they be
unsealed. Among the details reported were
that
loops of plastic were found around the fetus' neck.

Analysts said the autopsy results could be used to bolster a defense
argument that Peterson was kidnapped by a
satanic cult.

Peterson's husband, Scott Peterson, 30, has pleaded innocent to two counts
of murder
for allegedly killing his pregnant wife and their unborn child.

Laci Peterson, 27, disappeared just before Christmas. Her body and the body of her unborn
son were
found in mid-April on the shore of San Francisco Bay. Authorities Friday issued
a death certificate listing her death as a homicide but its cause as undetermined.


Superior Court Judge Al Girolami last week ordered that the leaks stop.
He said releasing the autopsy reports could hamper the investigation
and prejudice public opinion before Scott Peterson's trial.


The autopsy details confirmed by an Associated Press source close
to the case on condition of anonymity included that 1{ loops of plastic
were around the fetus' neck and a significant cut was on the fetus' body.


Prosecutors have said they would support a gag order, while defense attorney
Mark Geragos has opposed any effort to curtail discussions about the case.


Girolami on Friday also set a June 26 date to rule on defense
motions regarding
wiretaps of Scott Peterson's phone calls.

Scott Peterson's lawyers want the judge to toss out the results of two court-approved
wiretaps that monitored thousands of his calls after his wife's disappearance.


During the wiretaps, the first of which began two weeks after Laci Peterson vanished,
police logged 3,858 phone calls made to Scott Peterson, according to court papers.


Defense lawyers claim police eavesdropped on protected
conversations between Scott Peterson and his attorney.


A judge approved the wiretap of Peterson's phone Jan. 10. The surveillance
was discontinued Feb. 4 after it no longer produced results. A second
wiretap was started April 15 after the remains washed ashore.


The judge on Friday also rejected requests by 22 reporters to
listen to wiretaps of phone calls they had made to Scott.


Lawyers for the reporters said the calls could be considered
unpublished work, which reporters are not required to turn over.


The judge delayed the release of the tapes for 10 days so reporters could appeal.


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