PROSECUTION RESTS!
October  5, 2004

Prosecutors in the Scott Peterson murder trial called
to the stand their 174th and final witness, a police
investigator who portrayed the former fertilizer salesman as
a man on the run because he killed his pregnant wife, Laci.
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Modesto Detective Jon Buehler wrapped up 19 weeks of testimony by the the state's
witnesses, describing the details of Peterson's arrest on April 19, 2003.

Peterson's Mercedes Benz was taken to the Department of Justice in San Diego
where Buehler
was assigned to document and photograph items in Scott's Mercedes.

The photographs shown to the jurors were pictures  taken showing how the items
were placed in the car.  Each item was then taken from the car and inventoried.


More pictures were taken of the inventoried items and they were also shown to the jury

Buehler told jurors that Peterson had a large backpack and an overnight bag stuffed with
everything from hunting knives and a water purifier to snorkeling and fishing equipment to a shovel
and duct tape. Much of the
camping equipment had been purchased a month earlier, he said.

Peterson also had several changes of clothes, including seven pairs of shoes, jackets, pants,
shorts and sweaters. He had four cell phones, two driver's licenses — his and his brother
John's — six credit cards, including one in his
half-sister's name, and nearly $15,000 in cash.
(LIST OF ITEMS IN CAR)
Prosecutor Dave Harris showed photographs of the equipment, found in
a Mercedes that Peterson had bought earlier
using his mother's first name.

Also found was a Yahoo MapQuest printout dated April 16, 2003, of a map to
American Bodyworks, in Fresno, where Amber Frey once worked.

Peterson's attorney Mark Geragos showed photos of similar clothes and equipment found in
Peterson's truck months earlier, portraying him as a guy who simply lived out of his vehicle.


Buehler also testified that Peterson also had with him "The Purpose-Driven Life: What on Earth
Am I Here For?", a book girlfriend
Amber Frey had given him, along with a card dated Feb. 16, 2003.

"I can only hope that this will come to an end soon," Frey wrote.
"
I wish I could go back in time. I'm praying for you and your family."

Several flyers advertising a reward for Laci's safe return were found in the trunk, Buehler said.

On the day he was arrested, Peterson drove a circuitous nearly 170-mile route in
Southern California in what prosecutors suggested was an attempt to evade police.
Defense lawyers have maintained Peterson was trying to elude media scrutiny.


Detective Buehler was also asked if there was a difference in the appearance
of Scott Peterson from December 25, 2002, to the time of his arrest.   Buehler
described the difference of  the color of Scott's hair, eyebrows, and goatee.


The prosecution effectively portrayed Peterson as a man capable of murdering his wife, experts said.

"He lied to everybody," said Paula Canny, a defense lawyer and former
prosecutor who has been watching the trial. "
The strongest evidence the
prosecution has is what Scott Peterson said and what Scott Peterson did
."

Defense lawyers were expected to take at least a week for their case. Judge Alfred A. Delucchi
has told jurors they should be able to begin deliberations by the end of the month.


The state alleges Peterson killed his eight-months pregnant wife in their Modesto home on or
around Dec. 24, 2002, then dumped her body into the bay. Her badly decomposed remains —
and that of her fetus —
washed up in April 2003, not far from the marina where Peterson
launched his boat that Christmas Eve morning for what he said was a solo fishing trip.


Geragos maintains someone else abducted and killed Laci, then
framed Peterson after learning of his widely publicized alibi.


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