Laci: Inside the Laci Peterson Murder
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About this ebook
Praying for a happy ending, friends and family stood by Laci's grieving husband Scott. Four months later, Laci's decomposed body was found in the murky waters of San Francisco Bay. The body of her child had washed ashore about a mile away, after a possible "coffin birth." It was a sad closure to an exhaustive search, and a grim end to a marriage that by all accounts had appeared to be perfect.
Scott Peterson's behavior had cast a mysterious shadow over the death of his pregnant wife: his alibi on the day of the disappearance was questionable; he admitted to an affair with another woman; and when he was finally charged with capital murder, he had altered his appearance. Almost immediately, the media condemned Scott, even though he maintains his innocence. Is Scott Peterson a victim of circumstantial evidence? Despite the state attorney general's claim of a "slam dunk", the case that has gripped the nation is much more complex, and is yielding even more questions, doubts, accusations, and shocking revelations.
Michael Fleeman
Michael Fleeman is a Los Angeles-based writer and former People magazine editor and reporter for the Associated Press. He is the author of Love You Madly and Seduced by Evil.
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Reviews for Laci
24 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A excellent book with much data previously not known. This author explained both the defense and prosecution sides.
Book preview
Laci - Michael Fleeman
PROLOGUE
At the end of the 1973 movie American Graffiti, a long hot night of cruising Modesto, California’s downtown streets in cool ’50s cars yields to an inevitable dawn and poignant goodbyes, as Richard Dreyfuss boards a prop plane for college in the East and leaves his friends—and small-town past—behind, maybe forever. The postscripts before the credits tell us that Dreyfuss, the smart, witty, sensitive guy, goes on to become a writer living in Canada
while the kids he grew up with in California’s heartland meet less romantic fates: a tragic car crash, death in Vietnam and a career selling insurance in Modesto.
The film’s director, George Lucas, was a child of that heartland town and the movie came out of his life story. The son of an office supply store owner, he went to Modesto’s John Muir (elementary) School, Roosevelt Junior High School, Thomas Downey High School and Modesto Junior College. Despite his future success, he never really amounted to much academically, never ran with the cool crowd. He was short and shy and awkward. It wasn’t until he became old enough to drive that he found his niche.
According to Dale Pollock’s biography, Skywalking: The Life and Films of George Lucas, the future filmmaker spent almost every night for four years driving up and down Modesto’s streets from three o’clock in the afternoon until one o’clock in the morning. On Saturdays and Sundays he would do it all day long.
Night after night, driving souped-up cars, wearing dark shades, blasting the radio, Lucas would cruise up 10th Street and down 11th Street, stopping only to hang out at the drive-in hamburger stand. Lucas would sum up his Modesto youth in the ’50s and ’60s this way: Racing cars, screwing around, having fun, the endless search for girls.
While in American Graffiti Lucas didn’t necessarily trash Modesto, which would have been an easy target, he did make it clear that the hero of the story was Dreyfuss, who, like Lucas, left the farm town for something more glamorous than selling insurance on McHenry Boulevard—just as the hero of another Lucas film left a hot dusty planet for something better in the heavens. But Modesto didn’t hold this against the director, who would go on to become a major Hollywood force with Star Wars, and in fact has treated George Lucas like a favorite son. For fifteen years the city tried to recapture American Graffiti’s spirit with Graffiti Nights, an annual tradition of cruising and partying on the Saturdays after high school graduation, until the cruising and partying got so out of control (in large part due to booze and drugs) that it wasn’t fun anymore. When six people were shot in 1994, the event was stopped, and the movie and its memories would be immortalized in quiet bronze in Lucas Plaza, the little park at a five-way intersection named after the director in 1997. There, cars pass a statue of a young couple, the guy in swept-back ducktail hairdo, the girl with a ponytail, sitting on the hood of a ’57 Chevy.
In 1993, another graduate of Thomas Downey High School would leave Modesto for college after spending her teen years in her own American Graffiti way.
Only, unlike a George Lucas hero, after finding romance Laci Denise Rocha, brown-haired, brown-eyed, with a smile that would break the heart of a nation, returned to Modesto. She and husband Scott settled into a little green house on Covena Avenue to live out their years, raising children, holding dinner parties, tending to the garden, swimming in the new pool, spending time with her brother, sister, mother, father and step-father.
Her postscript was about to be written.
CHAPTER 1
Hi, Mom.
It was Scott Peterson on the line.
Sharon Rocha was preparing Christmas Eve dinner for the family when her son-in-law called.
There was concern in his voice.
Is Laci there?
No,
Sharon said.
She hadn’t spoken to her daughter since the night before.
Well,
said Scott, she’s missing.
The wording was peculiar.
Laci was missing. Not gone. Not out.
Then a horrible feeling overcame her.
Sharon Rocha knew immediately that something was terribly wrong.
Scott called at least two more times on the evening of Tuesday, December 24, 2002, when a cold fog descended on Modesto.
The next time he phoned, he told his mother-in-law that he had called everybody he could think of and nobody knew where Laci was.
The third time Scott called his in-laws’ house, about 6:30 p.m., his mother-in-law told her husband, Ron Grantski, to phone the police.
When the officers arrived, it took very little to convince them of the urgency of the situation. Scott hadn’t seen Laci since that morning. When he got home in the late afternoon, her car was there, her purse was there, her cellular phone was there. But not Laci.
There was no note, no message on the answering machine, no word left with any family or friends. This wasn’t like her. She was outgoing and bubbly, but not impetuous or irresponsible. She was the Mini–Martha Stewart to her friends, the gracious but strict hostess who served dinner at eight, and don’t be late—and be sure to dress accordingly. She wrote notes for holidays and special occasions. Surely, she would have left a note if she were to leave before such an important evening.
She was the model of manners and comportment, of doing things right, of expecting the same of others.
She was also eight months pregnant—with their first child, a boy, whom they planned to name Conner.
Scott rounded up the neighbors. In the misty darkness, with temperatures dipping toward the 40s, they searched throughout his La Loma neighborhood. Scott looked distraught, scared.
Teary-eyed, he ran down Covena Avenue, past the END sign where the street dead-ended into a well-trod footpath. He went through the open gate and headed down the steep path into East La Loma Park.
She must be in the park. She had been getting ready to walk the dog.
Scott searched. The neighbors searched.
The police officers went into the park, probing the darkness with their Maglites, looking behind the bushes and rocks, walking up and down the banks of Dry Creek, searching under the footbridge. In the foggy skies, a helicopter from the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department strafed the grounds with its powerful searchlight.
The officers roamed the streets of the La Loma neighborhood, just northeast of downtown Modesto, looking for any traces of the pregnant woman, interviewing anybody they could find, to see if they’d seen or heard anything.
They found a neighbor, Karen Servas, who hadn’t seen Laci that day, but had seen her dog. At about 10:30 that morning, Servas was pulling out of her driveway onto Covena when she saw a golden retriever she recognized as McKenzie, scampering down the street, trailing a muddy leash.
She led the dog to its home at 523 Covena, where the gate to the back yard was open. That must have been how the dog got out, Servas thought. She put the dog in the yard and closed the gate and thought nothing of it until the police showed up later that evening and asked her if she had seen anything unusual that day.
By midnight, a small group of friends gathered in front of the green house and wondered and worried: Where could she be?
The next morning, Christmas Day, Scott called his parents down in San Diego. They had always been fond of Laci. She had sent his mother a heartfelt note on the first Mother’s Day after they were married and signed it with her name and a happy face. His mother knew it was her son calling because she recognized his voice. But she couldn’t understand him. He was crying, blubbering, incomprehensible, save for a single word.
Laci.
The little green house at 523 Covena sat a block and a half from where the tree-lined street hit a fence of gray weathered wood. The house had wood siding, a red brick chimney, a wide driveway and wood gate that opened to a newly installed swimming pool and patio, where there was an outdoor chess set with marble pieces shaped like frogs. There were young palm trees growing next to the front window, the curtains uncharacteristically closed—Laci had liked the morning light—and a garden of camellias, azaleas and geraniums tended by a careful and trained hand.
At the street’s end, the fence had a gap where a heavy gate must have once swung. It was now only two thick posts, one blackened by fire. It opened to a footpath, the dirt worn down to a U-shaped trough a foot deep, leading down a steep embankment bordered by chain-link fencing topped by razor wire. The path leveled to a field of brush with green park benches and saplings braced by posts in fields of tall green grass. The field was intersected by an asphalt bike trail lined by tall street lamps. The trail wound through groves of mature oak trees. Across the bike trail and over the field, a wooden footbridge—the floor made of planks that would make a thump-thump-thump sound as the bicyclists rode over them by day—spanned a gorge cut by Dry Creek, which wasn’t dry at all, but a slowly moving stream twenty feet wide in spots, waist-deep, flowing past reeds, trees, rocks and dead branches.
It was here, in East La Loma Park, on this cold dark foggy night—Christmas Eve—that Scott Peterson, his neighbors and police searched.
He had come home, he would tell police, to an empty house and a missing wife. Her Land Rover was parked in the driveway. Her purse and phone were inside. He had last seen her at 9:30 that morning. She was working in the newly remodeled, Spanish-tiled kitchen, her sanctuary, with the TV on, the channel turned to one of her favorite shows, Martha Stewart Living.
She was wearing a white blouse, oversized to accommodate her pregnant belly, and dark pants. She was getting ready to walk the dog, he said, probably on the usual route, down Covena Avenue. The morning was cold and dreary, temperatures in the 50s, but feeling much colder, the fog lifting off the ponds and lakes and streams and canals and irrigated fields, shrouding the heartland of California.
Scott would tell police that he had gone outside, retrieved a couple of patio umbrellas from the back yard and put them in his new 2002 Ford F-150 pickup. Rain was in the forecast from a series of storms from the Northwest and he wanted to protect the umbrellas from the elements. He drove to a storage unit where he kept supplies from his job—he was a sales representative for California and Arizona for Tradecorp, a Madrid-based manufacturer of specialty fertilizers—and where he also kept his 14-foot Sears Gamefisher aluminum boat with the 15-horsepower outboard motor. It was a 1991 model, eleven years old—but for him it was new. He’d bought it fifteen days before from a man with his same last name, but not related. The deal was sealed on a weekend and he had returned the following Monday with the cash when the bank had opened. Scott said he’d put the umbrellas in the storage facility and took the boat out, hitching it to the pickup, then driving out of town, out of Modesto.
Scott’s destination was the San Francisco Bay, eighty miles to the northwest, and if he took the most direct route, his drive would have taken him down arrow-straight Highway 132 past vineyards, fields of fragrant alfalfa, groves of almonds, dairy farms smelling of cow manure. He would have gone past Mapes Ranch, which brags on a roadside sign to be the Home of ton bulls
and says Breed the best and forget the rest.
He would have gone over the San Joaquin River, then onto the freeway, Interstate 580, which crosses the Delta Mendota Canal and the water lifeline to Los Angeles, the California Aqueduct, before heading over the 1,009-foot-elevation Altamont Pass, where the hills are covered in power-generating windmills that look like huge propellers mounted on towers. The highway drops into the San Francisco suburbs of Livermore and Dublin before reaching the bay cities of San Leandro, Piedmont and, finally, Berkeley. At the bottom of University Avenue, down the hill from the University of California, Berkeley, is the Berkeley Marina. There would have been little to no traffic this holiday Tuesday and the drive wouldn’t have taken much more than an hour and a half.
At the north end of the marina, next to Cesar Chavez Park, and just off Spinnaker Way, is a parking lot and boat ramp. The administrative offices at the harbor were closed this Christmas Eve morning, but there was a skeleton crew on duty: two maintenance workers, a groundskeeper. A couple of them would remember seeing the Ford F-150 truck and Sears boat near the boat ramp.
He wouldn’t need anybody on duty to pay the five-dollar launch fee. The fee system was automated. Five one-dollar bills placed into a yellow machine generate a business-card-sized slip of glossy paper with blue stripes down the sides informing the user: This side up on dash.
The ticket says, Welcome to the Berkeley Marina
and provides the time and date the ticket was purchased and the time and date it expires.
The concrete ramps have floating docks on either side, and a third dock in the middle. Once in the marina, his little aluminum boat would have cruised the still waters past sailboats in their slips, then to the mouth of the harbor, where the water on this dreary morning would have been as gray as the sky and where, in all likelihood, the Golden Gate Bridge to the west, the Bay Bridge and San Francisco skyline to the south, and the Point Isabel Regional Shoreline to the north, all would have been invisible through the fog and clouds.
Leaving the harbor, just off the left bow of the little aluminum boat, would have been an eerie bay landmark, the crumbling shell of the Berkeley Pier, jutting three miles into the bay.
He would later say that this trip to the bay was for the purposes of fishing for sturgeon, which he had been told were running. He had long been a fisherman—his earliest memories were of fishing in San Diego while his family played golf on a riverside course. His first date with his wife was on an ocean fishing boat. He was a golfer, too, and could well have hit the links at the Del Rio Country Club north of Modesto rather than go to the bay. But the plan was what it was, and he would say that he spent the better part of Christmas Eve day bobbing in San Francisco Bay in his aluminum boat trying his luck.
By late afternoon, he would tell police, he was back ashore, driving the truck, the boat behind him, making the return trip to Modesto. He placed calls on his cell phone, at least one to his wife, but he never reached her, and another to a friend named Greg Reed, who would remember hearing a voice that sounded great.
Scott wanted to make sure everybody was still on for a New Year’s Eve gathering that he was looking forward