THIS IS QUITE INTERESTING:10 minutes could be lifetime
By JOHN COTÉ and GARTH STAPLEY
BEE STAFF WRITERS
Last Updated: November 20, 2003, 06:26:50 AM PST
The case against accused double-murderer Scott Peterson could come down to roughly 10 minutes.
That's the amount of time from when someone used Peterson's cell phone in or near his home the morning of Dec. 24 until a neighbor said she found the Petersons' dog standing in the road, its leash dangling from its collar.
If the 10:08 a.m. call indicates the time Peterson left his home, his alibi appears to hang on his pregnant wife mopping the floor, leaving to take the dog for a walk and being abducted during that 10-minute stretch.
Neighbor Karen Servas testified that she found the Petersons' golden retriever standing in the street at 10:18 a.m. She deduced that time after checking a time-stamped receipt and clocking how long it took her to retrace her route.
Peterson told police he left home about 9:30 a.m. Dec. 24 to go fishing in San Francisco Bay, stopping at a warehouse he used in his work as a fertilizer salesman to get his boat and to check his e-mail, Detective Al Brocchini testified during Peterson's preliminary hearing.
Peterson said that when he left, his wife was preparing to mop and planning to run errands before walking their golden retriever, McKenzie, Broc- chini said.
"Laci asked the defendant to bring in a bucket," Brocchini testified. "She was going to mop, clean up the kitchen, go shopping for a dinner or a brunch they were going to have, and then walk the dog."
Prosecutors contend that Peterson murdered his wife and unborn son late Dec. 23 or early Dec. 24. He could receive the death penalty if convicted on both murder counts.
The bodies were found in April along the bay's eastern shore, less than two miles from where Peterson said he went fishing.
The 10:08 a.m. call from Peterson's cell phone to his voice mail appeared to show the caller driving westward from the Petersons' home because it switched to a different cell phone tower, district attorney's Investigator Steve Jacobson testified.
Peterson's Emerald Avenue warehouse is northwest of his home.
"Does it appear that he's driving from the house and that, while making the phone call, that the cell phone site switches?" defense attorney Mark Geragos asked.
"That would be my understanding," Jacobson said.
General area indicated by tower
Cell phone tower data cannot pinpoint a location, Jacobson acknowledged; it can only indicate that the call came from within the area it covered.
The cell tower serving the Petersons' home has a radius of 1.42 miles, Jacobson said, meaning the call could have come from anywhere in that distance.
But the defense questioning did not pursue the possibility that Peterson left at 9:30 a.m., drove elsewhere, then went back through his neighborhood on the way to his warehouse.
"You're familiar that (Peterson is) at the warehouse sometime shortly after 10:08, if you believe that he's the one that accessed the computer at the warehouse, correct?" Geragos said.
"Yes," Jacobson said.
A computer expert who examined Peterson's computer at the warehouse found that someone accessed it shortly after 10:08 a.m. and used it until nearly 11 a.m., Geragos said in court.
THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE CAN BE FOUND AT WWW.MODBEE.COM
http://www.modbee.com/local/story/7776760p-8669077c.html