"The Perfect Husband: the Laci Peterson Story"
EVIDENCE VS. FICTION
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The Perfect Husband takes liberal artistic license with fabricated conversations and the creation of a married couple that are supposed to be friends of Scott and Laci Peterson. The couple, which producers say are composites of real people, play significant roles.
The two main detectives in the film also are composites, producers say, with made-up names.
Other inconsistencies, most based on Bee reports and testimony at Scott Petersons preliminary hearing in October and November, include:
MOVIE: Peterson realizes hes coming under suspicion some time after his wife is reported missing, when officers search his home and bring him to the police station for questioning.
REALITY: Detectives immediately began probing Petersons alibi, including a lengthy interview at the station that started early Christmas morning. They served the first search warrant Dec. 26.
MOVIE: Peterson tells his friend that he had a tee time to golf Christmas Eve but went fishing instead.
REALITY: Del Rio Golf & Country Club doesnt require members to reserve tee times.
MOVIE: Policemen discuss smelling bleach in the Peterson home Christmas Eve. Later, during questioning, Peterson says he had mopped the floor after returning from his fishing trip.
REALITY: Officers testified that they did not smell bleach or other cleansers at the house. Peterson told them that his wife mopped the floor Christmas Eve, a detective testified.
MOVIE: An anonymous caller phones Peterson on New Years Eve and urges him to confess and lead police to the bodies. Peterson then phones girlfriend Amber Frey and says he lied when he previously told her he had never been married. He says his wife disappeared a year ago.
REALITY: A detective testified that a friend of Freys confronted Peterson about his marital status in early December. Peterson told Frey Dec. 9 nearly two weeks before his wife disappeared that he had lied about never being married and that he had lost his wife, the detective testified. Peterson told Frey that the upcoming holidays would be his first without his wife, the detective said.
MOVIE: After the bodies are found, a clean-shaven, dark-haired Peterson talks about leaving Modesto. A few days later, he is arrested near San Diego sporting a full goatee and lightened hair.
REALITY: Peterson had a short goatee Feb. 18, when police searched his home a second time. He was spotted several times in the San Diego area over the next few weeks. His mother, Jackie Peterson, said April 3 that her son no longer lived at the home.
MOVIE: Frey realizes her boyfriend is at the center of a media maelstrom as she watches a telecast of a New Years Eve vigil for Petersons missing wife. She later calls police and offers to cooperate.
REALITY: Phone records and police testimony show that Frey first contacted police Dec. 30.
MOVIE: Frey realizes her boyfriend is at the center of a media maelstrom as she watches a telecast of a New Years Eve vigil for Petersons missing wife. She later calls police and offers to cooperate.
REALITY: Phone records and police testimony show that Frey first contacted police Dec. 30.
MOVIE: After his wife disappears, Peterson stares at the bay from the Berkeley Marina at night. He is monitored by two detectives, one saying, Hes worried, starting to feel trapped.
REALITY: A detective testified that police followed Peterson to the marina three times, all in the day. The defense suggested Peterson went to the bay those days after reading Bee articles indicating searches would be going on.
MOVIE: Peterson talks on the phone with Frey after the bodies of his wife and son are found in April, saying he didnt kill them, but I know who did.
REALITY: Phone records and police testimony show that the last call between Peterson and Frey came Feb. 19 nearly two months before the bodies were recovered.
MOVIE: Peterson laments moving to Modesto, with one of his wifes friends replying: Laci wanted to raise Conner here with her family.
REALITY: Sharon Rocha, Laci Petersons mother, testified that her daughter moved to Modesto because she was concerned about her paternal grandfathers health. After the move, she expressed a desire to have a baby, Rocha testified.
MOVIE: During questioning, Peterson says he fished for sturgeon Christmas Eve. Asked what bait he used, he says, I dont know.
REALITY: Police testified that on Christmas Eve, Peterson didnt know what kind of fish he hoped to catch that day.
MOVIE: A sign on a government complex building reads East County.
REALITY: Modesto is in Stanislaus County.
MOVIE: The Petersons live in a typical tract home with garage facing the street.
REALITY: A garage at the Covena Avenue home has been converted to living space. There is no garage.
MOVIE: A woman at the search center says Tuolumay.
REALITY: The Tuolumne River running by Modesto is alternatively pronounced Tuolumey or Tuolumney.
http://www.modbee.com/reports/peterson/relatedstories/story/8115439p-8970819c.html
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** There was nothing in this made for TV 'B' movie that included Lee and Jackie Peterson, Scott's parents...that would be another reality check, IMO.