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  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    11:18am, EDT

    Judge denies request for mistrial in Drew Peterson murder trial

    The judge in the Drew Peterson murder trial turned down a second request to declare a mistrial. NBCNews.com's Craig Melvin reports.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By NBC News and wire services

    The judge in Drew Peterson's murder trial denied the defense team's request for a mistrial Thursday, enabling the trial to resume -- with first responders and a locksmith testifying about the night Peterson's third wife was discovered dead.

    The mistrial ruling by Will County Judge Edward Burmila during the trial in Joliet, Ill., follows several blunders by prosecutors, who are seeking to prove the 58-year-old former police sergeant killed  Kathleen Savio, in 2004. Peterson also is a suspect in the 2007 disappearance of his fourth wife, Stacy Peterson, but has not been charged in her case. 

    The mistrial decision came before prosecutors have even presented the most delicate of the hearsay evidence, including Savio's alleged remarks to others about Peterson threatening to kill her before her body was found in a dry bathtub at her home in Bolingbrook, Ill., a Chicago suburb. 

    Prosecutors alleged earlier in the week that Peterson staged Savio's death to look like an accident; the defense argues Savio died after she fell in the tub. 

    On Thursday, defense attorney Steven Greenberg asked paramedic Louis Oleskiewicz if he noticed a rubber mat or bath rug when he arrived on the scene, reported The Chicago Tribune.

    "So you did see anything in that tub that would keep a person from slipping?" Greenberg said.

    "Not that I remember seeing," he said, adding that he leaned over the tub to check for signs of life, The Tribune reported.

    Robert Akin Jr., the locksmith called to open the door of Savio’s home, testified he waited downstairs with Peterson and went to sit in his truck once he heard a scream come from upstairs in the bathroom.  

    Savio’s divorce attorney, Harry Smith, was called next to testify, but after objections by the defense and sparring between prosecutors and Burmila over the line of questioning, prosecutors decided not to have him testify on Thursday.

    They instead called  Lt. Michael R. Newton, who was on the fire truck that responded to Savio’s home. Newton testified he did not see a blue towel on the bathtub edge.  The towel was caught in a crime scene photo.

    He said Peterson seemed upset and told him: “This is my ex-wife, treat the scene with respect.” 

    Judge in Drew Peterson case adjourns court early; no decision on mistrial

    The defense first asked for a mistrial Wednesday, arguing the prosecution had improperly introduced evidence that could taint the jury's objectivity. Burmila gave them another option instead of a mistrial: throw out the testimony in question and tell the jury to ignore it. The defense lawyers took the rest of the day to consider their choices; on Thursday morning, they returned to court and renewed their request for a mistrial.

    "So far, we have a jury that thinks that everyone is afraid of Mr. Peterson," defense attorney Steven Greenberg said, NBCChicago.com reported. "How is that fair to Mr. Peterson?"

    As he arrived at the Will County, Ill., courthouse Thursday morning, Greenberg said he believed prosecutors were trying to derail the case.

    "We think this was calculated," Greenberg said, according to The Tribune. "The prosecution wants to goad us into a mistrial so they can start over and they can recover from their mistakes."

    But the judge said Thursday that Peterson still can get a fair trial.

    A furious Burmila admonished prosecutors Wednesday after the second witness in just their second day of testimony began talking about finding a .38-caliber bullet on his driveway. Thomas Pontarelli, a former neighbor of Savio's, hinted in his testimony that Peterson may have planted it there to intimidate him.

    Prosecutors later admitted under tough questioning by the judge that there was no evidence to support the claim. And Burmila wondered aloud about whether the testimony made Peterson appear menacing in jurors' eyes and undermined his ability to get a fair trial.

    Will County State's Attorney James Glasgow himself nearly triggered a mistrial during his opening statement Monday when he referred to an accusation that Peterson once tried to hire a hit man for $25,000. Burmila said there was no proof of that, either, but stopped short then of declaring a mistrial. 

    Peterson, who was a police officer in Bolingbrook, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in Savio's death. He also has said he wasn't responsible for his fourth wife's disappearance.

    The legal snafus are just the latest twist in a case long plagued by problems, including a botched initial investigation that left prosecutors with no physical evidence and forced them to rely heavily on normally prohibited hearsay.

    Legal experts say what has unfolded so far has damaged the case.

    "It's bad news if a judge is chastising prosecutors so much, because it tells the jury, 'I don't trust this prosecutor, I don't approve of this prosecutor,'" said Marcia Clark, Los Angeles' lead prosecutor in the O.J. Simpson murder trial. "It's a scary place to be as prosecutor."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

     

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    109 comments

    Well, I can see already that this will be another O.J. Simpson trial scenario.....only this scum Peterson will be getting away with two murders instead of one.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: illinois, murder, mistrial, kathleen-savio, drew-peterson
  • 1
    Aug
    2012
    2:01pm, EDT

    Judge in Drew Peterson case adjourns court early; no decision on mistrial

    Will County Sheriff's Office / AP file

    Drew Peterson is shown in a May 2009 booking photo.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Updated 4:00 p.m. ET: The judge presiding over the Drew Peterson murder trial ended court early Wednesday to give defense attorneys time to consider whether they still want to pursue a mistrial after a question to a witness from prosecutors prompted jurors to be escorted out the courtroom, the Chicago Tribune reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Judge Edward Burmila asked Peterson's defense team to consider the testimony of Thomas Pontarelli be stricken from the record as part of a compromise to their motion for a mistrial with prejudice. If granted, Peterson could not be retried again on the same charges.

    During the trial in Joliet, Ill., Will County Assistant State's Attorney Kathleen Patton asked Pontarelli about Peterson being angry with him for helping his ex-wife, Kathleen Savio, change some locks in her home.


    Peterson, a former Chicago-area police officer, is on trial for the murder of Savio, who was found dead in her bathtub in 2004. 

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Patton asked Pontarelli, who lived next door to Savio, if he had felt intimidated by Peterson. Pontarelli replied he had been, saying "yes ... he accused me of changing the locks. I said I didn't, but I got his message yesterday. "

    Asked what the "message" was, Pontarelli told jurors about a 2004 incident where he found a .38-caliber bullet in his driveway, prompting outrage by defense attorney Steven Greenberg.

    Greenberg immediately objected, the Tribune reported.

    After Pontarelli and the jurors left the courtroom, Burmila asked Patton if she would be able to demonstrate that Peterson had been the one who left the bullet.

    She told him she could not. 

    "What is the purpose of you trying to let the jury think that Mr. Peterson put a bullet in the driveway of Mr. Pontarelli." Burmila told Patton. "Why would you do that? You are going to leave the jury with the impression that the defendant put it there." 

    "This is not negligence or over zealotry, this is intentional," Greenberg said.

    Drew Peterson trial: No hit man testimony allowed, judge rules

    Prosecutors argued they had not tried to poison the jury.

    Burmila told prosecutors the statement about the bullet was not supported by any evidence and that their actions were "very troubling."

    "The state's argument makes absolutely no sense to the court whatsoever," he said.

    Savio's death was initially ruled an accident, but suspicions were raised after the disappearance of Peterson's fourth wife, Stacy, in 2007.

    Her body has never been found and she is presumed dead. Peterson maintains that she ran away with another man.

    The trial has been a heated contest between both sides from the start, with the defense motioning for a mistrial on the first day and prosecutors making 25 objections during the defense's opening statement. 

    Pontarelli testified that he helped Savio install a deadbolt lock on her bedroom door in 2002. He said Peterson asked him not to help his ex-wife and to not change the locks on the front door, to which Pontarelli said he did not do.  

    Earlier this week Pontarelli's wife, Mary, testified her son had changed the locks to Savio's front door.

    Thomas Pontarelli told jurors of an incident while helping Savio move some of Peterson's belongings into the garage one day, when Peterson arrived and told him "Any friend of hers is an enemy of mine."

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    Pontarelli recalled the night that he, Mary, his son Nick and Peterson discovered Savio's body. He said he entered the bathroom after hearing a scream and saw her lying in a clean, and "pristine" bathtub.

    He testified that after Peterson checked her pulse, he made a phone call, telling the person on the other line "people were going to think he did it."

    The Tribune reported defense attorney Joel Brodsky would not say whether the trial would continue.

    "The ball is always in the the judge's court," he said.

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    21 comments

    Could we get some competent attorneys to put this predator away?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: chicago, crime, murder-trial, mistrial, drew-peterson, commentid-mistrial

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