Read Erased: Missing Women, Murdered Wives Online
Authors: Marilee Strong
Tags: #Violence in Society, #General, #Murderers, #Case studies, #United States, #Psychology, #Women's Studies, #Murder, #Uxoricide, #Pregnancy & Childbirth, #True Crime, #Social Science, #Crimes against, #Pregnant Women, #Health & Fitness
E R A S E D
Amber was so impressed by what she considered his genuine grief
that she took his hand and comforted him, assured him that she was
not mad. How could she be when he had suffered such a terrible
loss and made such a painful confession? When he saw that she
was buying his story, he quickly regained his composure. She asked
him if he was ready for another relationship, and his response was
emphatic: ‘‘God, yes!’’
Strangely, Scott claimed to have spent the previous weekend sailing
on the bay with some friends. ‘‘I just had a horrible weekend, and
it wasn’t fun for anybody because I had this on my mind,’’ he said,
although withholding any mention of Shawn’s confrontation and
ultimatum.
For their last date on December 14, the night of the Christmas
formal, Scott was back to his old practiced self. He showed up at
Amber’s door with three dozen red roses, then pulled off one bud
and began rubbing the petals around her breasts. During the week,
Shawn had confessed to Amber what she had learned about Scott, and
Amber interrupted Scott’s seduction to ask if he would have made
his confession to her if Shawn hadn’t forced his hand. He claimed he
had planned to tell her the truth when he returned from his business
trip to Europe at the end of January.
‘‘I live a certain lifestyle, and I can see you living that lifestyle, too,’’
Scott told her. He then cryptically added that he was in the process
of making some big decisions and hoped that when he returned
from his trip, she would say yes to whatever he asked of her without
question.
Scott rushed off the next afternoon, telling Amber he was headed
to Arizona and New Mexico on business. In fact, he had to get
home to have dinner with his wife and in-laws. The four of them
happened to have a long conversation that evening about fishing. Ron
Grantski is such a fishing fanatic that he keeps a pole in his car at all
times, just in case he happens to find himself near a good fishing spot.
Sharon hardly ever goes with him, but she had accompanied him that
morning, and they laughed at the description of her gamely trying to
pass the time reading the newspaper and ward off the morning chill
while Ron happily fished. Scott mentioned nothing about having
just purchased a boat. Neither did Laci, even though the defense at
trial would claim she knew all about the boat, had even been to the
warehouse to see it.
A Collision Course
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It was the last time Sharon Rocha would ever see her daughter.
Laci proudly showed her the nursery and wanted desperately for
her mother to feel the baby kick, mentioning how impatiently Scott
would always snatch his hand away when she asked him to feel
Conner move inside her. Sharon kept her hand on Laci’s stomach for
a long time, but never did feel the baby stir. She finally laid her head
against her daughter’s belly and spoke to the grandchild she would
never get a chance to know.
‘‘Hello, little Conner,’’ she said. ‘‘I can’t wait to meet you.’’
The lie Scott used to cancel plans with Laci the night before in
order to take Amber to the formal dance was that he had to pick up
his boss at the San Francisco airport. There had been very high winds
that night, and when Sharon asked him how the drive had been, he
quickly changed the subject, turning on his well-practiced charm.
Just as he had at their wedding, he raised his glass, toasting Sharon
for giving him her wonderful daughter.
C H A P T E R
T H I R T E E N
Sex, Lies, and Audiotape
Q Idon’tbelievethatScottPetersoneverlovedAmber
Frey. I doubt that he is capable of truly loving anyone. But he needed
her to love him, to believe in him in order to maintain the illusion
that even after committing an unspeakable crime he was still the
Golden Boy—the sensitive, chivalrous, rose-bearing knight.
For the first two weeks after the murder, before Amber let Scott
know that she was aware he had a missing wife, she was his refuge
from the maelstrom swirling around him. She was like a blank slate,
or so he believed, untouched by the horror he had set in motion, the
only person with whom he could carry on his pose of normality. With
Amber he could continue to play out his fantasies and be whoever he
wanted to be.
It was stunning to sit in court and listen to his tape-recorded
phone calls with Amber as the jury was hearing them. After two
and a half months of often confusingly presented testimony—one
of the inherent difficulties of putting on a circumstantial case—here
was Peterson himself speaking in a way he never would have had he
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Sex, Lies, and Audiotape
2 6 9
chosen to take the stand. Until she forced him to give up his ruse by
leading him to believe a friend was about to tell her his true identity,
he regaled her with richly atmospheric tales of his fictitious European
revels: the quaint cobblestone streets, the magnificent churches, the
rich French cuisine that he fretted was turning him into ‘‘Pudge Boy.’’
In between the elaborate lies are moments of truth so revealing
they seemed like free association. He rhapsodizes about the book he
was reading at the time Laci disappeared, Jack Kerouac’s
On the Road
,
a tale of the ultimate rambling man, commenting on ‘‘how I never
had a prolonged period of freedom like that from responsibility.’’ He
raves about what he termed ‘‘the best movie ever made,’’
The Shining
,
a Stephen King story about a man who goes mad and attempts to kill
his wife and young son. He quotes a line from the Ron Howard film
A Beautiful Mind
, in which a mentally disturbed and socially inept
math genius approaches a woman without any attempt at romantic
seduction and says exactly what is on his mind: ‘‘I don’t know what
I have to do for prevention, but I’m trying to get to the point of
intercourse as fast as I can.’’
‘‘That’s somehow appealing, just to, you know, cut the crap,’’
Scott says. ‘‘Just the clarity of saying, hey, screw the rest of it, let me
just tell you what I want.’’
‘‘Love doesn’t mean two people can be together forever,’’ he tells
Amber at another point. When she tries to insert a serious note into
Scott’s boyish babblings, suggesting it must be hard for him to be
spending his first holidays without his wife, Scott cuts her off curtly,
and perhaps with more honesty than he intended. ‘‘Well, I don’t
think about it,’’ he says. He is capable of compartmentalizing even
the act of murder.
Knowing when these tapes were recorded and what was really
going on in Scott’s life at that time induced a dizzying sense of
cognitive dissonance. What was most damning was what was clearly
not
on Scott’s mind: any sense of concern for his missing wife and
child. He was a man without a care in the world.
Curiously, Scott’s need for Amber seemed to grow into near
obsession
after
she let him know she was on to him. Rather than
breaking off contact with her—which he surely would have done if
she meant nothing to him and should have done if he had followed
his lawyer’s advice and the dictates of common sense—he subjected
himself to her relentless interrogation, hour after hour, day after day,
week after week. Why did he keep coming back for more?
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E R A S E D
I believe that in a strange way, Amber was the closest thing he had
to a confidant. I say strange because he remained to the end deceitful
and evasive with her. Yet as he became increasingly isolated by the
suspicion surrounding him, an odd intimacy developed between
them. He was desperate to make her believe him, to keep her on his
side, to win back her affection and approval, but he knew he was
not fooling her. Amber might have been working for the police, but
her feelings were raw and direct. There was a realness between them,
however painful, that Scott hadn’t shared with another soul.
Although Scott never admitted any involvement in Laci’s dis-appearance, he refused to answer even the simplest questions and
instead offered strange and cryptic deflections. A typical exchange,
from January 7:
‘‘Amber, you don’t know all the facts.’’
‘‘Well, then why don’t you share them, Scott?’’
‘‘I can’t.’’
‘‘Why?’’
‘‘I can’t tell you everything now.’’
‘‘Scott, from what I gather, the whole nation is wanting to find
Laci.’’
‘‘Definitely. She does not deserve, you know, she’s—’’
‘‘She does not deserve what?’’
‘‘She was abducted, disappeared, and she needs to be found . . .’’
‘‘. . .That all too familiar silence,’’ Amber interjects sadly after
Scott drifts off into silence. ‘‘I know why I’m silent, but why are you
so silent?’’
‘‘Because I said what . . . what I can say and what I need to say. . . .
And if that is not enough for you, it’s not enough for me, but it’s
right for now.’’
He uses bizarre logic and tortured, abstract syntax. At one point
he insists that he never cheated on Amber (apparently overlooking
the glaring fact that he was married). At another point he tells Amber
‘‘I have always told you the truth . . . with exceptions, obviously.’’ He
won’t say his ‘‘home’’ but ‘‘the house in Modesto’’ or ‘‘the house
where Laci disappeared,’’ won’t call Laci his wife but ‘‘the woman
I’m married to.’’ At times it seems as if he is choosing his words
carefully to leave open every possible avenue of defense. By refusing
to admit to Amber that Conner was his son, was he simply revealing
the lack of any human connection he felt toward his unborn child?
Or was he preserving his ability to argue that Laci may have become
Sex, Lies, and Audiotape
2 7 1
pregnant by someone else who did her harm? In Scott’s mind, that
may have seemed like a viable argument for reasonable doubt, as he
was not expecting Conner’s body ever to be found and his paternity
established.
Rather than directly incriminating facts, most of the evidence
in the Peterson case pointed to what is known in legal terms as a
‘‘consciousness of guilt’’—that Scott knew his wife was dead and
was moving on with his life without her. The defense argued that
Scott sold Laci’s Jeep within weeks of her disappearance, trading it
in for a truck for himself, because police had impounded his own,
and he needed transportation, both for work and to look for Laci.
Besides, according to Jackie Peterson, Laci herself termed the car ‘‘a
piece of shit’’ and wanted something safer when the baby arrived.
The defense also came up with an excuse for why Scott attempted
to put his and Laci’s house on the market just as quickly, claiming
his wife would never want to live there again after such a traumatic
experience (although the kidnapping was supposed to have happened
at some location outside the house).
No one attempted an explanation, however, for why he offered to
sell their home furnished. Surely Laci would want her furniture, which
included expensive Tiffany lamps and other treasured heirlooms from
her paternal grandmother.
It is rare, indeed, for families of genuinely missing persons ever
to move or change their phone number while a loved one is still
missing—in hopes that the person will one day turn up or at least try
to call for help. Parents of missing children almost always preserve
their child’s room both for evidentiary purposes, to preserve articles
scent dogs can use for searches, and for sentimental reasons, as a way
of freezing time and hanging on to their memories of their lost child.
Marc Klaas and his second wife, Violet, who shared custody of
his daughter, Polly, with her mother at the time of her kidnapping,
didn’t change a thing in Polly’s room at their house for five years
after her death. ‘‘We just couldn’t,’’ said Klaas, who has since worked
with scores of other families with missing children. ‘‘That’s how it is
for almost every family whose child has been kidnapped.’’
Peterson did not merely seem as though he couldn’t wait to get
on with his life: nothing associated with Laci or Conner seemed
to hold any sentimental value for him. He continued to talk about
a future with Amber ‘‘after everything was resolved’’ with Laci,
while at the same time hitting on other women—from Anne Bird’s
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E R A S E D
teenage babysitter to the house sitter at the home of Anne’s adoptive
parents, where he went to lay low after looking for an apartment
in the Bay Area under an assumed name. When police served a
second series of search warrants six weeks after Laci disappeared,
they found wedding photos that had originally been inside his office
stuffed unceremoniously into a wastebasket in a rented storage unit.
Conner’s nursery had basically been turned into a storage room as
well, with furniture from Scott’s shuttered warehouse and piles of
linens crammed willy-nilly into the space.
A separate wiretap that police obtained to listen in on all Peterson’s
calls captured Scott in early February 2003 telling a supporter that he’d
spent the previous four days at a retreat for grief counseling, when
in fact he had traveled to Mexico for a fertilizer conference—where
detectives feared he might forever flee their clutches.
Scott also did not seem concerned about potential sightings of his
wife after she went missing. Around the time of the Mexico trip, a
clerk at a grocery store in Washington State reported that a pregnant
woman who looked like Laci came into the store claiming to have
been kidnapped. Jackie called Scott and left a message urging him to
go up and review the store’s surveillance tape, offering the name of a
relative with whom he could stay in the area. The wiretap picked up
Scott chuckling at his mother’s message and erasing it midstream.
He was concerned, however, when Modesto police reported in
early January that divers using sonar technology detected what they
believed might be a body in the bay waters near the Berkeley Marina.
Police were exceedingly tight lipped throughout their investigation,
but this information they purposely released, making a point of
saying that the weather would not permit them to return and attempt
to retrieve the possible body for a couple of days. They wanted to
turn the heat up on Scott, to see what he would do.
Rather than checking in with police or going to the marina to
see firsthand what they had discovered, Scott rented a car and hit
the road, covering more than thirteen hundred miles over the next
three days. It was one of the rare instances when he actually seemed
to be afraid. As when he was forced to ‘‘confess’’ to Amber that he
had been married, he wasn’t in control of the situation: he didn’t
know if police had indeed found Laci. Police later reconstructed his
movements, based on cell sites he used to make phone calls while on
the road. To each and every person he spoke to during that period
of time, including his own mother, he lied about his whereabouts,
Sex, Lies, and Audiotape
2 7 3
giving everyone a different and apparently randomly selected location
hundreds of miles away from where he really was.
It was Sharon Rocha who inadvertently let Peterson know he was
in the clear. At that point still believing in his innocence, she called
his cell phone to pass along the good news: the murky image picked
up by sonar on the muddy bay floor was not a body but an old boat
anchor. The wiretap preserved his reaction. As Scott listened to his
mother-in-law’s message, he let out a whistle of relief. He was back
in control.
When the bodies washed up on their own in mid-April 2003—first
a baby’s and then a woman’s, a day later and a mile apart along the
East Bay shoreline—Scott once again took flight. During the several
days it took for authorities to identify the remains through DNA
testing, he never once called police to inquire whether they could
be his wife and child or came to the bay to see for himself, even
though he told his half sister that he was just forty-five minutes from
the scene when she called him with news of the macabre discovery.
Instead he drove as far as he could in the opposite direction, to San
Diego, where he was just minutes away from the Mexican border.
Scott had by now discovered the secret GPS transmitter police
had implanted on his truck. He left the truck with relatives, who
drove it around town while he used a car he purchased that week
under his mother’s name—telling the skeptical seller that the name
Jacquelyn Peterson was a ‘‘Boy-Named-Sue kind of thing.’’ After
several panicked days trying to locate him, surveillance teams finally
spotted Scott in his new car. They didn’t even recognize him at first,
as he had grown a goatee and lightened his hair, beard, and eyebrows
to an unnatural orange hue.
On April 18, 2003, the bodies were positively identified as Laci
and Conner. As an arrest warrant was being prepared, undercover
officers from the California Highway Patrol and the Department of
Justice struggled to keep Peterson in their sights as he led them on a
wild 170-mile trek over several counties using every evasive driving
technique in the book in an attempt to shake his tail—darting across
several lanes of traffic to exit the freeway, then pulling right back on;
making sudden U-turns in the middle of the street; abruptly pulling
over to the side of the road, then getting back on after the cars trailing
him were forced to pass. At one point he was driving so fast on a
winding road, seventy-five in a thirty-five-miles-per-hour zone, that
he caused one of the surveillance cars to fishtail and nearly wreck.
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