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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:11 pm |
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News Articles -- No posts please
lets try to keep conversation off this thread, so news is easy to follow
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:15 pm |
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Wife of Bolingbrook police sergeant missing
State Police are searching for the wife of a southwest suburban Bolingbrook police sergeant.
"Because he's one of our officers, we thought it would be better to have an independent agency investigating," Bolingbrook Mayor Roger Claar said of the state's involvement in the disappearance of Stacy Peterson
It was not clear how long Peterson, the wife of Bolingbrook police Sgt. Drew Peterson, has been missing. Illinois State Police Trooper Mark Dorencz at first declined to comment on the matter, but later said the state is handling the case as a missing persons investigation.
The Bolingbrook police department said Drew Peterson was not scheduled to work Monday. A message left for him at the department went unreturned.
According to an Illinois State Police release, Stacy Ann Peterson was last heard from at 10 a.m. Sunday. She was supposed to help a friend do some painting, but never showed up.
Peterson is described as a 5-foot-2-inches, 100 pound, white female with brown hair and eyes. She was last seen wearing a red jogging suit. She has a tattoo of a blue and yellow carnation on the small of her back and a scar across her stomach, the release said.
According to the release, Stacy Peterson frequents Joliet Junior College.
Stacy Peterson’s family reported her missing at 4 a.m. Monday. Drew Peterson's previous wife, 40-year-old Kathleen Savio, was found dead in the dry bathtub of her Pheasant Chase home in March 2004. Drew Peterson and Savio were divorced and he was returning their two sons to their home after a weekend visit, but no one answered the locked door.
Peterson went to a neighbor's to call a locksmith. Once entry was gained, the neighbor went inside and found Savio's body in a waterless bathtub.
The investigation revealed Savio drowned. Her fingertips showed pruning from being submerged in water and her hair was wet when she was found. While there was no water in the bathtub, it may have drained out over time, as the plug was down, investigators speculated.
A coroner's jury ruled the death accidental. State Police investigated that case as well. No charges were filed.
According to one official, Savio was Drew Peterson's third wife, and Stacy Peterson is his fourth. More than 20 years ago, Drew Peterson was fired from the Bolingbrook Police Department after the village board of police and fire commissioners found him guilty of disobedience, conducting a self-assigned investigation, failure to report a bribe immediately and official misconduct. He had been indicted two months earlier on charges of official misconduct and failure to report a bribe. Peterson was working under the auspices of the Metropolitan Area Narcotics Squad at the time. Indictments alleged he solicited drugs in exchange for information about his agency.
The charges later were dropped. Special prosecutor Raymond Bolden said at the time the charges were not provable.
Drew Peterson won reinstatement with the department in March 1986. Judge Edwin Grabiec ruled police and fire commissioners lacked sufficient evidence to find Peterson guilty of the charges.
Anyone with information should call ISP Joliet District at (815) 726-6377
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:17 pm |
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Bolingbrook Cop Speaks About Wife's Disappearance
Husband Says 23-Year-Old Is 'Where She Wants To Be'
BOLINGBROOK, Ill. (CBS) ― Bolingbrook police Sgt. Drew Peterson commented Wednesday for the first time about the disappearance of his young wife Stacy Peterson. Meanwhile, prosecutors are taking a fresh look at the death of his ex-wife three years ago.
Sgt. Peterson says it was an unusual but fatal slip in the tub that caused the death of Kathleen Savio. He also took time to lash out on the media for, in his words, being more interested in the death of his ex-wife than in finding Stacy Peterson.
As CBS 2 West Suburban Bureau Chief Mike Puccinelli reports, at Stacy Peterson's Bolingbrook home police were on standby in marked and unmarked cars throughout the day Wednesday. While Drew Peterson and his kids remained holed up inside with no plans to go trick-or-treating. But CBS 2 did talk with his friend briefly outside the home.
"Drew is doing the best he can in a situation like this," Richard Mims said.
Drew and Stacy Peterson have been married for four years. She disappeared seemingly without a trace. Sgt. Peterson didn't want to go on camera but he did allow CBS 2 inside for a 10-minute conversation.
He described his last conversation with Stacy on Sunday night as being very unusual. He says she seemed "snotty."
He also said that her demeanor changed after one of her sisters died recently from cancer. He said she'd been under the care of a psychiatrist who had put her on the anti-anxiety drugs.
He also said he had no reason to suspect foul play in his wife's disappearance.
But Stacy Peterson's only surviving sister, Cassandra Cales, says Stacy lived in fear of the veteran police officer.
"She feared for her life," Cales said. "She wanted a divorce and was talking about getting a divorce."
Cales says her sister planned to meet with a divorce attorney on Monday. On Sunday she had planned to help a friend paint her home. When she never showed up, Cales started worrying.
"She told me if anything happened, if she disappeared she wanted somebody to know," Cales said.
So Cales called police before dawn Monday. Sgt. Peterson said he believes Stacy is "where she wants to be." He also said after she sees the media reports she'll either go deeper underground or she'll surface.
Police have been searching with canines and heat-seeking planes for Stacy Peterson. Sgt. Peterson said he thought it would be "very unusual" for Stacy to leave her children. He also said he has lived an honorable life and now people are looking at him with suspicion. He said that hurts.
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:18 pm |
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Missing Wife's Car Found At Suburban Airport
BOLINGBROOK ,Ill. (WBBM) -- Clow Airport in Bolingbrook is one focus of the investigation into the disappearance of Stacy Peterson.
WBBM's Steve Miller reports.
Bolingbrook police say Sergeant Drew Peterson told them he found his wife's car at the airport Sunday night.
A camera is aimed at the parking lot of the airport, and investigators have been trying to figure out if they can get images that will yield some clues.
The problem, says Clow Airport Manager Joe DePaulo, is the the camera aimed at the parking lot is only a Web cam. Meaning, it does not record anything.
DePaulo says investigators have been to the airport at least twice to try to get images from the Web cam.
As far as flights out, DePaulo says the Bolingbrook airport has no tower and keeps no records of most planes that go in and out.
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:19 pm |
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Stacy Peterson Case: Cops Question Husband, Remove SUV, Call
Stacy Ann Peterson has been missing since Sunday and now police have swarmed to the home of her husband Sgt. Drew Peterson and video from news reports are showing police towing away and SUV and a car from the man's home. Cops apparently received a search warrant as well as they now are searching the home and have dogs there as well trying to pick up a scent from the missing woman.
Stacy Peterson Case: Cops Question Husband, Remove SUV, Call in Dogs
Drew Peterson is maintaining that his 23-year old wife left of her own accord and broadcast reports from fox News claim that he believes that she may have ran off with another man. It has also been reported that they have a tumultuous marriage.
***
Fox News is reporting that there is no arrest warrant, just a search warrant. The police are remaining tight lipped on why they are at the house but the broadcast video shows a very thorough search both inside and outside of the house.
The Chicago Sun Times is reporting that the husband, who is a police officer that is 53 years old (thirty years older than Stacy) has told reporters that she was seeing a psychiatrist, taking Effexor, a prescription anti-depressant medication and struggling with "mood issues" since the cancer death last year of her sister, Peterson said during a brief interview in the couple's Bolingbrook home.
***
He says that when she was fifteen years old that her mother "took off." The police officer also said "she's where she wants to be," according to Fox News. The report details that Drew said that she took a bikini and a passport and possible even cash when she "left." Family members of the missing woman say they suspect foul play.
She is five foot two inches tall and weighs one hundred pounds.
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:21 pm |
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Stacy Peterson search continues, husband Drew Peterson quest
Atlanta, GA 11/02/2007 07:31 PM GMT (FINDITT)
The search for Stacy Peterson continues as divers search a pond nearby Stacy and her husband, Drew Peterson’s home. Stacy vanished two days ago and was reported missing after she failed to show up to help a relative paint and her family could not get in touch with her.
Police say there is no sign of foul play, but Stacy’s family insists she would not have voluntarily left her two young children. Drew, a Bolingbrook police sergeant, is not a formal suspect or person of interest at this time but was taken to the police station for questioning.
Police arrived at the Peterson home Thursday afternoon with a search warrant. The 53-year-old has been married three times. In 2004 his ex-wife Kathleen Savio was found dead in her bathtub. It was ruled as an accidental death, but police are now reopening the investigation.
Family members say Stacy feared for her life after telling Drew she wanted a divorce two days prior to going missing. Drew insists Stacy left with a passport, cash and a bikini.
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:22 pm |
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Friends and family search for missing police officer's wife
Associated Press - November 3, 2007 11:13 PM ET
BOLINGBROOK, Ill. (AP) - Family and friends of the missing wife of a suburban Chicago police sergeant have not given up their search for Stacy Peterson.
They've set up a Web site in hopes of finding the 23-year-old who was reported missing earlier this week.
Authorities say Peterson's husband, Drew, is cooperating and that they've found no evidence of wrongdoing. He's a sergeant in the Bolingbrook police department.
Peterson has said his wife called him Sunday night to tell him she was leaving. He thinks it was for another man.
Authorities used divers to search a pond near the Peterson home. Illinois State Police say authorities are receiving many tips and hope to find Stacy Peterson alive.
Meanwhile, authorities have started reviewing files on the death of Sergeant Peterson's ex-wife. She was found dead in her bathtub in 2004.
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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woebedamned
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 5:23 pm |
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Family seeks search help
November 4, 2007
By TONY GRAF STAFF WRITER
BOLINGBROOK -- The search for a missing Bolingbrook mother continues this morning, as her loved ones are inviting the public to help.
Stacy Peterson, 23, of Bolingbrook was last seen a week ago today. On Saturday, her sister Cassandra Cales and her fellow searchers looked around many places in the Bolingbrook area between Weber Road and Illinois 53, and Boughton and Royce roads.
The number of people in the search party is growing, Cales said.
"Today we had 60, but tomorrow we'll have way more," she said Saturday night.
People who want to help may show up at 9 this morning at 5 Pheasant Chase Court in Bolingbrook.
That address, right next to Peterson's home, is the home of neighbor Sharon Bychowski.
"We're going to meet here on Sunday, and we're going to go out looking for Stacy. We're organizing a party to leave fliers and to search for her," Bychowski said.
Bychowski also said a professional search team will arrive late today, and will be in place to start searching the Bolingbrook area on Monday morning.
On Saturday, Bychowski had a table set up on Pheasant Chase Court to register people to search, get e-mail addresses in order to send updates, and register where searchers are going so people do not duplicate efforts unnecessarily.
"We want to cover as much area here as we can," Bychowski said.
On Saturday, Cales and her search party recovered a barrel in a detention pond, but the barrel turned up empty.
"As soon as we saw it, we called the police," Cales said. "The police got it out, inspected it. It was nothing."
Cales and her helpers searched from 8 a.m. to about 8 p.m. Saturday. Late Saturday, Cales was reviewing where she and her helpers had searched, and where they might search today.
A little after 8 p.m., Cales said she was planning to go back out and search even more.
Stacy Peterson is the wife of Bolingbrook police Sgt. Drew Peterson. A photograph that appeared Friday in The Herald News showed the couple with their children Anthony and Lacy, and Drew's children from his third marriage, Kris and Tom.
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Damn it All!!!!
Joined: 15 Aug 2006
Posts: 6309
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gwen
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 6:03 pm |
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Wife #4’s disappearance raises questions about #3
Stacy Peterson’s relatives say she was unhappy, but would have taken kids
By Mike Celizic
TODAYShow.com contributor
updated 9:50 a.m. ET, Wed., Nov. 7, 2007
Stacy Peterson wanted out of a marriage to a police sergeant 30 years her senior, but she would not have left her suburban Chicago home without her kids, her half sister told TODAY on Wednesday.
“I don’t believe she would ever leave her children,” Kerry Simmons told TODAY co-host Meredith Vieira. “She loved those kids to death.”
The 23-year-old Peterson is the fourth wife of Bolingbrook, Ill., Police Sgt. Drew Peterson, 53. Stacy Peterson’s disappearance has prompted new questions about the death of Peterson’s third wife, Kathleen Savio, who was found dead in her bathtub shortly after Peterson told her he was having an affair with Stacy and had gotten her pregnant.
The 2004 death was ruled an accidental drowning, although the tub was bone-dry when Savio's nude body was found in it.
Stacy Peterson had two children by Drew Peterson, Anthony, 4, and Lacy, 2. She was reported missing to Bolingbrook police on Sunday, Oct. 28. Her husband said that she had told him two days earlier that she wanted a divorce. He said she went to help friends paint their house and never returned.
Police initially treated it as a missing person’s case, not searching the couple’s home until last Thursday. Her family and friends, though, are convinced that the young woman is dead and that her husband is responsible.
“She told many [people] that if anything happened to her, it was not an accident,” one relative told NBC News.
Simmons confirmed that, telling Vieira, “It was the end of pretty much every conversation that we had when we were together or when we spoke on the phone, that one day if she never answered her phone or if we ever couldn’t get ahold of her, we would need to look for her, that something happened.”
Debby Forgue, Stacy Peterson’s stepsister, told Vieira that the missing woman had said the same things to her.
Deteriorating marriage
Friends and family members have told the media that Stacy Peterson, who had been abandoned by her own mother in 1998, had fallen in love with Drew Peterson when she was 19. They have said that the marriage was happy at first, but after the birth of her two children, she had complained that her husband was controlling and abusive and would not allow her to go anywhere without him. They said she kept a journal documenting the deteriorating marriage.
Stacy Peterson’s family has been searching for her from the beginning, recently enlisting the help of EquuSearch, a Texas-based volunteer search and recovery organization. More than a week after she was reported missing, the Illinois State Police joined the search, although they are still treating the disappearance as a missing person's case. In addition to two searches of the couple’s home, police divers have also searched a pond at a nearby airport where Drew Peterson has a small airplane.
The police sergeant has not helped in the search, maintaining that his wife told him she was leaving him. “I believe she's not missing,” he told reporters in Illinois. “She's where she wants to be. I have no reason to suspect foul play."
Drew Peterson still has custody of the children, and Forgue and Simmons said they have not been allowed to speak with them. Nor have they spoken with Drew Peterson.
“We haven’t spoke to him, we haven’t heard from him, he hasn’t been out there helping,” Simmons said. “Nothing.”
The sisters said that they are satisfied that police have finally taken the disappearance seriously, but admitted to frustration at the delays in starting a criminal investigation. Once Drew Peterson was considered a suspect, police also reopened the investigation into the death of his third wife. When Savio died, he collected a million-dollar insurance settlement.
While maintaining his innocence, Drew Peterson has taken to wearing sunglasses and a bandanna over his face when he goes out and has told reporters it’s to protect his identity.
Asked if he’s concerned about being the focus of the investigation, he told “The Chicago Tribune,” “Why should I be nervous? I did nothing wrong.”
Simmons and Forgue said if Stacy Peterson were still alive, she would have contacted friends and family.
“Hopefully, we’ll find her,” Simmons told Vieira, “but it doesn’t look good.”
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21668534/?GT1=10547
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AKA Gagal_05
Joined: 24 Feb 2007
Posts: 15239
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 6:12 pm |
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Transcript of Dr. Baden's analysis of the 3rd wife's autopsy report:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,308199,00.html
Mysterious Death of Drew Peterson's Third Wife
Monday , November 05, 2007
This is a rush transcript from "On the Record ," November 2, 2007. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated.
GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, HOST: Stacy Peterson, wife number 4 of Sergeant Drew Peterson, is missing. She has not been seen since Sunday. And complicating matters for Sergeant Peterson tonight is that his third wife's bathtub death is now being re-investigated. A prosecutor has re-opened the investigation into her death. It was declared an accident at the time. The coroner said she drowned, but did she?
Joining us is forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden. Dr. Baden, we have gotten a copy of the autopsy report from wife number three's family.
DR. MICHAEL BADEN, FORENSIC PATHOLOGIST: Right.
VAN SUSTEREN: I take it you've looked at it now.
BADEN: I have it right here.
VAN SUSTEREN: And your thoughts on it?
BADEN: It is not an accident. The hair, her head hair, was soaked in blood, as the medical examiner says, and she had a laceration, a blunt force laceration on the top of her head. She had a dozen other black-and- blue bruises and scraping abrasions of the extremities and of the abdomen. It looks as if she — from the description that she was beaten up, apart from drowning. Her heart was good. Her brain was good. There were no drugs in her body on toxicology. There's no reason for her to have drowned. Adults don't drown if they're in good health.
VAN SUSTEREN: Dr. Baden, what would possess a coroner to call it accident? When I looked at it and I saw the hair full of blood, I thought, What's that? But I figured I just — you know, I went to law school and not medical school. What would possess this coroner to say this was an accident?
BADEN: Well, the doctor who did the autopsy, the pathologist who did the autopsy just said drowning. The non-physician coroner, who's elected, determined that it was also an accident. And he just made a mistake. I don't know...
VAN SUSTEREN: How is that a mistake? I mean — I mean, you look at it — I mean — I mean, is it an easy mistake, I should say? I mean, is this a close call, as you look at this?
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: No.
VAN SUSTEREN: I mean, you don't have the body to examine. You're looking at the report. But is this a close call, in your mind?
BADEN: No, it's not a close call. It should not have been called an accident.
VAN SUSTEREN: Well, then how — then how can you say it was a mistake, if it's not a close call?
BADEN: Well, because it depends on the qualification of the coroner. Medical examiners have to be physicians. Coroners are often funeral directors.
VAN SUSTEREN: But the doctor who did the autopsy, when he hears that it was — it was in the news that it was an accident, I'm sure. I mean — I mean, what was he thinking of...
BADEN: Right.
VAN SUSTEREN: What was the — the man or woman who did the autopsy thinking when the coroner, who's not a doctor, says this is an accident? Wouldn't you think that someone would speak up, if it's as obvious as you say?
BADEN: Well, three years later, I think that the — an investigation is now being done to answer that very question that you're raising, Greta. And if that question had been looked into three years ago, possibly his wife wouldn't be — have disappeared at this time.
VAN SUSTEREN: It — and I suppose that it would make — it might be helpful — would it be helpful to exhume her, if she wasn't cremated? We only have 15 seconds.
BADEN: It might be — it would be, and under these circumstances, to see further whether there were any fractures or other injuries that were overlooked initially. There's no evidence that they took X-rays, for example. It would be important to exhume the body and do X-rays to see if there are any subtle fractures.
VAN SUSTEREN: And I must admit, if I were the prosecutor, I'd also take a look at the coroner and the medical examiner to see what was what, if it's...
BADEN: Absolutely.
VAN SUSTEREN: ... as obvious as you say, because I'll tell you, you know, it certainly doesn't look good, even as a layperson reading it, and now I hear you say this. Dr. Baden, thank you, sir.
BADEN: Thank you, Greta.
VIDEO
http://www.foxnews.com/
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 6:13 pm |
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Court filings tell story
November 6, 2007
By STEWART WARREN STAFF WRITER
JOLIET -- Although we don't know much about Stacy Peterson's disappearance, we know other things.
They are found in files at the Will County Courthouse.
Knit together, these facts tell something about Bolingbrook Police Sgt. Drew Peterson, the missing woman's much-older husband. For example, while married to another woman, Drew Peterson, 53, owned several businesses and life insurance policies -- and that third wife later was found drowned in a bathtub without any water.
Fourth wife Stacy Peterson, a 23-year-old mother of two, hasn't been seen since Oct. 28. The young woman was supposed to help family members paint a house, but never showed. Drew Peterson claims his wife simply deserted him, but a family member reported her missing.
Savio's death
In early 2002, Drew Peterson and Kathleen Savio, the third wife, began divorce proceedings, according to court documents. They had been married about 10 years and had two children. In late 2003, Will County Judge Susan O'Leary dissolved their marriage. Their divorce was "bifurcated," in this case meaning they were allowed to divorce before their common property was divided, according to court documents.
Then in March 2004, a neighbor found Savio dead in the dry bathtub at her Bolingbrook home. It was an accident, Will County Coroner Patrick K. O'Neil ruled. The 40-year-old woman suffered blunt trauma and a lacerated scalp, injuries consistent with a fall that could have knocked her unconscious, according to the inquest. By that time, Drew Peterson already was involved with the then-Stacy Cales, who was 17 when they met.
After Savio died, there was a Will County probate case to settle her financial affairs. Well-known local lawyer Dick Kavanagh was the public administrator of Will County, a governor-appointed position. Simply put, the public administrator tries to find the fairest way to settle an estate after a death, among other things.
A will emerges
A year after Savio's death and the beginning of the legal proceedings to settle her affairs, a will emerged. It was submitted in court on March 23, 2005. Hand-written in capital letters, it was scrawled across two pieces of lined notebook paper and witnessed by Alex J. Morelli and Gary L. Marcolina.
A man named Alex Morelli is a Bolingbrook police officer, and Herald News archives show a man named Gary Marcolina is a developer in the Crest Hill area.
"This day March 2nd 1997 Drew Walter Peterson and Kathleen Savio Peterson, both being of sound body and mind, do hereby bequeath all of our worldly possessions to each other in the event of either of our individual deaths," begins the will filed with court documents.
If they died together, the couple wanted everything to go to certain people, among them Tom and Kris Peterson, their children, and Eric Drew Peterson and Stephen Paul Peterson, Drew Peterson's children from another relationship.
The will lists some of their assets:
• A Golden Rule life insurance policy valued at $100,000
• A Monumental Life Insurance policy valued at $125,000
• A Prudential Life Insurance policy valued at $308,137.59 -- "Beneficiary Merchants Bank Oswego to pay off note for Sud's Pub in Montgomery," according to the will.
• Bolingbrook Police Pension fund of more than $50,000
• A piece of real estate listed as 9 Clay Court, Montgomery
• The Blue Lightning Corp., or Sud's Pub, 1250 S. Broadway, Montgomery
• Da Page Corp., Fast 'N' Accurate Graphics, 87 Eisenhower South, Lombard
• A quarter interest in CMYK Corp., listed as a printing business in "Lombard-Naperville," according to the will.
Division of property issues
The will names James B. Carroll, Drew Peterson's uncle, executor of the estate, according to a document filed in court by Kavanagh, who apparently had some concerns.
"After my appointment as administrator, I conferred with attorney Harry Smith with respect to the status of the property settlement portion of the divorce proceeding ... (He) advised me that there were three major issues with respect to the division of property ... 1. Whether Kathleen's estate would be entitled to any portion of Drew Peterson's pension; 2. The valuation of the business known as the Blue Lightning Corp., which has been sold with all of the proceeds going to Drew Peterson; and 3. The value of the house, and whether Kathleen Peterson's estate would be entitled to receive not only her one-half of the proceeds of any sale, but an additional portion of the remaining one-half as an offset for the cash taken by Drew Peterson from the sale of the (bar)," Kavanaugh wrote in court documents.
On April 8, 2005, Will County Judge Michael Powers entered a judgment in the financial aspects of the divorce case. It awarded Drew Peterson the Blue Lightning Corp. and all the proceeds from the sale of the couple's home, according to the court documents filed by Kavanagh. The judgment also mentions what seems to be a fourth life insurance policy.
"(It) provided that Drew Peterson would not be obligated to fund any college expenses for the minor children of the parties due to the fact that life insurance on the life of Kathleen in the amount of $1 million had been payable to the children," according to the document.
As part of the judgment, Carroll agreed that some money from Savio's estate should go to someone other than the four children. "The effect of the judgment was to transfer anywhere from $144,117.65 to $288,235.31 (one-half to all of the proceeds of the home sale) from the four children who were the beneficiaries of the estate ... to Drew Peterson," according to court documents.
Kavanagh didn't approve of that move, apparently.
"The actions of (Carroll) were not in the best interest of the estate or the beneficiaries," he wrote in a court document.
Reporter Stewart Warren can be reached at (815) 729-6068 or swarren@scn1.com
http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/heraldnews/news/636553,4_1_JO06_MISSING_S2.article
_________________
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 6:14 pm |
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SlideShow
http://www.nbc5.com/slideshow/14489909/detail.html
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Joined: 03 Sep 2006
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 6:17 pm |
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November 7th, 2007 2:35 PM Eastern
Breaking News
by Greta Van Susteren
OTR producer just reported that a grand jury has been convened to investigate the March 04 bathtub death of Sgt Drew Peterson’s wife. More news to come shortly…
http://gretawire.foxnews.com/
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 6:18 pm |
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Message from Colleague FNC’s Jamie Colby
by Greta Van Susteren
My colleague Jamie Colby (also a lawyer…and she was in Illinois last week) just messaged me that Sgt.Peterson’s wife #3 (the one who died in a bathtub) was NOT cremated. This means that the authorities may elect to exhume her body in their re- investigation. What would they look for? Dr. Baden can tell us best…but I do know one thing, they would look for fractures since that might indicate this was not an accidental death. It would not be a proof - only a clue indicating.
Of course they also will look at other important clues: hair full of blood….bruises ..
http://gretawire.foxnews.com/
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Fu-Gee-La
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 7:33 pm |
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Stacy Peterson's husband visits courts complex
Drew Peterson's lawyers: 'Nothing to say'
November 7, 2007
BY DAN ROZEK, JOE HOSEY AND STEFANO ESPOSITO
The police sergeant husband of missing Bolingbrook mother Stacy Peterson visited the Will County courthouse complex in Joliet for about two hours this afternoon.
A grand jury is meeting in the building he entered, which also houses the Will County State's Attorney's offices.
But neither Sgt. Drew Peterson nor the two lawyers who accompanied him would say what they were doing there.
"This is an on-going investigation," said attorney Fred Morelli. "We have nothing to say."
Drew Peterson -- clean shaven and dressed in a dark suit and tie -- would not respond to repeated questions from reporters. Moments later -- about 3:30 p.m. -- the sergeant and his lawyers left the courthouse complex in a gray Volkswagen.
snip-
Will County authorities expect to soon question her two stepchildren - ages 12 and 15 - to see if they can offer any information that will help solve her disappearance.
"We have plans to do that in the very near future," said Charles Pelkie, a spokesman for Will County State's Attorney James Glasgow. "We want to find out what the kids know about [her] disappearance.''
http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/639607,peterson110707.article
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***Deactivated: Pending Review***
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 7:50 pm |
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Sister of third wife speaks
Anna Marie Doman, the sister of Peterson’s previous wife, Kathleen Savio, also entered the house of his next-door neighbor and said she spoke to her former brother-in-law.
“Nobody looked at my sister’s case close enough,” Doman said. “I never got a call back (from police). It was like they couldn’t be bothered.”
Doman wants investigators to get to the bottom of the mystery surrounding Peterson’s fourth wife as well, and to determine whether her former brother-in-law had a hand in it.
“If he did it, fine. If he didn’t do it, fine,” she said. “I just want them to find out the truth.”
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/user-posts?id=8259
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Fu-Gee-La
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 7:54 pm |
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Stepmom: 'The abuse was there'
Abuse, alcoholism and instability were key characteristics of the household in which the Cales children were raised, a family member said.
It may explain why Stacy Peterson, 23, found what she thought to be stability and security in the arms of a man 30 years her senior, Bolingbrook police Sgt. Drew Peterson.
Linda Cales, 54, last saw her stepdaughter five years ago, but has remained in contact with her throughout the years. Cales married Stacy's father, Anthony Cales, in the mid-90s and remained in the family and children's lives until their divorce in 2002.
"She was blinded by the security," Linda Cales said of Stacy's marriage to an older man. "(Drew Peterson) is the same age as her father, in fact he's a year older than her dad."
But it wasn't a father figure Stacy was seeking, Linda Cales said, at least not a father like her own.
"The abuse was there," she said. "He would want to discipline the kids and spank them when he was drunk. He would say things to the girls like, 'You better be nothing like your slut mom.'"
It's been nearly 10 years since Stacy's mother, Christie Cales, has been heard from. She seemingly disappeared without a trace. But in the early years of Anthony and Linda Cales' marriage, Christie was still around.
"She always up and vanished and then all of a sudden she would show up wanting to see the kids," she said. "She wasn't exactly the model mother. I was taking care of the kids and they looked at me as if I was Mom."
When Linda and Anthony Cales decided to divorce around 2000, the children wanted to live with their stepmother, according to Linda Cales.
Seeking stability
According to Dr. Nadia Persun, associate professor of psychology of North Central College in Naperville, children need a routine in order to feel safe and stable.
She says Stacy may not have had the ability to recognize danger because of her unstable past.
"A child who is misguided and handicapped emotionally may be obedient and submissive, and if someone comes with ill intentions, they may be manipulated because they may lack confidence and an internal compass," Persun said.
And at just 17 years old, Stacy began dating a married Drew Peterson, who was then 47.
"His wife (the now deceased Kathleen Savio) divorced him because she found out about the affair," Linda Cales said. "At that point Anthony should have stepped in. If I would have known about it, I would have flown to Illinois and said, 'Oh no, this is not going on.'"
Her father's alleged alcoholism, coupled with reported abuse and the lack of a home base may have contributed to Stacy having a lack of identity and therefore seeking comfort in an older man who could tell her what to do and who she was, Persun said.
"It makes you more likely to become prey to someone if they have ill intentions because you are more hungry for affection and more in need to find stability," she said.
Linda Cales says Stacy's mistake was telling Drew Peterson she wanted a divorce, something friends and family have alleged since the mother of two disappeared.
"You get the hell out and then file," she said. "If you're afraid of the man, you don't tell him you want to divorce him.
"I know Stacy," Linda Cales said. "I was her stepmom for six years; she would not have left her kids."
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***Deactivated: Pending Review***
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Wed Nov 07, 2007 8:46 pm |
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Nov 7, 2007 6:22 pm US/Central
Family Of Bolingbrook Cop's Deceased Wife Speaks
Sister Of Drew Peterson's Late Third Wife Says She Thinks He Harmed Her
Reporting
Mike Puccinelli JOLIET, Ill. (CBS) ― The search continues for missing Bolingbrook mother Stacy Peterson. Meanwhile, after not being seen for days, her husband, Drew Peterson, made an appearance in Joliet.
CBS 2 news partner the Naperville Sun saw Drew Peterson leaving the courthouse annex at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. It was rumored that he would be there for grand jury proceedings but officials would not confirm that.
CBS 2 West Suburban Bureau Chief Mike Puccinelli made a trip to the coroner's office on the fourth floor of that building where Drew Peterson was spotted. An official asked that he leave. When asked if the building was a public building, the official responded, "Not today." That, as prosecutors discussed whether to exhume the body of Drew Peterson's third wife.
Three and a half years after Kathleen Savio was found dead in a bathtub, her sister is speaking out for the first time for her desire to see her youngest sister exhumed from her eternal resting place.
When asked if she would support the exhuming of her sister, Anna Doman said, "Yes, if that's what it takes. In a minute."
That's because Anna Doman says Kathleen always believed that her husband, Drew Peterson, would hurt her.
"She told me she'd never make it to the end of the divorce. She'd never make the property settlement," Anna Doman said. "That's a shame."
Anna Doman said Kathleen Savio told her she knew she would be killed. And although she's never said publicly that she believed Drew Peterson killed Kathleen, she's not holding back anymore.
When asked if she thinks Drew Peterson killed Kathleen Savio, Anna Doman said, "It's hard to say… yeah, I do. …He had the most to gain – money."
She says there was $1 million in life insurance and a more than $600,000 estate that stood to be divided.
"She would have gotten half. Instead she got none," Anna Doman said. "He got it all."
When Kathleen Savio died, Melissa Doman lost her favorite aunt. But she thinks of the woman she called Kitty every time she looks at her daughter.
"When I had my daughter, I named her after my aunt, so that no matter what I'll never forget," Melissa Doman said.
Savio's family will never forget a loving mother and sister, who is always in their hearts, a woman whose story they are telling now because she no longer can.
"How in the world could anyone say it was an accident?" Anna Doman said. "The cut was on the back of her head, and she was on her face in a waterless bathtub. Give me a break."
CBS 2 tried to reach Drew Peterson Wednesday but he did not return calls. Anna Doman says she has not spoken to authorities since Stacy Peterson went missing, but says she is now ready to.
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Fu-Gee-La
Posted:
Thu Nov 08, 2007 3:55 pm |
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Stacy Peterson's Close Friend Speaks Out
Thursday, November 08, 2007
GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, HOST: Day 10 — still no Stacy Peterson, and police still do not know where Sergeant Peterson's fourth wife is. Police are searching, but so far, absolutely nothing.
Joining us is a close friend of Stacy Peterson, Pamela Bosco. Welcome, Pamela.
PAMELA BOSCO, FRIEND OF STACY PETERSON: Hi, Greta.
VAN SUSTEREN: Pamela, how long have you known Stacy?
BOSCO: It's been about eight years. I came to know her when I became legal guardian of Cassandra Cales.
VAN SUSTEREN: And why did you become legal guardian of Cassandra, her sister?
BOSCO: She was with another legal guardian, and she knew me through my business and she got along with me very well, and she thought we'd have a good relationship. And we just grew to really love each other at the time, so she said can she come live with me. And I assumed legal guardianship, so I did.
VAN SUSTEREN: When was the last time you spoke to or saw Stacy?
BOSCO: I spoke to Stacy on the Thursday before the weekend she disappeared. She had called me to talk to me about renting my rental property in Westman (ph). And at that time, I knew she was having difficulties, but I wanted to know more and I asked her what was going on. And she says, Well, I'm looking to move out with my children and find a place to live with them. And at that time, I said no to her because I already had people living on the property, and we then discussed other things that were happening in her life.
VAN SUSTEREN: And what were the other things you discussed?
BOSCO: She was — at that time, she told me she was fearful of her situation with Drew and that she was trying to find a way to live on her own and looking for reasonable housing and find a way to do it based on she really didn't have a whole lot of money at hand because she said he had control of all the finances. So I had advised her actually to seek legal counsel at that point to do it legally so she, you know, didn't lose a chance (INAUDIBLE) losing the children.
VAN SUSTEREN: Now, he had given her — I understand that he had given her some ring. What do you know about a ring that he'd given her?
BOSCO: I was actually out of town on business that week she had come in, but it was enough that female employees at my business spoke to me about it when I did return, that it was supposedly a big ring, and they were wondering why, understanding the difficult relationship they were in, he would give her this ring. We knew that they were in a very terribly strained relationship. So when she showed up, they questioned it.
VAN SUSTEREN: About when was that in relationship — did she show off her new ring in relationship to her disappearance?
BOSCO: I believe it was, like, a week before, a week, a week-and-a- half before.
VAN SUSTEREN: Do you know Drew?
BOSCO: I can't say I knew him well, but I knew him. I had, you know, met with him since she had been with him.
VAN SUSTEREN: Ever — did he ever do anything to you that you thought suspicious in terms of his relationship — would he get violent, for instance, to his wife?
BOSCO: No, I can't speak like that. I did not know — he never did anything to me, you know, personable enough. But that's not to say what his relationship was with Stacy. My relationship was very benign.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did Stacy ever discuss the death of wife number three with you?
BOSCO: No. No, but I remember the day that we had heard about it. I was completely shocked, and my first reaction (INAUDIBLE) he had some involvement with it.
VAN SUSTEREN: And — but Stacy never said a word, never — she was never suspicious, as far as you know.
BOSCO: No. I asked her. I said, You know, come on, Stacy. This is a little strange. There must have been some question of doubt. And I'm sure, in her mind, she must have had question of doubt. But being a child — because she was, you know, a teen at that point, we can't (ph) wonder what she was thinking at that age.
VAN SUSTEREN: Pamela, thank you.
BOSCO: You're welcome.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,309617,00.html
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***Deactivated: Pending Review***
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Fu-Gee-La
Posted:
Thu Nov 08, 2007 4:28 pm |
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18 complaints on the record from Kathleen
Tuesday, November 06, 2007
VAN SUSTEREN: Chief, I know that out of an abundance of caution, you have sent this investigation of missing Stacy Peterson over to the state troopers, rather than keeping it in your police force. Why is that, sir?
CHIEF RAYMOND MCGURY, BOLINGBROOK POLICE: Well, initially, when Stacy was reported missing, my first inclination was to start the investigation immediately, but I wanted to consult with the family. And I called in Stacy's sister, Cassandra, as well as her father, Anthony, to meet with them on Monday morning. And they made it pretty clear to me that they would be more comfortable having an outside agency, such as the Illinois State Police, investigate this incident. And as I have stated, you know, before, in fact, to your producer, that was a tough pill for me to swallow, I'll be very honest with you. But it's the right thing to do.
VAN SUSTEREN: I spoke to the state's attorney's office. I know that they're looking into the death of his wife number three. Now, just so that I'm clear, wife number three died in March of 2004. This was not when you were the chief of police there. Is that correct, sir?
MCGURY: That's correct. I was with another jurisdiction at the time as a captain. And I had the opportunity to come as the chief of police here in Bolingbrook back in August of 2005. But I want to preface by saying while that could be used as an excuse, I don't want to use that as an excuse, Greta, I'll be very honest with you. I accept responsibility to get questions answered on this case. And that's why I wanted to come on tonight.
And I'll be honest with you, also. Many of my colleagues in the profession said that this is wrong. You know, You shouldn't be going on. But I'm very comfortable speaking with you, and I just want to get the message out from the Bolingbrook Police Department that we're going to do everything we can physically possible, whatever's asked of us by the Will County state's attorney's office, the Illinois State Police. Whatever other jurisdiction may be brought into this case, they have my guarantee of 100 percent cooperation.
VAN SUSTEREN: All right. Let's assume — and this is maybe unfair, but let's assume that you were the chief of police back in March of 2004 and that let's make a second assumption that you saw the autopsy report. Would it have piqued your interest that perhaps this could be more than an accident of wife number three in the bathtub?
MCGURY: Well, I've been doing this now almost 27 years. And I'll kind of use one of your quotes that you used on Friday, as I was watching your show, is that you're just an attorney and what do you know? And I'm just a police officer of 27 years, and what do I know?
But having reviewed the autopsy report, as a police officer — not as a professional doctor, not as a pathologist, not as a coroner — yes, it has piqued my interest. And I would concur with you, Dr. Baden and your viewers, that there's some questions in this that need to be answered. And there may be very logical answers. But as a police officer, as a police chief, as a former investigator that's investigated these types of crimes, yes, I'm somewhat — I don't want to say concerned, but I'd like to get some answers.
And that's why I'm pleased that the state's attorney, Jim Glasgow (ph) of Will County, has reopened this case. And it's ironic, I just spoke with Jim a few minutes ago and turned over a bunch of materials that your producer was very kind enough to give to us and hand those directly to Jim. So Jim has got a full file of information out to add into this investigation.
VAN SUSTEREN: Because of the size of your department, do you happen to know Sergeant Peterson, or is it too big a department?
MCGURY: No, no. I know Sergeant Peterson.
VAN SUSTEREN: Do you know what his record is within your department? What can you disclose and what — you know, what are you not inhibited by privacy considerations he might have? I don't know if there are any.
MCGURY: Well, I can tell that you Sergeant Peterson has been a police officer with us for 29 years. When I arrived here in 2005, he was a sergeant assigned to the patrol division. That's his assignment currently today. He's an officer in good standing, meaning, just like other officers, you know, he's a police officer employed by the village of Bolingbrook.
I know that Sergeant Peterson has discussed a recent discipline that he got. And I can't go into specifics. I can tell you that I disciplined him for a policy violation back in September that has absolutely nothing to do with any type of allegations of domestic violence, domestic abuse. It is totally a policy violation. And as a supervisor, I hold supervisors to a higher standard, so he was given discipline based upon an error in judgment.
VAN SUSTEREN: All right. Now, obviously, that's an important one because you thought it was important enough to discipline him. Some of the rest of us, if it's just policy, might not see that quite as important as if there were one, for instance, of excessive force or domestic violence, anything like that. Is there anything in his record like that that you can tell us about, or can you tell us that it doesn't exist in his record?
MCGURY: To my knowledge, as I sit here today and speak to you, there's nothing in his record to my knowledge that indicate any type of domestic violence, excessive use of force. None of that exists. You know, again, I can't get into much detail, but I can tell you that with much certainty that none of that exists.
VAN SUSTEREN: Now, there was something public. At least, it's being reported in the press back in the 1980s that he lost his job for a while. Are you able to talk about that, sir?
MCGURY: I am. I believe in 1985, he was fired by the police and fire commission. Shortly thereafter, a Will County judge reinstated him based upon, I believe — and again, I'm not positive of this, but I believe it was excessive discipline and evidence or lacking thereof evidence. So he was reinstated through the court system, not by the police and fire commission.
VAN SUSTEREN: Do you know him to be a good officer, or is he a good officer?
MCGURY: Sergeant Peterson shows up for work, does his job and goes home. I mean, nothing more, nothing less. I mean, he fulfills his duties as a police officer here.
VAN SUSTEREN: Have you heard of any complaints that were ever filed by Kathleen, who was wife number three before she died, complaints directed at him?
MCGURY: There was a series of complaints. And as I was speaking with your producer, I noted 18 different reports that were placed on file beginning, I believe, somewhere in February of 2002. And the last one was somewhere like November, I believe, of 2003.
And again, if I can clarify something — and I believe if you run this by Mark Fuhrman, he would concur. Most of these domestic-type disputes, when I would be on the street — and that was a long time ago, but when I was on the street, we would show up at a house. We would, you know, restore peace, and then we would leave. And there were no reports filed. It was basically peace restored and back in service.
The chief at the time that was here in Bolingbrook made a wise decision, I believe, and said that any issues pertaining to Sergeant Peterson and Kathleen Savio are to be documented. And so that's why we have 18 separate reports. And of those 18 — I spent my weekend going through all of these meticulously — nine of those are visitation issues. You didn't drop the kids off on time. Call the police, document it, so can I use it in court. You didn't drop the kids off, or You're not giving me the kids. So 50 percent of those had to do with that type of thing. And I think you had insinuated that on one of your programs, that you know, oftentimes these things happen.
The other ones that I went through were insinuations where both of them claimed to be victims of. Battery and one of the cases — and again, I can't get into too much of this. At some point, I, hopefully, can release these to you and the media. Kathleen alleges that she was held against her will. The issue with that is it appears from reading the report that it took two weeks for her to report that to us.
VAN SUSTEREN: I just want to emphasize, you weren't chief of police there then at that time, in case people are, you know, concerned about that particular one. I just want to point that out again. And secondly, it was also contained, at least it appears to be, in a letter to the state's attorney. I don't know if that — I didn't see a signature on that letter, but it may have also been conveyed to a state's attorney, a prosecutor.
MCGURY: That's correct. And also what's critical, at least in that case, is immediately when that case was filed, the police officers on scene transferred a copy of that report immediately to the domestic violence advocate, which is called — I believe is called Ground Break (ph). And so domestic violence — a separate third party now had knowledge of this case, and that case was also faxed to the Will County state's attorney's office.
VAN SUSTEREN: Chief, I've got one last thing to say to you, or a comment, and I also want to get the tip line out. But when people say on our show or post comments on Gretawire.com, the good old boy network, they are grossly wrong about your department. And it stinks, doesn't it, sir.
MCGURY: It does. You know, and again, this past week, the e-mails that I've gotten and the phone calls, some of which have been death threats, by the way, it's part of the job. It's part of being the chief of police. But it doesn't make it easy. And certainly, it doesn't make it easy, and certain there doesn't make it easy to walk through the halls here in Bolingbrook Police Department, look at the men and women that I think are some of the finest officers, if not the finest officers in the United States. And they watch your show and they read the papers, and they hear the same things that I do. And yet I understand. I understand. You know, I may not like it, but I understand.
And I just wanted the opportunity to at least try to address some of that stuff. And you didn't have to let me on the show tonight, but you did. And you know, thank you very much for doing that. You're welcome in Bolingbrook any time.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,308472,00.html
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***Deactivated: Pending Review***
Joined: 03 Apr 2006
Posts: 7247
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WildFlowers
Posted:
Thu Nov 08, 2007 5:06 pm |
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BREAKING NEWS: It is official: authorities are going to exhume the body of Sgt. Peterson’s wife #3, Kathleen Savio.
November 8th, 2007 1:33 PM Eastern
Prosecutor Wants Kathleen Savio Exhumed
by Jamie Colby
Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow’s investigation into the 2004 death of Kathleen Savio, Drew Peterson’s third wife takes a new turn this hour. His office is speaking right now to the Savio family about exhuming Kathleen’s body. The Savio family has already said publicly they support the exhumation of Kathleen’s remains for further review.
The prosecutor is not obligated to get the family’s permission to do this but his office tells me he believes this is the right thing to do. What can be learned by looking at Kathleen Savio’s remains three years later? A second autopsy might not be possible but her remains could be thoroughly re-examined. The prosecutor is also not bound by the determination of the jury that heard the inquest and ruled her death an accidental drowning.
I’m also being told for the first time today that the Illinois State Police visited the previous State’s Attorney Jeff Tomczak within days of Savio’s death in 2004 “seeking guidance”. I’ve also learned that Tomczak’s file on the case is slim…there is very little paperwork available on that meeting with police or whatever investigation previous State’s Attorney Jeff Tomczak conducted. Why is that? One source suggests Drew Peterson may have had “connections” that limited the scope but I see no concrete proof of that.
My sense is for the Savio family the current State’s Attorney James Glasgow is giving the case the review it should have had initially.
Stacy Peterson’s disappearance is still being classified a “missing persons” case. I believe it is significant that the two Peterson cars taken by police a week ago have not been released. It’s been reported too that when police returned to the Peterson home executing a second search warrant they found what they were looking for.
I’ve asked a neighbor of Stacy how the children are doing. They are staying with Drew Peterson’s son Steve who is a police officer and is married. His wife works with the FBI. This neighbor believes the kids may have been interviewed by authorities. This would not be uncommon but Illinois police are not commenting on this part of their investigation.
Stacy’s neighbor tells me she believes Drew has found safe haven with former Bolingbrook police officer Mike Robinson and that Robinson has provided Drew she says with new cell phone and car. I’ve called Drew at home and the answering machine has an outgoing message from Stacy.
Here is the new poster being put up in the search for Stacy. A salesman for HP came to the search location and donated 20,000 pieces of paper, a printer and ink so that volunteers could better get the word out.
http://colbyfiles.blogs.foxnews.com/
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gwen
Posted:
Thu Nov 08, 2007 6:19 pm |
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Cop's 3rd Wife May Get Exhumed
Death of Illinois Officer's 3rd Wife Should Have Been Ruled 'Undetermined,' Coroner Says
BOLINGBROOK, Ill. Nov 8, 2007 (AP)
They believe they're looking for a body now.
Nobody scours the woods, peering behind bushes, or watches divers bob in a retention pond for somebody who is alive.
And they look in the windows of her house and they think the answer could be in there, behind those curtains. Stacy Peterson's friends and family just can't shake the notion that her husband could help them determine the 23-year-old mother of two's whereabouts.
"We all know she's dead. She wouldn't leave her kids," said Jim Murray, 38, who spent Thursday traipsing through an overgrown field about a mile from the couple's home looking for signs of the missing woman. "If we thought she was alive, we wouldn't be out here."
Peterson, a petite brunette who was studying nursing at a nearby junior college, was last seen Oct. 28. Authorities on Thursday still classified the case as a missing person -- not criminal -- investigation.
But they also have started looking again at the death of one her husband's three ex-wives, whose death in a bathtub three years ago was ruled accidental, and are considering exhuming the body.
In the days since her disappearance, much attention has centered on Peterson's husband, Drew, a 53-year-old police officer who began dating Stacy when she was just 17. On Thursday, some of the 60 searchers who combed area fields, waterways and construction sites, said Drew Peterson's own actions -- and inaction -- have left them angry.
"He has not taken part (in) anything to help us locate her," said Roy Taylor, whose other moved next door to the Petersons' house four years ago. "He has not gone on television, pleading with her to come home. He has done nothing..."
In the immediate aftermath of his wife's disappearance, Peterson told reporters the two talked on the phone the day she disappeared and that he believed she was with another man. But he has not spoken publicly in several days.
He added to the strangeness of the case by standing outside his house as police served a search warrant, a bandanna covering much of his face, his eyes behind sunglasses and wearing a baseball cap. He since has been away from the home, presumably staying elsewhere with the couple's 2-and 4-year-old children.
He did appear at the Will County courthouse in Joliet for two hours Wednesday, but his attorney would not say why he was there.
Meanwhile, the Will County State's Attorney's office has not said much about their probe of the death of Peterson's third wife, Kathleen Savio, whose bloody and bruised body was found in her bathtub in 2004.
A coroner's jury said her drowning death was accidental, even though no water was found in the tub. But this week the Will County Coroner added to speculation about the case when he said Savio's death should instead have been ruled "undetermined."
"Certain aspects of Kathleen Savio's death raised concerns for me, as well," Will County Coroner Patrick O'Neil said.
On Thursday afternoon, it appeared likely county state's attorney's office would have her body exhumed.
"What we're doing now is taking a look at what is legally required to move forward with the exhumation of a body and talk to the appropriate family members," said Charles Pelkie, a spokesman for the office. "We need to talk to the appropriate family members. We have heard they would agree to go ahead with this and we want to talk to them."
Drew Peterson has denied involvement in either case.
While he has said he thinks his wife left him for another man and is alive, family friends don't believe that is true.
"I'm hoping to get a call from her in Hawaii, but I don't think that's the case," said Taylor, who has helped marshall volunteers to look for the woman. "We hope she's alive, but with all the evidence here, we don't think that's the case."
The Illinois State Police would not comment on whether there has been any indication Stacy Peterson is alive, such as use of her cell phone or credit cards. It has, though, said officers with cadaver dogs have conducted several ground searches and a search of a retention pond near the Petersons' home.
And Thursday, the agency that has used dogs, divers, ATVs and an airplane in the search, announced it has started coordinating efforts with a private search organization, Texas EquuSearch.
As he helped search a field just blocks from the Petersons' home, Joshua Giovenco, a paramedic who went to school with Stacy Peterson, didn't sound optimistic she was alive or that volunteers would find a body.
But, he said, "I want to find something that will help the investigation," he said. "We search for anything we can get."
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=3836286
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AKA Gagal_05
Joined: 24 Feb 2007
Posts: 15239
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Fu-Gee-La
Posted:
Thu Nov 08, 2007 6:25 pm |
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Politics-
Back when he was on the outside, campaigning for mayor, Rich Daley is said to have revved up his political troops by bragging about what he intended to do to Donald Tomczak, the Bridgeport turncoat.
"He'd tell the precinct captains, `The first thing I'm going to do when I become mayor is throw Donny Tomczak out the window,'" a veteran politician recalled to me the other day.
"Or out the door. Sometimes he was going to throw Donny off the roof," he said. "But mostly, he'd say he was going to throw Tomczak out the window of his office."
....
And with Tomczak testifying this week in the federal City Hall patronage-corruption trial, I figure the mayor wishes he had thrown him.
Instead, Daley installed Tomczak as first deputy of the Water Department, which meant that Tomczak was the boss, not any of those suits the mayor put in as commissioners.
There, Tomczak was allowed to indulge in some hobbies. One hobby involved taking $400,000 in bribes from the mayor's scandal-plagued Hired Truck program.
Still, Tomczak's Hired Truck fetish didn't bother the mayor's office, not as long as Tomczak's army of city patronage workers stumped the precincts for the mayor and his candidates.
And to keep them happy, Tomczak testified that he required the support of Daley underlings, including the mayor's chief of patronage, one of the underlings on trial.
Assistant U.S. Atty. Patrick Collins asked Tomczak on Tuesday if he had any authority to choose who got hired or promoted.
"No," Tomczak said.
Then Collins asked if any of the suits above him--meaning the commissioners no one paid attention to until it was time to choose a fall guy--had any say.
"No," Tomczak said.
Well, then, Collins asked, who did?
"Mr. Sorich and Mr. Reyes and John Doerrer."
....
Tomczak bolted from the 11th Ward, he backed former Mayor Jane Byrne, who hated the Daleys as much as they hated her. And, don't forget, Daley went around town t | |
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