Scott Peterson Reply Habeas Corpus Brief 8-7-18
Scott Peterson Reply Habeas Corpus Brief 8-7-18
Scott Peterson Reply Habeas Corpus Brief 8-7-18
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
STANDARD OF REVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
ARGUMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
D. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
C. The New Evidence From Dr. Jeanty Does Not Merely Show A
Disagreement Among Experts, But Instead Shows The State Presented
Objectively False Evidence As To The Application Of The Jeanty
Formula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
2
D. A Prosecutor’s Use Of False Evidence Is Not Immune From Review
Simply Because The Prosecutor May Have Acted In Good Faith; What
Matters Is the Character Of The Evidence Not The Character Of The
Prosecutor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
E. Because The State Bears The Burden Of Proving Any False Evidence
Harmless, Petitioner Has Established A Prima Facie Case That The
State Presented False Evidence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
F. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
D. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
3
B. The Allegations Of The Petition Show Defense Counsel Had No
Legitimate Tactical Reason For Failing To Call A Dog-Scent Expert
Prior To Trial; Assuming These Allegations Are True, Petitioner Has
Established A Prima Facie Case Of Deficient Performance At The
Pre-Trial Hearing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
D. Given The Importance Placed On The Dog Scent Evidence By The Trial
Prosecutor, Petitioner Has Established A Prima Facie Case As To
Prejudice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
4
C. Given The Importance Of Defense Counsel’s Credibility To The
Defense, And The Prosecutor’s Repeated Reliance On Counsel’s
Broken Promises, Petitioner Established A Prima Facie Case As To
Prejudice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
C. Given The Importance Of Showing Laci Was Alive When Scott Was
On His Way To The Berkeley Marina, Petitioner Has Established A
Prima Facie Case As To Prejudice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
A. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
C. Given The Importance Of Showing Laci Was Alive When Scott Was
On His Way To The Berkeley Marina, Petitioner Has Established A
Prima Facie Case Of Prejudice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
CONCLUSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
5
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
FEDERAL CASES
Dugas v. Coplan (1st Cir. 2005) 428 F.3d 317 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97, 125
Hall v. Director of Corrections (9th Cir. 2003) 343 F.3d 976 . . . . . . . . 42, 65, 73, 97, 98
Keith v. Mitchell (6th Cir. 2006) 466 F.3d 540 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97, 124
Richards v. Quarterman (5th Cir. 2009) 566 F.3d 553 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97, 124
Smith v. Mullin (10th Cir. 2004) 379 F.3d 919 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97, 125
United States ex rel. Hampton v. Leibach (7th Cir. 2003) 347 F.3d 219 . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
6
Williams v. Woodford (E.D.Cal. 2012) 859 F. Supp. 2d 1154 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
STATE CASES
7
INTRODUCTION: A SINGLE QUESTION
“[M]istakes in the criminal justice system are sometimes made.” (In re Sanders
(1999) 21 Cal.4th 697, 703.) And when they are, habeas corpus is available to ensure
“the person being punished is actually guilty of the crimes of which he or she was
convicted.” (Ibid.)
Petitioner here was convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of his wife
and unborn child. He has maintained his innocence from day one. In November of 2015
petitioner filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus with this Court. Aside from a juror
misconduct claim, the Petition was based largely on new evidence from percipient and
counsel -- the essential factual predicate of petitioner’s various claims is the same: the
petitioner is employing the Great Writ to ensure “the person being punished is actually
guilty of the crimes of which he . . . was convicted.” (In re Sanders, supra, 21 Cal.4th at
p. 703.)
In pursuing this course Mr. Peterson recognizes reviewing courts may properly
harbor skepticism when faced with a claim of innocence after a jury trial. From an
8
institutional perspective, that skepticism may well be necessary. After all, not only were
substantial resources expended in providing petitioner a jury trial but the jury
unanimously concluded he was guilty. Such verdicts cannot and should not lightly be set
aside. But the fact of the matter is that it is in precisely this situation -- that is, where a
jury has unanimously found a defendant guilty -- that this Court has recognized “mistakes
At the end of the day, petitioner’s claims of error will require the Court to
determine whether this is one such case and whether relief is required. But the ultimate
question of whether relief is required is not before the Court at this early stage of the
habeas corpus proceedings. Instead, the Court has the much simpler task of deciding
In connection with this inquiry, the details of each of petitioner’s claims will be
discussed in the arguments below. For purposes of resolving the prima-facie case inquiry,
however, it is important to note that although the parties presented two very different
factual theories at trial, the jury had but one factual question to resolve in deciding if
The state’s theory was that Scott Peterson killed his wife Laci on the evening of
December 23 or the morning of December 24, 2002, in their home at 523 Covena Avenue
9
in Modesto, California.1 The state asserted that Scott put Laci in his truck. Cell phone
records show that at 10:08 on the morning of December 24 Scott drove the truck to his
warehouse at 1027 N. Emerald Avenue in Modesto. Under the state’s theory, Scott
attached cement anchors to Laci’s body, loaded her body into his 14-foot boat and drove
to his warehouse and then the Berkeley Marina, arriving at 12:54. He then put his boat
into the water and -- when he was out on the bay -- pushed Laci’s body overboard.
The defense agreed that Scott drove to his warehouse at 10:08 that morning. But
the defense theory was quite different; under the defense theory, Laci was alive and at
home at that time. Scott told police that Laci was mopping the floor when he left and
planned to take their dog Mckenzi out for a walk. Scott drove to his warehouse, took his
boat to the Berkeley Marina and went fishing. When he returned, Laci was gone. Under
the defense theory, Scott had nothing to do with Laci’s disappearance -- instead, she was
alive when he left for the warehouse and marina and was abducted at some point either
As these two thumbnail sketches show, the jury had one question to resolve: was
Laci alive when Scott left for the warehouse and Berkeley Marina? If so, then Scott was
1
Because there are a number of witnesses with the last name of Peterson, and
as he did on appeal, petitioner will on occasion use first names to avoid confusion. No
disrespect is intended.
10
At trial, of course, the prosecutor skewered the defense theory that Laci took
Mckenzi for a walk after Scott left for the marina. According to the prosecutor, this was
just another lie Scott told to cover his tracks; the prosecutor told jurors in closing that
after Scott killed Laci he put the leash on Mckenzi and let him outside the house before
To his credit, the prosecutor was candid about the central evidence supporting the
state’s theory: the testimony of neighbor Karen Servas. As discussed in much greater
detail below, at 10:18 that morning Servas found Mckenzi outside the Peterson home with
his leash on. Servas was able to pinpoint the time so precisely based on cell phone
records and store receipts containing time stamps. In order to keep Mckenzi safe, Servas
did what any good neighbor would do -- she put Mckenzi in the Peterson’s yard and
closed the gate behind her so Mckenzi would not get out.
The prosecutor relied on this evidence to ridicule the defense theory that after
Scott left, Laci took Mckenzi for a walk and was thereafter abducted. The prosecutor
explained that for the defense theory to work, between 10:08 (when Scott left for the
marina) and 10:18 (when Servas found and put Mckenzi back in the yard) Laci would
have had to (1) finish mopping the floor, (2) get dressed and (3) take Mckenzi for a walk
during which time she was abducted and (4) Mckenzi would have had to make her way
11
And if that’s the case, then this is what had to have happened in ten
minutes, in a ten minute time. Laci would have had to get up, put on all her
jewelry, because the defendant tells the police and some other folks, the dog
tracking people and stuff, that [Laci was wearing jewelry]. . . . So she puts
on all of her jewelry to then, I guess, go mop the floor. Because he says,
when he says he leaves, she’s mopping the floor, she’s got on a white shirt
and black pants, and she’s barefoot. So she has to have put her jewelry on,
finish mopping the floor, put on her shoes and socks, changed her clothes,
because remember, when she’s found, Laci Peterson is not bearing black
pants.
Laci Peterson is wearing a pair of pants just like these. No one confuses
these pants with black. . . . So she changes out of these nice pair of capri
pants, I mean she changes out of her black pants she was wearing when she
was mopping, into these nice pair of capri pants so she can go walk the dog.
She has to then get abducted . . . . This is all in ten minutes. . . . .
The dog then has to be able to come home in the ten minutes time, because
she’s now done all these things, been abducted, the dog comes home and
has to be found by Karen Servas, all in ten minutes, all in a ten minute
window, because at 10:08 the defendant is just now driving away from his
house.
(109 RT 20224-20225.) The jury agreed with the prosecutor, rejecting the defense theory
But this is precisely where the new evidence comes into play. The habeas record
now shows that the prosecutor’s theory of the crime was almost certainly false.
The starting point for this analysis is the December 27, 2002 statement of postman
Russell Graybill discussed in Claim 9 of the Petition. Graybill gave this statement to
police when his memory was fresh -- only three days after Laci went missing. Graybill
12
told police he delivered mail to the Peterson house between 10:35 and 10:50 that
morning, well after Servas had put Mckenzi back in the yard and closed the gate.
(Petition Exhibit 3.) Graybill knew the Peterson family, and he knew Mckenzi well --
according to Graybill, Mckenzi barked at him whenever he delivered mail to the Peterson
But the jury never heard that when Graybill arrived at 10:35 to 10:50 the gate
which Servas had closed at 10:18 was now open and Mckenzi was not barking. (Petition
Exhibit 3.) This evidence directly supports the defense case that Laci took Mckenzi for a
walk after Scott left for the marina. The state never suggests who else would possibly
have opened the Peterson’s gate and taken Mckenzi for a walk.
This is not the only evidence contradicting the state’s case which the jury did not
hear. As discussed in Claim 9 of the Petition, in accord with Graybill’s recollection that
Mckenzi was not at the house when he delivered mail, numerous witnesses saw Laci
walking the dog in the neighborhood after Scott left for the marina. (Petition Exhibits 12,
13, 14, 15, 16.) This evidence also directly supports the defense theory that Laci left the
house to walk Mckenzi after 10:08, the time that the state concedes Scott left the house
But there is more. In 2002, the Medina family lived at 516 Covena -- across the
13
street from the Petersons. The prosecutor conceded at trial that the Medinas left for Los
Angeles at 10:30 on the morning of December 24. On December 27, Diane Jackson
reported to two different police officers that she saw the Medina home being burglarized
and a safe stolen on the morning of December 24. Sure enough, when the Medinas
returned home on December 26, their home had been burglarized, and a safe had been
taken. The jury heard all this evidence about the burglary, along with testimony from
police Officer Hicks that when he arrested Steven Todd for the burglary several days
later, Todd admitted that he had committed the burglary but insisted the burglary occurred
that the burglary occurred on December 26 -- and was therefore entirely unrelated to
Laci’s disappearance -- the jury never heard from Officer Xavier Aponte, a correctional
only weeks after Laci disappeared -- Officer Aponte monitored a telephone conversation
between an inmate named Shawn Tenbrink and his brother Adam Tenbrink. Adam was a
friend of burglar Steven Todd; during the conversation, Adam revealed that Todd
confessed “Laci witnessed him breaking in.” Since the Medinas left their home at 10:30
on December 24 -- after Scott had already left for the marina -- Todd’s confession directly
supports the defense theory that Laci was alive when Scott left for the marina.
14
The jury did not hear from Officer Aponte. The jury did not hear from burglar
Steven Todd. The jury did not hear from Adam or Shawn Tenbrink.
Taken together, every piece of this new evidence supports a very different
narrative than the one the prosecutor presented at trial. Servas found the dog and put him
back in the Petersons’ yard, closing that gate, at 10:18. Laci then left the house and took
the dog out for a walk. That explains why the gate was open when Graybill delivered the
mail at 10:35, why Mckenzi did not bark when Graybill delivered mail that morning, why
numerous people in the neighborhood saw Laci walking the dog well after 10:18 that
morning and why -- as Steven Todd later admitted -- Laci “witnessed him breaking in”
At the end of the day, for the state to be right about what happened in this case,
postman Russell Graybill, the witnesses who saw Laci walking the dog on the morning of
December 24, Officer Aponte and Adam Tenbrink -- none of whom have any motive to
lie for Scott Peterson -- all have to be wrong. Every one of them. Instead, the Court
would have to accept convicted burglar Steven Todd’s frantic insistence to investigators
(rather than his candid admission to Adam Tenbrink) that he did not burglarize the
Medinas home until December 26 and Laci could not therefore have “witness[ed] him
breaking in” on December 24. And as discussed more fully below the Court would have
to accept the state’s December 26 thesis despite the testimony of four prosecution
15
witnesses -- including an investigating detective and Laci’s own mother and brother --
about the intense police and media presence on Covena Street by December 26 which
made it extraordinarily unlikely that any burglary was committed on Covena that day.
The Court does not yet have to decide if the criminal justice system has made a
mistake in the trial of Scott Peterson. But for the reasons which follow, an Order to Show
16
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Petitioner has been convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death. His appeal
and habeas petition are now pending before this Court. As noted above, aside from a
juror misconduct claim the Petition is based largely on new evidence going directly to the
question of innocence. This new evidence was never presented to the jury.
At this stage of the proceedings the Court is not charged with deciding if Mr.
Peterson is entitled to relief. The Court’s task is much simpler. The Court must
“assum[e] the petitioner’s factual allegations are true” and assess whether petitioner has
established a prima facie case for relief on any of his claims. (People v. Duvall (1995) 9
Cal.4th 464, 474-475.) If so, an Order to Show Cause should issue requiring the state to
formally admit or deny the factual allegations of the petition. (Ibid.) Credibility
assessments are not made at this early, prima-facie-case stage of the proceedings, but
instead are made later -- if necessary -- with the benefit of an evidentiary hearing. (See In
To assist the Court in assessing whether a prima facie case has been established,
the Court ordered the state to file an Informal Response to the Petition. The Informal
Response performs a “screening function,” in which the state may urge the Court to
17
(People v. Romero (1994) 8 Cal.4th 728, 742.) Under Romero there are two distinct paths
the state may take in urging summary dismissal. First, the state may by “submission of
the state may elect not to offer any factual materials at all but instead “demonstrate by
citation of legal authority . . . that the claims asserted in the habeas corpus petition . . .
The state has now filed its Informal Response. But for the most part, the state has
not taken either of the approaches established in Romero. The state correctly recognizes
that pursuant to Romero, it “need not provide documentary evidence to controvert the
factual allegations of the petition.” (Informal Response (“IR”) 21.) Lower courts have
noted sound reasons for the state to avoid presentation of factual materials; when the state
proceedings, it bears a heavy burden to “provid[e] the court with irrefutable evidence that
the petition's allegations are factually unfounded.” (Dardines v. Superior Court (1999) 76
Cal.App.4th 247, 253.) The state wisely does not seek to carry such a burden here. Thus,
the state does not submit a single declaration, affidavit or document to support its position
that petitioner has not established a prima facie case. (IR 1-150.) Instead, the state
argues it will take the second option outlined in Romero and limit its Informal Response
to “legal arguments with respect to perceived flaws on the face of the petition.” (IR 21-
22.)
18
Despite this clear statement of intent, however, the state does nothing of the sort.
Rather than focus the Informal Response on “legal arguments,” as to each and every
claim in the Petition the state instead “specifically . . . controvert[s] all of Peterson’s
factual . . . claims and allegations.” (See, e.g., IR 24, 40, 61-62, 70, 86, 92, 105-106, 111,
the petition’s factual allegations are true.” (Duvall, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 474.) Indeed, it
is fair to say that controverting every factual allegation of the petition is as far from
This was not mere boilerplate on the state’s part. The Court need look no further
than the very first claim in the Petition. That claim alleges juror Richelle Nice committed
misconduct in giving materially false answers in response to questions asking if she had
ever been involved in a lawsuit and, if so, whether as a plaintiff, defendant or witness.
(Petition 96-108.) Fairly read, the state does not deny that Ms. Nice gave false answers;
instead, it argues that Ms. Nice had no intent to deceive but simply misunderstood the
questions. (IR 26-27.) Significantly, however, the state does not attach a declaration
from Ms. Nice herself to support its position. Instead, the state urges the Court to simply
assume Ms. Nice would credibly take this position at an evidentiary hearing.
Maybe she would. Maybe she wouldn’t. Given the state’s tactic in making this
19
representation without any factual support at all, it is entirely unknowable at this point.
As discussed more fully below, in light of Ms. Nice’s experience working in a law firm, it
seems distinctly unlikely that any factfinder would accept as credible the state’s current
claim that she misunderstood basic terms like “lawsuit,” “plaintiff” and “witness.” But
more important for current purposes is that this is precisely the type of credibility
assessment which this Court does not make at this preliminary stage of the habeas
proceedings.
controvert[ing] all of Peterson’s factual . . . claims and allegations” infects its response to
many of the claims in the Petition. As will be seen, throughout its Informal Response the
state argues that petitioner’s allegations are “not true” and “mistaken.” In short, much of
the state’s argument is made not by following the rules which are applied in assessing a
But there is more. In urging the Court to find that no prima facie case has been
shown as to even a single claim, the state takes a clever divide-and-conquer strategy. In
responding to each separate claim for relief the state argues that the Court should
summarily deny relief because petitioner did not plead a prima facie case of prejudice for
that specific claim. (IR 58, 69, 84, 91, 102, 110, 117, 127.) But the state’s argument --
20
Contrary to the assumption at least implicit in the state’s approach, this Court does
not simply assess in isolation the prejudice stemming from individual instances of error.
To the contrary, it assesses the cumulative effect of all instances of error together,
recognizing that prejudice from different errors can be cumulative. (See, e.g., People v
misconduct, error in shackling defendant, improper presence of a bailiff who was also a
counsel even if no single instance rises to that level. (See, e.g., In re Jones (1996) 13
Cal.4th 553, 583, 587.) The state ignores this case law entirely.
But this case presents the perfect illustration of these principles. The state’s theory
was that Scott killed Laci and drove her to the Berkeley Marina. The defense theory was
that Laci was alive and at home when Scott left for the marina and she later took their dog
Mckenzi for a walk. Given these starkly different theories, the jury had to decide whether
Laci was alive when petitioner drove to the marina. If she was, the jury would certainly
As to this factual question, Scott has alleged that jurors never heard critical
evidence. Specifically, he has alleged that counsel improperly failed to present testimony
from (1) witnesses whose observations directly supported the defense theory that Laci
21
was walking the dog after Scott left for Berkeley, (2) witnesses who heard Steven Todd’s
confession that “Laci witnessed him breaking in” to the Medina home on December 24
after Scott left for Berkeley (3) a fetal development expert showing that Conner lived
well beyond that date, as late as January 3, 2003, and so was alive when Scott left for the
marina, (4) a dog-scent expert showing that the inculpatory dog-scent evidence the state
introduced was entirely unreliable and (5) an expert on the movement of bodies in water
showing that the state’s expert provided only half the story to the jury. In its Informal
Response, the state separately argues that summary dismissal of each claim is proper
As discussed more fully below, the factual predicate for the state’s argument is
incorrect. In fact, each of these errors alone does meet the single-juror test for prejudice
which governs both federal and state law. (See Wiggins v. Smith (2003) 539 U.S. 510
[where state law requires unanimous verdict, relief for ineffective assistance of counsel is
required where absent counsel’s error one juror could reasonably have reached a different
But even assuming the state is correct, and these errors were individually harmless,
the request for summary dismissal based on an asserted lack of prejudice is entirely
premature. As noted, even if any one of these errors alone was not prejudicial, such
errors cumulatively may rise to the level of prejudicial error when combined with
22
prejudice stemming from counsel’s errors as a whole. (See In re Jones, supra, 13 Cal.4th
at pp. 583, 587.) Thus, at this early pleading stage of the habeas process, a final
assessment of prejudice as to any one claim -- and summary dismissal for an asserted lack
In assessing whether petitioner has pled a prima facie case for relief as to any of
his claims, and contrary to the suggestion at least implicit in the state’s decision to
“controvert all of Peterson’s factual . . . claims and allegations,” the Court is not now
tasked with deciding if relief is proper. As discussed in much greater detail below,
assuming the truth of petitioner’s factual allegations as Duvall requires, nothing in the
state’s Informal Response calls into question whether petitioner has established a prima
23
ARGUMENT
A. Introduction.
In Claim One of the Petition Mr. Peterson alleged that juror Richelle Nice
concealed relevant information during voir dire. (Petition 96-108.)2 Questions 54a and
54b of the jury questionnaire asked prospective jurors if they had ever been “involved in a
lawsuit (other than divorce proceedings)” and, if so, whether they were the plaintiff or
defendant. (Petition 97.) Question 72 asked if the prospective jurors had ever
question 74 asked if the prospective juror had ever been the victim of a crime. (Petition
98.) Seated juror Nice answered “no” to questions 54a, 72 and 74, and left 54b blank.
(Petition 98.)
The documents filed in support of the Petition as Petition Exhibit 45 show that all
2
The Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus will be referenced in this brief as
“Petition.” Exhibits which accompanied the Petition will be referenced as “Petition
Exhibit” followed by the exhibit number and, if appropriate, the page number as well.
The supporting memorandum petitioner filed with the Petition will be referenced as
“Memorandum.”
24
these answers were false. In November of 2000, Ms. Nice -- who was four and a half
months pregnant at the time -- filed a lawsuit against Marcella Kinsey. (Petition 99.)
Nice alleged that because of Kinsey’s conduct she (Nice) “fears for her unborn child.”
(Petition 100.) Nice alleged that Kinsey “committed acts of violence against her” and
“would try to hurt the baby.” (Petition Exhibit 45 at pp. 905, 909.) And Nice later
testified at a hearing in Superior Court and obtained a restraining order against Kinsey.
(Petition 100.)
In short, the documents show: (1) Ms. Nice had been involved in a lawsuit; (2) she
was the plaintiff; (3) she participated in the lawsuit as both a party and a witness; and (4)
she alleged that she was the victim of a crime. Put another way, Nice’s answers on the
questionnaire were false. Based on these facts, Mr. Peterson alleged Ms. Nice had
The state makes several important concessions. The state recognizes that “a
conviction cannot stand if even one juror” was biased. (IR 24.) The state recognizes that
“a juror who conceals relevant facts or gives false answers during voir dire commits
misconduct.” (IR 25.) Finally, the state recognizes that the reason for this strict rule is
that false answers “eviscerate a party’s statutory right to exercise” jury challenges. (IR
25
The state’s disagreement with Mr. Peterson in connection with this claim is not
really on the law, it is on the facts. As noted, the state “specifically . . . controvert[s] all
of Peterson’s factual . . . claims and allegations in Claim One . . . .” (IR 24.) The state
argues that Mr. Peterson did not plead a prima facie case as to either juror concealment of
below, the state is wrong on both counts and an Order to Show Cause should issue.3
3
In his Petition, Mr. Peterson explained that he used Ms. Nice’s name, rather
than juror number, because she published a book in her own name and identified herself
as Juror 7. (Memorandum 2, n.1.) The state responds in a footnote indicating it would
refer to Ms. Nice by juror number, presumably to protect her anonymity. (IR 23, n.2.)
The state’s concern is commendable, but dramatically misplaced here.
Since 2004, Juror Nice has taken every opportunity to disclose to the
American public her identity as a juror in the Peterson case. Immediately after the
verdict, on December 14, 2004, Ms. Nice introduced herself to the American public in an
appearance under her own name on CNN’s Larry King Live. (http://transcripts.cnn.com/
TRANSCRIPTS/0412/14/lkl.01.html, last visited on 5/21/18.) The next day she again
appeared under her own name on national television on the Fox News show “On The
Record With Greta Van Susteren.” (www.foxnews.com/transcript/2004/12/15/ inside-
peterson-jury.html, last visited on 5/21/18.) She appeared on “Good Morning America,”
as described in the December 13, 2004 issue of USA Today. (http://usatoday30.usatoday.
com/news/ nation/2004-12-13-peterson_x.htm, last visited 5/21/18.) On March 16, 2005,
she appeared on CNN Live. (http://www.pwc-sii.com/Mediadiscuss.htm, last visited
5/25/18.) As noted, in 2006 she published a book about serving on the Peterson jury,
identifying herself as “Richelle Nice, Juror No. 7.” And in June 2006 she sold her story
to People Magazine; the June 5, 2006 issue features a story about Ms. Nice’s
correspondence with Scott entitled, “Letters from Scott” and informs readers that “[s]ince
last August, Richelle Nice, one of 12 jurors in the capital murder trial of Scott Peterson,
has become a pen pal to the man she convicted.” (http://people.com/archive
/letters-from-scott-vol-65-no-22/, last visited on 5/21/18.)
Ms. Nice has voluntarily and enthusiastically disclosed her identity and
experiences in the Peterson case to millions of Americans. Accordingly, for the sake of
clarity and consistency, Mr. Peterson will follow the nomenclature used by prior counsel
in the Petition and refer to her by name.
26
B. The Allegations Of The Petition Show That Juror Nice Concealed Relevant
Information; Assuming These Allegations To Be True Petitioner Has
Established A Prima Facie Case Of Juror Concealment.
The state concedes -- somewhat grudgingly to be sure -- that Ms. Nice had been
involved in a lawsuit prior to her jury service. (IR 27.) Thus, in an artfully phrased
concession the state recognizes it is “technically correct” to conclude Ms. Nice’s lawsuit
against Ms. Kinsey was indeed a lawsuit. (IR 27.) With even greater care, the state then
concedes Ms. Nice provided false information on her questionnaire, admitting that
because Ms. Nice’s lawsuit was “technically” a lawsuit, her answer to question 54a did
“not comport with technically correct legal jargon.” (IR 27.) Or, to translate the state’s
legalistic concessions into plain English, the answers Ms. Nice gave on her questionnaire
were false.
The state argues, however, that Ms. Nice simply made an honest mistake. In the
state’s view, although Ms. Nice’s legal action against Kinsey was a lawsuit, Ms. Nice
may not have realized that when she testified against Kinsey in Superior Court in 2000,
she was a witness in a lawsuit -- she may have thought it was something else. (IR 26-27.)
The state attaches no declaration from Ms. Nice herself to this effect.4
4
The state’s failure to offer any extra-record support at all for its factual
allegation that Ms. Nice simply misunderstood the questions is all the more surprising in
light of the state’s candid recognition that “[f]acts must be alleged in a manner that makes
the declarant liable for perjury if the allegation is false.” (IR 32.)
27
Mr. Peterson will be blunt. There is nothing in the record to support the state’s
Certainly the paperwork Ms. Nice herself prepared does not support the state’s
interpretation. On the lawsuit itself, Ms. Nice listed herself as “plaintiff.” (Petition
Exhibit 45 at p. 903.) She listed Ms. Kinsey as “defendant.” (Ibid.) The paperwork
showed that “a court hearing has been set” for hearing in Department 14 of the Superior
Court on December 13, 2000. (Ibid.) Ms. Nice even added a request for “attorneys fees
and costs.” (Id. at p. 906.) She then filled out a “Civil Case Cover Sheet” for filing in the
San Mateo Superior Court, stating that the case was “not a class action suit.” (Id. at p.
911.) This was the very same Superior Court in which Ms. Nice was called to jury
service in this case. And when the December 13th date arrived for Ms. Nice’s trial, the
documents show Ms. Nice was “sworn and testified.” (Id. at p. 914.) The paperwork Ms.
Nice filled out strongly suggests was aware she was involved in a lawsuit involving
Despite this evidence the state maintains that Ms. Nice simply did not know she
was involved in a lawsuit, she was a party to that lawsuit or had testified as a witness.
(IR 26-27.) The state’s position is difficult to square with the plain import of the
documents Ms. Nice herself filled out, as discussed above. It is also difficult to square
28
The state accurately notes that Ms. Nice’s “background did not include any
professional training in the law.” (IR 27-28.) The state adds that jurors are not “experts
in English usage” and may be “uncertain as to the meaning of terms.” (IR 27.)
This is all certainly true. But as Justice Brown noted some years ago, neither are
(People v. Guiuan (1998) 18 Cal.4th 558, 579 [Brown, J., concurring and dissenting].)
Ms. Nice was asked if she had ever been “a witness.” She was asked if she had ever been
involved in “a lawsuit.” She was asked if she was the plaintiff or defendant. Contrary to
the state’s suggestion, these are not complex terms which require “professional training in
the law” to understand. (IR 27-28.) Ms. Nice was not being asked to apply the Rule
Against Perpetuities.
The state’s position is especially odd here. With some understatement, the state
concedes that Ms. Nice had “an interest in the law.” (IR 32.) In fact, Ms. Nice stated in
her questionnaire that she had wanted to be a lawyer when she was younger, she had been
to college and had even worked in a law office prior to the trial. (Petition Exhibit 44 at
pp. 886, 888; 23 RT 4611.) It seems very unlikely she would not understand terms like
29
“witness,” “plaintiff” and “lawsuit.”5
To be sure, despite the explicit nature of the documents Ms. Nice herself prepared
and signed, and Ms. Nice’s background working in a law office, the state is certainly free
to take the position that Ms. Nice would say she just did not understand that she had
appeared as a witness and was party to a lawsuit. And the credibility of such an
inherently incredible position is one a factfinder would have to assess. But this
hypothetical question of fact and credibility has nothing at all to do with whether --
assuming Mr. Peterson’s factual allegations are true -- a prima facie case of juror
5
It is worth noting that the confusion the state now alleges Ms. Nice had with
respect to terms like “lawsuit,” “plaintiff” and “witness” was not shared by other
members of the jury pool. To the contrary, other prospective jurors understood the plain
meaning of these terms in a wide range of contexts. (See, e.g., 2 Hovey CT 93 [small
claims court proceedings]; 4 Hovey CT 783 [patent infringement action]; 5 Hovey CT
990 [landlord tenant dispute]; 15 Hovey CT 4071 [worker’s compensation claim]; 40
Hardship CT 11362 [paternity action].) Other jurors had no trouble applying these terms
to similar domestic violence disputes. (See, e.g., 22 Hardship CT 6173; 31 Hardship CT
8596; 40 Hardship 11454; 65 Hardship CT 18932.) The state never explains why other
jurors would understand these terms, but Ms. Nice would not.
30
concealment has been pled. It plainly has.6
In urging the Court to find that no prima facie case has been established the state
makes a second argument. The state argues that petitioner did not establish a prima facie
case of juror misconduct even if the Court “credit[s] Peterson’s claim that juror [Nice]
committed misconduct and improperly concealed material information during voir dire.”
(IR 30.) According to the state, this is because Ms. Nice was not biased. (IR 30.)
It is important to put the state’s argument in context. The state properly concedes
that “a juror who conceals relevant facts or gives false answers during voir dire commits
6
In passing only, the state notes that the lawsuit between Nice and Kinsey,
and Ms. Nice’s testimony at that lawsuit, occurred in December 2000, whereas Ms. Nice
filled out her questionnaire in March of 2004. (IR 29.) In other words, a little over three
years had passed. The state suggests the incident in which Kinsey “threatened [Ms.
Nice’s] unborn child,” and in which Nice testified in open court had become “long
buried” in Ms. Nice’s memory and she just plain forgot about it.
The alternative factual theory the state now offers up suffers from the same
flaws as its prior offering: it is entirely unsupported by a declaration from Ms. Nice and it
depends entirely on a factfinder accepting as credible a version of events which is
distinctly unlikely. It too has nothing at all to do with whether -- assuming Mr. Peterson’s
factual allegations are true -- he has pled a prima facie case of juror concealment. In any
event, the attached declaration of jury foreman Steve Cardosi establishes the falsity of the
state’s passing suggestion that Ms. Nice had forgotten the Kinsey incident. To the
contrary, Ms. Nice spoke about the Kinsey incident with other jurors. (See Exhibit 50
[Cardosi Declaration] at HCP-000987.)
31
misconduct.” (IR 25.) When a juror commits misconduct, prejudice is presumed and the
state has the burden of proving the misconduct harmless. (In re Hamilton (1999) 20
Here, as discussed above, a prima facie case of juror concealment has indeed been
established. At this early stage of the habeas process, then, the question is whether -- as a
matter of law -- the state has carried its burden of proving the misconduct harmless. If the
state has not carried this burden, an Order to Show Cause must issue.
The state suggests it can rebut the presumption of bias as a matter of law because
Ms. Kinsey’s threats to juror Nice did not “endanger[] juror [Nice] and the life of her
unborn child.” (IR 31.) It is hard to square this suggestion with the actual record.
Ms. Nice explicitly alleged that Kinsey “committed acts of violence against [her.].”
(Petition Exhibit 45 at p. 905.) She alleged Kinsey “would try and hurt the baby.” (Id. at
p. 909.) She alleged that she “fears for her unborn baby.” (Id. at p. 908.) And after
hearing both Ms. Nice and Ms. Kinsey testify, the Superior Court judge found there was
Kinsey from coming within 100 yards of “Richelle Nice & unborn child.” (Id. at p. 912.)
Contrary to the state’s position, this documentary evidence does not rebut
32
prejudice, it establishes it. The state was charging Scott Peterson with killing Laci and
his own unborn child. Ms. Nice concealed the fact that she had been directly involved in
a lawsuit to protect her own unborn baby from violence. This was directly relevant to her
And as petitioner explained in some detail in both his Petition and Supporting
Memorandum, the extraordinary letters Ms. Nice wrote to Mr. Peterson after the death
verdict not only suggest why Ms. Nice lied to get on the jury, but confirm why the state
will be unable to prove her misconduct harmless. As summarized in the Petition and the
Supporting Memorandum, these letters disclose Ms. Nice’s near obsessive interest in the
harm to Conner. (Petition 103-106; Memorandum 7-10. See also Exhibit 51 [Beratlis
Declaration] at HCP-000992 [noting that when Nice was seated to replace a juror, she
“came in [the jury room] talking a big game about how we should ‘get Scott for what he
did to Laci and Little Man.’ Little Man was the nickname Richelle used to refer to Laci
The state urges the Court to blind itself to the letters because in the Petition Mr.
Peterson focused only on “those passages that relate to Conner and parenting.” (IR 36.)
The suggestion, of course, is that other portions of the letters might undercut the idea that
the unusual decision Ms. Nice made to write a series of letters to the person she had just
33
But the fact of the matter is that Mr. Peterson attached as an exhibit to his Petition
the entirety of each letter on which he relied. (Petition Exhibit 47.) If anything was taken
out of context -- or if there was even a shred of evidence to place Ms. Nice’s comments in
a different context -- the state would presumably have pointed that out. It did not. (IR
36.)7
The state takes a similar approach to the statements Ms. Nice made in her own
book. In her book, Ms. Nice discloses various statements she made during deliberations
which reveal her focus on violence to the unborn child. (Petition 103.) The state urges
the Court to blind itself to these facts as well, arguing that the book contains “multiple
7
Perhaps because Ms. Nice decided to sell Mr. Peterson’s letters to People
Magazine, the state does not dispute that she in fact corresponded with Mr. Peterson.
Nevertheless, the state makes a technical objection that the letters filed as exhibits in
support of the Petition have not been authenticated. The short answer is that they have
now been authenticated. (Exhibit 52 [Peterson Declaration] at HCP-000995.) The
slightly longer answer is that the state’s observation completely ignores the procedural
posture of this case.
book. (Petition Exhibit 8 at p. 140.) In it she reports her own statements in the jury room.
objection has no place in the prima facie case calculus; as with Ms. Nice’s letters, the
book has been attached as documentary evidence showing what an evidentiary hearing
will show. There is no reason in law, logic or common sense for the Court to simply
D. Conclusion.
Deciding whether petitioner pled a prima facie case as to this claim should be
simple. Assuming the factual allegations of the Petition are true, there is no doubt juror
Nice (1) was involved in a lawsuit involving a threat of harm to her unborn child, (2)
testified as a witness in that lawsuit, and (3) alleged that she and her unborn baby
received threats of violence. Similarly, there is no doubt that in her jury questionnaire,
juror Nice (1) denied ever participating in a lawsuit, (2) denied ever testifying as a
witness and (3) denied ever being the victim of a crime. All of these answers were
8
The state accurately notes some of Ms. Nice’s other questionnaire responses
did not in and of themselves indicate bias. (IR 33.) The legal relevance of the state’s
point is hard to discern. A juror misconduct claim does not require habeas petitioners to
show that every answer a particular juror gave during voir dire or in her questionnaire
constituted misconduct. And the state cites no authority for the startling proposition that
it may defend a juror’s improper concealment of material information during voir dire by
noting that there were other questions which the juror may have answered truthfully.
35
unequivocally false. Given that the state charged Scott Peterson with murdering his
unborn child, these false answers did not relate to some unimportant, tangential point.
And given Ms. Nice’s statements after trial -- in her own book and her own letters -- the
state cannot establish as a matter of law that the misconduct was harmless. Petitioner has
pled a prima facie case of misconduct and an Order to Show Cause should issue on this
claim.
36
II. CLAIM TWO: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
THE STATE PRESENTED FALSE EVIDENCE AS TO WHEN CONNER
STOPPED GROWING.
A. Introduction.
The state’s theory of the case was that Scott killed Laci on the evening of
December 23 or the morning of December 24, 2002. At trial, the state called Dr.
Greggory Devore who testified that he measured Conner’s femur bone, applied a formula
developed by Dr. Phillipe Jeanty, and concluded that Dr. Jeanty’s formula showed Conner
It turns out Dr. Devore got it wrong. As explained in Dr. Jeanty’s 13-page
declaration submitted with the Petition, along with an additional 34 pages of graphs and
data, Dr. Devore relied on the wrong formula, he erroneously applied that formula to only
one bone (rather than three) and -- not surprisingly -- his result in applying the formula
was wrong. (Petition Exhibit 7.) A correct application of Dr. Jeanty’s formula shows that
Conner died not on December 23 (as Devore testified) but January 3. (Petition Exhibit 7
at p. 62.) Even applying the incorrect formula that Dr. Devore used -- but applying it
correctly by measuring three bones -- the formula indicates a date of death of January 3.
(Id. at pp. 62-63.) Based on these facts Mr. Peterson alleged the state had presented false
evidence about the exact date Conner died based on Dr. Jeanty’s formula. (Petition 109-
37
116.)
The state argues that for four reasons, petitioner did not plead a prima facie case of
false evidence. As discussed below, none of these arguments supports the state’s position
that summary dismissal of this claim is proper. Assuming the factual allegations of the
Petition are true, petitioner has established a prima facie case of false evidence and an
The state first makes a short argument that the false evidence claim is procedurally
defaulted because it should have been raised on appeal. (IR 41-42.) The argument is
without merit.
The state recognizes that “it is certainly true that Dr. Jeanty’s declaration . . . in
support of Peterson’s claim was not part of the trial record . . . .” (IR 41.) No matter, the
state now says, because at trial defense counsel cross-examined Dr. Devore and brought
out “the purported concerns raised by Jeanty’s declaration.” (IR 41.) Thus, the false
The argument need not long detain the Court. Contrary to the state’s suggestion,
38
“the purported concerns raised by Jeanty’s declaration” were never explored at trial. No
expert -- much less Jeanty himself -- testified that Devore used the wrong formula. No
expert -- much less Jeanty himself -- testified that it was improper to apply the Jeanty
formula (even the incorrect one) to only one bone. No expert -- much less Jeanty himself
-- testified that a correct application of the Jeanty formula leads to a result squarely
inconsistent with the state’s case. These are the precise facts on which the false evidence
claim is based, and these are the facts which the state concedes were “not part of the trial
C. The New Evidence From Dr. Jeanty Does Not Merely Show A
Disagreement Among Experts, But Instead Shows The State Presented
Objectively False Evidence As To The Application Of The Jeanty Formula.
Turning to the merits, the state argues petitioner did not establish a prima facie
case for relief because “Dr. Devore’s testimony was not objectively false.” (IR 51.) The
state correctly notes that a “reasonable disagreement among credible experts” will not
suffice to establish a false evidence claim. (IR 51.) The state seeks to fit the facts of this
Contrary to the state’s suggestion, however, this is not a case where two experts
simply disagreed about the date Conner stopped growing. The state’s expert said that
according to Dr. Jeanty’s formula, Conner died precisely on December 23. But according
39
to Dr. Jeanty, Dr. Devore did everything wrong -- he used the wrong formula, he
measured the wrong bones and he got a result which is unsupported by the formula. Dr.
Jeanty’s declaration makes clear that the correct application of his formula shows that
An analogy may help to expose the basic fallacy in the state’s position. According
to the Pythagorean theorem, the square of the hypotenuse of a right angle triangle is equal
to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. The theorem is often expressed as the
formula a2 + b2 = c2 where c is the length of the hypotenuse and a and b are the lengths of
the triangle’s other two sides. If a triangle has a side “a” which is three inches long, and
side “b” is four inches long, a correct application of the Pythagorean theorem reveals that
With that as background, assume an expert for the state came into court and
testified that he applied Pythagoras’s theorem to a right angle triangle of which the two
shorter sides were three inches and four inches long respectively, and he concluded that
under Pythagoras’s theorem, the hypotenuse was six inches long. In other words, the
expert took a specific theorem and told jurors the equally specific result from applying
that theorem.
40
shows the hypotenuse was five inches long, not six. A declaration from Pythagoras as to
the correct application of his own theorem does not simply create a “reasonable
disagreement among credible experts.” (IR 51.) The state’s expert may have other
reasons for believing the hypotenuse is six inches long -- he may even disagree with
That is precisely what we have here. Dr. Devore did not offer a general view as to
when Conner stopped growing, any more than the expert in the hypothetical above
offered a general view on how long the hypotenuse was. Instead, just like the expert in
the above hypothetical, Dr. Devore testified as to the mathematical result obtained when
he applied a specific formula -- in this case, the Jeanty formula. And just as in the
Pythagorean example above, the originator of the formula is able to state with certainty
that Dr. Devore conveyed false evidence to the jury about the result he reached through
incorrect application of his specific formula. The state’s suggestion that this was a
“reasonable disagreement among credible experts” ignores that Dr. Devore was not
specific and objectively verifiable conclusion derived from quantifiable data as to the date
bone growth stopped according to Dr. Jeanty’s formula. And as Dr. Jeanty has
concluded, the state’s expert got it objectively wrong. Assuming petitioner’s factual
allegations are true, petitioner has established a prima facie that false evidence was
41
presented at trial.
The state adds a separate legal reason in urging this Court to find there is no prima
facie case. The state argues there is no evidence the prosecutor knew that Devore had
misapplied Jeanty’s theory. (IR 56.) The state’s legal thesis is that a prosecutor’s
reliance on false evidence is fine so long as the prosecutor is acting in good faith.
The state is wrong as a matter of both federal and state law. The Due Process
Clause prevents the prosecution in a criminal case from introducing false evidence.
(United States v. Agurs (1976) 427 U.S. 97, 103. See also Napue v. Illinois (1959) 360
U.S. 264, 269.) For sound policy reasons, the bar on presentation of false evidence
applies even where the prosecutor does not intentionally elicit the false evidence. (People
v. Seaton (2001) 26 Cal.4th 598, 647.) As the Supreme Court has noted in this very
context, in assessing whether Due Process has been violated, what matters is “the
character of the evidence, not the character of the prosecutor.” (United States v. Agurs,
supra, 427 U. S. at p. 110. Accord Maxwell v. Roe (9th Cir. 2010) 628 F.3d 486, 506
[granting relief where false evidence was presented by prosecution, where the evidence
was material, even though the prosecution presented the evidence in “good faith”]; Hall v.
42
Director of Corrections (9th Cir. 2003) 343 F.3d 976, 978. 981, 985 [same].) The state
violates Due Process when it presents false evidence even where the prosecutor is
unaware the evidence presented was false. (United States v. Young (9th Cir. 1994) 17
obligation to grant relief where the state has introduced false evidence, California law
material or probative on the issue of guilt or punishment was introduced against a person
at any hearing or trial relating to his incarceration.” (Pen. Code § 1473, subd. (b)(1).) As
under federal law, it is immaterial whether the prosecution actually knew or should have
known of the false nature of the evidence. (Pen. Code §1473, subd. (c); In re Hall (1981)
30 Cal.3d 408, 424.) Even assuming the prosecutor’s good faith here, it is irrelevant to
E. Because The State Bears The Burden Of Proving Any False Evidence
Harmless, Petitioner Has Established A Prima Facie Case That The State
Presented False Evidence.
The state’s final argument in support of its request for summary dismissal of this
9
In a related argument, the state notes that nothing suggests Dr. Devore lied
in his testimony. (IR 55.) This is true but, yet again, its legal relevance is hard to fathom.
To paraphrase the Supreme Court, what matters is the character of the evidence, not the
character of the expert. (See Agurs, supra, 427 U.S. at p. 110.)
43
claim is that there is no prejudice. (IR 59.) It is once again important to place this
This Court has properly concluded that when the state relies on false evidence, it is
the state’s burden to prove the error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. (In re Sakarias
(2005) 35 Cal.4th 140, 165.) As discussed above, petitioner has established a prima facie
case of false evidence. As such, at this early stage of the habeas process the question is
whether as a matter of law the state has carried its burden of proving the error harmless.
The state makes two points to suggest it has carried its burden as a matter of law.
First the state argues that Dr. Jeanty’s criticisms of Dr. Devore came into evidence
through the testimony of Dr. March. (IR 59.) The claim is unsupportable.
Citing page 106 RT 19771 and 19784-19785 the state maintains that “arguably”
jurors were exposed to Dr. Jeanty’s concerns about using only the femur to reach a
conclusion as opposed to three bones. (IR 59.) The qualifier “arguably” is important.
The pages the state cites do not support the state’s contention at all; there is no discussion
on any of these pages about the need to rely on and average three different long bones as
44
The state next notes that jurors heard Dr. March give a different date than Dr.
Devore for when Conner died. (IR 59.) This is true, but it too has nothing at all to do
with Dr. Devore (1) using the wrong formula and (2) applying it to only one bone. These
Finally, the state argues that Dr. March’s examination contained a “pointed
criticism” of the formula on which Dr. Devore relied. (IR 59 citing 106 RT 19813-
19814.) This is true, but it points in a very different direction than the state wants. At the
cited pages Dr. March said nothing at all about Dr. Devore applying the wrong formula.
He said nothing at all about Dr. Devore’s failure to apply the formula to three bones.
Instead, Dr. March explained that in the article which included the Jeanty formula, Jeanty
incorporated an error rate to take account of different possible growth rates. (106 RT
19813.) This too has nothing at all to do with Jeanty’s specific criticisms of Devore’s
application of the Jeanty formula in this case or the conclusions supported by correct
The state adds that in light of testimony from Professor Galloway -- the state’s
anthropologist who gave a five week range for when Conner stopped growing -- “it was
no doubt clear to the jury that trying to pinpoint the specific date of Conner’s death with
reliable accuracy was impossible.” (IR 59.) The irony of the position taken by the state’s
45
The state’s prior lawyers expressed a very different view. Thus, at trial the
prosecutor told jurors that Professor Galloway’s had provided “just too big a range for us
to really make any definitive determination.” (109 RT 20288.) But contrary to the newly
minted position now taken by the state’s current lawyers, the prosecutor did not just throw
up his hands and admit that “trying to pinpoint the specific date of Conner’s death with
reliable accuracy was impossible.” (IR 59.) Instead, the trial prosecutor did the exact
opposite, relying on Devore and telling jurors his application of Jeanty’s formula “shows
us that Conner died right at the exact time the prosecution said he did.” (109 RT 20289.)
In the state’s evolving position on the accuracy of fetal-development evidence it says not
a word about the position it took below. (IR 59.) And we know to a certainty that jurors
took the prosecutor at his word -- in their book We the Jury jurors made very clear they
F. Conclusion.
Assuming the factual allegations of the Petition as true, Dr. Devore told jurors he
(1) was applying a formula developed by Dr. Jeanty and (2) using that formula, Conner
died on December 23. Similarly, these factual allegations show that, according to Dr.
Jeanty, Dr. Devore (1) used the wrong formula, (2) applied it to the wrong bones and (3)
gave jurors a date which correct application of the formula simply does not support. As
46
in the example with the Pythagorean theorem, this is the very definition of objectively
false evidence. And in light of the reliance on Dr. Devore by both the prosecutor and the
jury, at this early stage of the habeas proceedings, the state cannot prove as a matter of
law that this error was harmless. Moreover, the fact of the matter is that summary
dismissal is not warranted at this early stage because prejudice from separate errors can
cumulate. Petitioner has established a prima facie case for relief on this claim and an
47
III. CLAIM THREE: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
TRIAL COUNSEL PROVIDED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE IN FAILING TO
CALL AN EXPERT IN THE FIELD OF FETAL DEVELOPMENT.
In a report provided to the defense several months prior to trial, and in his
testimony at trial, Dr. Devore concluded that Conner died on December 23. (95 RT
17879-17883.) As discussed in detail above, Dr. Devore reached this result by applying a
fetal development formula devised by Dr. Jeanty. (95 RT 17861, 17868, 17879-17883.)
It is hard to see why. Dr. March was an expert in infertility. (106 RT 19843.) Dr.
(Ibid.) Although Dr. March offered a different conclusion than Dr. Devore, he was
unaware that Devore (1) used the wrong formula developed by Dr. Jeanty and (2) failed
to apply that formula to three bones (as opposed to only one) as specified by Dr. Jeanty to
ensure an accurate result. Dr. March made no attempt to use Dr. Jeanty’s correct formula,
apply it to the three long bones -- the femur, the tibia and the humerus -- or provide the
Trial counsel has admitted he failed to consult with an expert in fetal biometry and
he has explained his decision to use Dr. March. (Petition Exhibit 4 at pp. 17-20.)
Counsel has explained that he did not have sufficient time to hire a proper expert because
48
the state did not provide notice of its expert until February 2004. (Petition Exhibit 4 at
pp. 17-19.) Counsel has conceded that Dr. March’s expertise was “not specifically in
This is an important concession on defense counsel’s part. After all, this was the
exact purpose for which defense counsel retained Dr. March -- to assess the reliability of
Trial counsel has also conceded that in cross-examining Dr. March, the prosecutor
pathology and was only an expert in infertility. (Id. at p. 20.) And counsel has concluded
he had no tactical reason for failing to call someone who actually was familiar with Dr.
Jeanty’s formula and who could have explained that Dr. Devore used the wrong formula
and applied it to an insufficient number of bones. (Id. at pp. 20-21.) Counsel admits he
knew Dr. March was not really the best expert to call. (Ibid.)
Because Dr. Devore did not testify until seven months after the prosecution named
him as an expert, Mr. Peterson alleged in Claim Three of his Petition that counsel did
have sufficient time to hire a proper expert. Given the reliance placed on Dr. Devore’s
testimony about the Jeanty formula by both the prosecutor and the jury, Mr. Peterson
alleged that counsel’s failure to call a properly qualified expert constituted ineffective
49
assistance of counsel. Specifically, Mr. Peterson alleged that (1) counsel’s performance
in failing to call a qualified expert fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and
whether a prima facie showing has been made (assuming the truth of the facts alleged in
the Petition) -- and credibility determinations form no part of that calculus -- the state
Three . . . .” (IR 62.) Thus, rather than assume the truth of petitioner’s factual allegations
based on defense counsel’s sworn declaration, the state declares these allegations
“unfathomable.” (IR 67.) As discussed in some detail above, the state’s unwillingness to
assume the truth of petitioner’s factual allegations for purposes of assessing whether a
prima facie case has been established is inappropriate. Defense counsel has stated under
oath -- accurately -- that because Dr. March’s expertise was “not specifically in assessing
the age of a fetus from fetal bones” he was not the best expert. (Petition Exhibit 4 at p.
19.) But as noted above, “assessing the age of a fetus from fetal bones” was exactly what
Dr. Devore testified to, and exactly what the defense should have rebutted.
In arguing that petitioner did not plead a prima facie case of deficient performance,
the state alleges that defense counsel is not credible when he admits that Dr. March was
not qualified. The state notes that in seeking funds for Dr. March, counsel told the
50
funding court he was qualified. (IR 66.)
This latter assertion is true. But even putting aside that credibility determinations
are not generally made at the prima-facie-case stage, there is a much larger problem with
the state’s position that defense counsel thought March was qualified. The state’s
position does not solve the performance problem, it actually creates a bigger one.
If defense counsel in this case genuinely concluded March was qualified to testify
about the application of Jeanty’s formula and to “assess[] the age of a fetus from fetal
bones” that conclusion itself was objectively unreasonable. March practiced obstetrics
and gynecology and his field of specialty is infertility. (106 RT 19843.) While the state
now lauds his expertise in “gynecology, reproductive endocrinology and infertility,” (IR
48) the fact of the matter -- as the trial prosecutor exposed below -- is that Dr. March did
not know what he was doing in connection with fetal biometry and was predictably
19858; 109 RT 20290-20292. See Hinton v. Alabama (2014) ___ U.S. ___, 134 S.Ct.
1081, 1088 [trial counsel ineffective for failing to replace inadequate expert].) Assuming
51
petitioner’s factual allegations are true, petitioner has pled a prima facie case of deficient
performance.10
The state alternatively contends that petitioner has not presented a prima facie case
as to prejudice. (IR 69-70.) The state’s appellate lawyers repeat their argument that “it
was evident that trying to pinpoint the specific date of Conner’s death with reliable
date of Conner’s death with reliable accuracy” based on Dr. Devore’s testimony was
apparently lost on the state’s trial lawyers. In stark contrast to the newly minted position
now taken by the state’s appellate lawyers, the state’s trial lawyers told jurors that
pinpointing the date of Conner’s was not only possible, but had been done and “shows us
that Conner died right at the exact time the prosecution said he did.” (109 RT 20289.)
The prosecutor’s substantial reliance on Dr. Devore’s testimony shows just how
important it was to the state’s theory. (See People v. Powell (1967) 67 Cal.2d 32, 55-57
[prosecutor’s reliance on evidence in final argument reveals how important the prosecutor
“and so presumably the jury” considered the evidence]; People v. Cruz (1964) 61 Cal.2d
10
The state adds a second reason for its argument that there is no prima facie
case as to performance. The state notes that apart from March, defense counsel retained
Henry Lee, a criminalist, and Cyril Wecht, a pathologist. (IR 65.) The legal relevance of
this observation is difficult to see given the state’s forthright concession that neither of
these experts testified as to fetal biometry or -- indeed -- had any expertise in that area at
all. (IR 66.)
52
861, 868 [same].) And here, there is no need to guess whether jurors thought “trying to
pinpoint the specific date of Conner’s death with reliable accuracy was impossible,” as
the state’s new set of post-conviction lawyers now suggest. The jurors themselves have
publically stated in unmistakable terms that they found Dr. Devore’s testimony persuasive
evidence of guilt. (Petition Exhibit 8 at p. 219.) In equally plain terms, they have noted
that calling Dr. March was one of defense counsel’s biggest blunders and was a turning
In short, at this early stage of the proceedings, the state has not shown as a matter
of law that trial counsel’s failure to consult with an expert (like Dr. Jeanty) who would
have exposed the obvious flaws in Dr. Devore’s application of the Jeanty formula was
harmless. This is especially true not only because this case is at the prima facie case
offense. In such states, when a defense lawyer unreasonably fails to call a particular
defense witness, all the defendant need show to establish prejudice is that a single juror
could reasonably have found a doubt in light of the new testimony. (See Wiggins v.
Smith, supra, 539 U.S. at p. 537; People v. Centeno, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 677.)
Moreover, as discussed above, summary dismissal is also inappropriate at this stage of the
proceedings because aggregated prejudice from separate errors may itself require relief.
The state ignores both points entirely in its discussion. Petitioner has established a prima
facie case for relief and an Order to Show Cause should issue on this claim.
53
IV. CLAIM FOUR: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
THE STATE PRESENTED FALSE EVIDENCE AS TO THE DOG SCENT
EVIDENCE.
A. Introduction.
The state’s theory at trial was that after killing Laci on the evening of December
23 or the morning of December 24, Scott brought her to the Berkeley Marina in his boat,
which he launched into the bay. According to this theory, while out on the bay Scott
To support this theory, the state presented testimony from dog handler Eloise
Anderson that on December 28 (four days after Laci went missing), Anderson gave
Trimble (her dog) Laci’s scent using a pair of sunglasses which had been given to her by
another dog handler, Cindy Valentin. According to Anderson, Trimble alerted to Laci’s
scent during a search on a boat ramp at the Berkeley Marina. (7 RT 1381; 84 RT 16085;
8 RT 1520-1521, 1590-1591.) In his Petition, Mr. Peterson alleged facts relating to four
different subject areas: the process by which Trimble was given Laci’s scent, Trimble’s
training, the method used to conduct the actual search here and the environmental
(1) Flaws in the process by which Trimble was given Laci’s scent. First Mr.
54
Peterson alleged five facts relating to the way in which Trimble was given
Laci’s scent: (1) Ms. Valentin was wearing gloves when she picked up
Laci’s sunglasses, (2) before handling Laci’s sunglasses, Valentin first
picked up a pair of slippers belonging to Scott Peterson, (3) Valentin did
not change gloves after handling the slippers, (4) the sunglasses Anderson
used to scent Trimble were therefore contaminated with Scott’s scent and
(5) Anderson failed to perform the “missing member” test to ensure Trimble
would not search for Scott’s scent. (Petition 126-127.)
(3) The circumstances of the December 28 search. Third, and again relying
on these expert declarations, Mr. Peterson alleged three facts relating to
how the search was conducted: (1) it was not double-blind (because
Anderson was specifically told where police hoped to find a scent), (2) it
was not randomized (because Anderson was not told to search anywhere but
the target area where police hoped to find a scent) and (3) because
Anderson failed to perform the “missing member” test it was impossible to
say whether Trimble was alerting to Laci’s scent from her sunglasses or
Scott’s scent from his slippers. (Petition 137-139, 141.)
11
A “closed container subject search” is a search where the dog is trying to
track a subject who has not been exposed to the environment, as where the subject has
been transported in a closed car or boat. In contrast, an “open air subject search” occurs
where a dog tries to track a subject who has been exposed to the environment, as where
the subject is riding a bicycle.
55
(Petition 138, 141.)
Taking all these factual allegations together, Mr. Peterson alleged in Claim Four of
his Petition that the state’s dog-scent evidence -- evidence that Trimble reliably alerted to
Laci’s scent at the marina -- was false. (Petition 123-143.) He sought an Order to Show
The state argues that for four reasons, petitioner did not plead a prima facie case of
false evidence. As discussed below, none of these arguments supports the state’s position
that summary dismissal of this claim is proper. Assuming the factual allegations of the
Petition are true, petitioner has established a prima facie case of false evidence and an
The state first argues that the false dog-scent evidence claim is procedurally
defaulted because it should have been raised on appeal. (IR 70-72.) The argument is
without merit.
The state recognizes that Mr. Peterson’s claim is based on declarations from
experts explaining why Ms. Anderson’s testimony is false. (IR 71.) The state says this
56
does not matter because defense counsel’s cross-examination exposed the falsity of the
dog-scent evidence. (IR 71.) Thus, the state reasons that the false evidence claim should
Contrary to the state’s suggestion, the falsity of Anderson’s testimony was not
exposed at trial. Indeed, if it had been it is unlikely the prosecutor would have relied on
this evidence in closing argument to tell jurors that the dog-scent evidence showed Mr.
Peterson was guilty of capital murder “as simple as that.” (111 RT 20534.)
The record on this point is clear. At trial, no expert explained that under the facts
of this case the absence of a missing member test meant it was impossible to determine
whose scent Trimble alerted to (if anyone’s). And there was no expert testimony showing
that it was impossible to determine if an alert by Trimble at the marina was reliable
training history, and his prior inability to conduct a closed-container subject search, (2)
the absence of either a double-blind or randomized search at the marina or (3) the timing
and environmental conditions under which the search was conducted. These are the
precise facts on which the false evidence claim is based, and these are the facts which the
state concedes were not part of the trial record. There is no default in this case.
57
C. The Allegations Of The Petition Show The State’s Dog-Scent Evidence
Was False; Assuming These Allegations Are True, Petitioner Has
Established A Prima Case That The State Presented False Evidence.
The state argues that petitioner did not plead a prima facie case that false evidence
was presented in connection with the dog-scent evidence for two main reasons -- its
disagreement with the facts underlying the claim and prejudice. As to the facts, the state
Claim Four . . . .” (IR 70.) The state does just that in urging the Court to find no prima
facie case.
records. (Petition Exhibit 6 at p. 45.) Professor Myers concluded that these training
exercises were neither randomized nor double-blind as required for proper training.
(Petition Exhibit 6 at p. 47.) Based on this expert conclusion, petitioner alleged that
136.) Rather than assume this factual allegation as true however, the state quotes from
Anderson’s trial testimony and concludes that Professor Myers “is mistaken” about the
absence of double-blind testing. (IR 77.) Later, the state says Professor Myers is
This pattern continues throughout the state’s argument. Mr. Peterson alleged that
58
Anderson was told where to search on December 28. (Petition 125-126.) The state
disputes this fact saying “[t]hat is not true.” (IR 78.) Based on declarations by both
Myers and Rebman, Mr. Peterson alleged that absent a missing member test the scent-
trailing testimony in this case was worthless. (Petition 127-128, 138-139, 141.) The state
says this factual allegation too is “without merit.” (IR 81.) Based on Rebman’s first hand
observations, Mr. Peterson alleged that in 2002 Trimble failed a closed-container subject
search set up for her by Rebman himself. (Petition 146-147.) The state disputes this,
offering only Anderson’s contrary view that the test was not a closed-container subject
In light of this record, the state’s decision to dispute these facts is puzzling. As to
the lack of double-blind testing, Anderson herself admitted that in connection with
Trimble’s successful searches “most of the time we know where the trail is.” (85 RT
16108.) As to the absence of randomization, Officer Boyer admitted that he did not ask
Anderson to search the marina generally; instead, he specifically directed her to search the
“boat ramp” to look for “an entry or exit trail.” (84 RT 15997.) And as for the state’s
suggestion that Trimble did not fail a closed-container subject search, the video of that
failure is in the appellate record. (Defense Trial Exhibit D-5-Y; 85 RT 16147; see 85 RT
16116-16119, 16146.)
But the many errors in the state’s analysis of the facts are the least of the state’s
59
problems. Without repeating in detail what petitioner has explained above, in assessing
whether a petitioner has pled a prima facie case, the Court does not assume the factual
allegations are “mistaken” or “not true.” If petitioner’s allegations are credibly supported
must assess whether he has pled a prima facie case by assuming these allegations are true.
(Duvall, supra, 9 Cal.4th at pp. 474-475.) The state’s approach is once again entirely
contrary to Duvall.
Beyond these purely factual disputes -- which should have no place in the prima
facie case calculus -- the state expresses a legitimate concern, noting that a disagreement
among reasonable experts does not mean false evidence has been presented. (IR 72.)
This is true. If at the end of the day the Court concludes that is all that is presented here,
But we are not there yet. Assuming petitioner’s allegations are true, this is not a
case of reasonable experts disagreeing. Assuming the truth of the allegations about the
missing member test, the circumstances of this search, Trimble’s history, training and
prior failures and the impact of the marine environment, there is no disagreement among
reasonable experts. Assuming the truth of these allegations, no expert would disagree
that testimony suggesting Trimble reliably detected Laci’s scent was false. The state does
not really dispute this; what the state disputes are the factual allegations regarding the
60
missing member test, the circumstances of this search, Trimble’s history and the impact
of the environment.
The state is, of course, free to dispute the facts. What the state may not do,
however, is dispute facts in the context of the prima facie stage of proceedings. If
documentary evidence -- the trial testimony that Trimble reliably detected Laci’s scent is
false; as such, petitioner has pled a prima facie case of false evidence.
The state’s second argument in support of its request for summary dismissal of this
claim is that there is no prejudice. As noted above, however, when the state relies on
false evidence, it is the state’s burden to prove the error harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt. (In re Sakarias, supra, 35 Cal.4th at p. 165.) Thus, because petitioner has
established a prima facie case that the state presented false dog-scent evidence, at this
early stage of the habeas process the question is whether as a matter of law the state has
carried its burden of proving the false evidence harmless. If not, then an Order to Show
The state makes three points in support of its argument that it has carried its
burden as a matter of law. First the state argues that “the infirmities in the reliability of
Trimble’s search” were exposed at trial and “there is nothing new here.” (IR 85.) The
61
record will not support this assertion. At trial, no expert explained to jurors that it was
impossible to determine if Trimble’s alert meant anything at all because (1) Anderson
failed to perform a missing member test, (2) Trimble’s prior training lacked either double-
blind testing or randomization, (3) the December 28 search was neither double-blind nor
randomized or (4) the timing and environmental conditions under which the search was
conducted reduced the possibility of a reliable result. Indeed, had the infirmities in the
reliability of Trimble’s search really been exposed at trial, the prosecutor would not have
relied on the dog-scent evidence in closing argument to tell jurors that Mr. Peterson was
Second, the state notes that the defense called dog handler Ron Seitz to testify at
trial in “an attempt to neutralize any residual value the prosecution may have derived
from Anderson’s . . . testimony . . . .” (IR 85.) As the Court is no doubt aware, this
reflects something of a change in the state’s view as to the value of Mr. Seitz’s testimony.
At one point in Respondent’s Brief filed on appeal the state informed this Court that far
from being helpful to the defense, Seitz’s testimony actually “corroborated” Trimble’s
reliability and “provides further support for Trimble’s detection of Laci’s scent . . . .”
But even putting aside the state’s sea change of positions, Seitz’s testimony does
not help the state. The fact that defense counsel felt the need to present Seitz’s testimony
62
itself reflects a recognition that what the state now calls the “infirmities” in Trimble’s
reliability had not been adequately revealed. (IR 85.) If they had, of course, there would
Finally, the state finds support in an instruction which the court gave to the jury
about the dog-scent evidence. (IR 85.) The state characterizes the instruction as
informing the jury “that the dog trailing evidence was not sufficient by itself to prove
Peterson’s guilt” and that the dog-scent evidence “had to be corroborated before it could
discussion there shows, the state’s characterization of this instruction is not entirely
Evidence of dog tracking of the victim has been received for your
consideration. The evidence is not by itself sufficient to permit an inference
that the defendant is guilty of the crime of murder. Before guilt may be
inferred, there must be other evidence that supports the accuracy of the dog
tracking evidence.
The evidence can be direct or circumstantial and must support the accuracy
of the dog tracking evidence.
(19 CT 6071.)
63
The court went on to give examples of evidence that would “support the accuracy
of the dog tracking evidence,” including (1) whether the handler was qualified, (2)
whether the dog was adequately trained, (3) whether the dog had been found reliable, (4)
whether the dog had been at a place where “circumstances have shown the victim to have
been,” (5) whether the scent had become stale and (6) “any other factor that could affect
In other words, jurors were told they could rely on the dog-scent evidence to infer
guilt of capital murder as long as there was some circumstantial evidence which
supported that evidence. And that “corroborating evidence” could be “any . . . factor”
which jurors thought supported the accuracy of the dog tracking evidence. On appeal,
Mr. Peterson has contended in part that this instruction undercut the state’s burden of
proof by improperly permitting jurors to convict based on a “dog tracking plus” theory.
(AOB 239-254.) Regardless of whether this is correct, however, and contrary to the
position now taken by the state, this instruction certainly did nothing to minimize the
telling jurors they could infer guilt of murder by relying on the dog-scent evidence so
long as it was corroborated by some piece of circumstantial evidence makes the dog
evidence more important, not less. The state has not shown that the presentation of false
evidence about Laci’s scent being at the marina was harmless as a matter of law.
64
D. Conclusion.
Assuming the factual allegations of the Petition are true, Anderson’s testimony that
Trimble alerted on Laci’s scent at the marina was false. This was not merely a
allegations, all reasonable experts would agree that any alert by Trimble was meaningless.
And while the state spills a great deal of ink disagreeing with those factual allegations --
“he is mistaken,” “this is not true,” the factual allegation is “without merit” -- these
factual disputes have no place here. The state’s use of an Informal Response to
at this early stage of the habeas proceedings the state cannot prove the error harmless as a
matter of law. Moreover, as noted above, summary dismissal based on a lack of prejudice
as to any one claim is not warranted at this stage because prejudice from separate errors
must be assessed cumulatively. Petitioner has established a prima facie case for relief and
12
The state repeats an argument it made in connection with the false evidence
claim regarding application of Dr. Jeanty’s formula, arguing that absent a showing that
the prosecutor here knew Anderson’s testimony was false, no prima facie case of false
evidence can be pled. (IR 84.) As discussed above, however, the state is wrong as a
matter of both federal and state law: the bar on presentation of false evidence applies even
where the prosecutor does not intentionally elicit the false evidence. (Pen. Code § 1473,
subd. (c); People v. Seaton (2001) 26 Cal.4th 598, 647; In re Hall (1981) 30 Cal.3d 408,
424. Accord Maxwell v. Roe, supra, 628 F.3d at p. 506; Hall v. Director of Corrections,
supra, 343 F.3d at pp. 976, 978, 981, 985; United States v. Young, supra, 17 F.3d at pp.
1203-1204.)
65
V. CLAIM FIVE: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
COUNSEL RENDERED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE IN FAILING TO CALL
A DOG-SCENT EXPERT.
A. Introduction.
Prior to trial the court overruled defense counsel’s objection to testimony from Ms.
Anderson that Trimble alerted to Laci’s scent at the Berkeley Marina on December 28.
(10 RT 2002-2003.) At trial, the state introduced Anderson’s testimony. (84 RT 16075-
16080, 16085.) During closing arguments the prosecutor told jurors that if they found
that Trimble’s alert was accurate, petitioner was guilty of murder “as simple as that.”
(111 RT 20534.)
It turns out there were numerous problems with Anderson’s testimony. Regardless
of whether the Court finds that Anderson’s testimony was false (discussed in Argument
IV above), neither the judge charged with deciding if Anderson’s testimony was
admissible at the pre-trial hearing, nor the jury charged with deciding whether Anderson’s
trial testimony was reliable, had the full story about her testimony or anything close to it.
As explained in detail above, trial counsel could and should have presented expert
witnesses both at the pre-trial hearing and at trial showing that (1) the absence of a
missing member test meant it was impossible to determine whose scent Trimble alerted to
(if anyone’s), (2) the absence of double-blind testing and randomization in Trimble’s
66
training history, as well as his history of failing closed-container subject searches, meant
it was impossible to determine if an alert by Trimble meant anything at all, (3) the
impossible to determine if an alert by Trimble meant anything at all, (4) the timing and
environmental conditions under which the search was conducted meant it was impossible
his petition, Mr. Peterson alleged trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present an
expert at both the pre-trial hearing and the trial. Specifically, Mr. Peterson alleged that in
light of the flaws in Anderson’s testimony which should have been explored by a defense
expert (1) counsel’s performance in failing to call a qualified expert at the pre-trial
hearing and at trial fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2) counsel’s
The state argues that petitioner failed to plead a prima facie case, either as to
67
B. The Allegations Of The Petition Show Defense Counsel Had No Legitimate
Tactical Reason For Failing To Call A Dog-Scent Expert Prior To Trial;
Assuming These Allegations Are True, Petitioner Has Established A Prima
Facie Case Of Deficient Performance At The Pre-Trial Hearing.
There is no dispute that trial counsel failed to call a defense expert at the pre-trial
hearing. In his habeas petition, petitioner alleged that defense counsel had hired expert
Andrew Rebman to testify and Mr. Rebman was present at the pre-trial hearing. (Petition
145-150.) Petitioner alleged that Mr. Rebman had explained to counsel in some detail the
flaws in Anderson’s testimony. (Petition 148-149.) Defense counsel has explained that
he did not call Rebman at the pre-trial hearing because he thought that based on the law,
he would win his motion to exclude Anderson’s testimony in light of the record before the
trial court. (Petition Exhibit 4 at p. 26-28.) Defense counsel explained the law as he
understood it at the time. (Petition Exhibit 4 at pp. 27-28.) His understanding was that
the law precluded admission of dog-scent evidence without the contemporaneous location
In his Petition, Mr. Peterson alleged that counsel’s understanding of the law was
wrong because the law had changed prior to trial. (Petition 150; Memorandum 75.) At
the time of trial, the location of the target at the end of the search was no longer “a
68
In its Informal Response the state simply ignores the reasons defense counsel
actually gave for his decision. (IR 88-89.) Instead, the state argues that petitioner failed
to plead a prima facie case of deficient performance because defense counsel consulted
with an expert prior to the pre-trial hearing and successfully kept some dog tracking
whether defense counsel made a reasonable tactical decision not to call Mr. Rebman at
the pre-trial hearing. The fact that counsel was able to exclude some of the dog-scent
evidence is not a tactical reason for anything at all, much less an explanation for failing to
call Rebman to get the remainder of the dog-scent testimony excluded. Counsel may have
made many reasonable decisions in this case; the question this Court must resolve,
however, is whether he made a reasonable tactical decision not to call Rebman at the pre-
trial hearing.
As to this question, the state says nothing at all. Assuming petitioner’s factual
allegations are true, petitioner has pled a paradigmatic example of deficient performance
-- counsel made a decision based on an understanding of the law that was incorrect. (See
Lafler v. Cooper (2012) 566 U.S. 156, 162.) The state’s observation that defense counsel
successfully objected to other evidence -- while true -- simply does not provide a tactical
69
In connection with the state’s offering, however, it is worth noting that the many
commendations the state bestows on defense counsel may not be entirely justified. (IR
88.) The state lauds defense counsel’s performance in getting other dog-scent evidence
excluded and cites it as reassuring evidence that counsel’s performance prior to trial was
entirely fine. (IR 87-89.) The state characterizes the evidence which counsel excluded as
“far more damaging to Peterson’s defense than the testimony concerning Trimble’s
trailing efforts at the marina.” (IR 88.) The record will not support this characterization;
in fact, the excluded evidence may actually have been helpful to the defense.
The state’s theory, of course, was that Scott killed Laci at their home at 523
Covena Avenue in Modesto, put her in his truck and drove to his warehouse in Modesto.
To test this theory, the state brought Cyndi Valentin and her bloodhound Merlin to the
house at 523 Covena. If Merlin could track Laci from the house to the warehouse, that
would go a long way toward helping the state prove its case.
But Merlin could do no such thing. Merlin found Laci’s scent outside the Covena
house, tracked her through several streets in the neighborhood and then to a nearby Gallo
Winery nowhere near the warehouse. (7 RT 1360-1361.) Because this was not
advancing the state’s theory, of course, police simply stopped the search and went to plan
B. (7 RT 1359-1360, 1418-1420.)
70
Plan B involved police turning their attention to the warehouse, and trying to see if
dogs could pick up Laci’s scent there. This too might support the state’s case. In order to
ensure she would not subconsciously tip off Merlin as to where police hoped the scent
would take them, Ms. Valentin quite properly told Detective Brocchini not to tell her
where the warehouse was but to take her near it to see if Merlin picked up the scent. (7
RT 1420-1421.)
From the state’s perspective, however, this turned out to be a mistake. Brocchini
took her one block away from the warehouse and gave Merlin Laci’s scent. (7 RT 1420.)
According to Valentin, Merlin did indeed pick up Laci’s scent and then went “directly
Police turned to plan C. Since dogs were unable to track Laci’s scent in any
helpful way from the house, or from outside the warehouse, police put a cadaver dog
named Twist inside the warehouse. After all, the state’s theory was that Laci was dead
when Scott took her to the warehouse. Twist’s handler was Eloise Anderson, who also
handled Trimble; according to Ms. Anderson’s report, there were “no alerts.” (8 RT
1599.) During pre-trial hearings, Anderson completely changed her testimony and said
Finally, police had Merlin -- the same dog who had unsuccessfully trailed Laci
71
from the Covena house and near the warehouse -- try to pick up Laci’s scent from the
warehouse. Merlin alerted yet again and went down various streets towards Highway
132. (7 RT 1352-1353.) Then, after numerous rainstorms in the area, on January 4, 2003
-- a full 11 days after Laci disappeared -- police took Trimble (another dog of
Anderson’s) to Highway 132 where remarkably enough she alerted just where Merlin
had. (8 RT 1524.) Then, after additional rainstorms, police took Trimble to Highway 132
This was the evidence which the trial court excluded at defense counsel’s request.
(10 RT 2000-2005.) As the record shows, most of this evidence not only does not support
the state’s case, it affirmatively shows how unreliable the state’s dog-scent evidence
really was. Merlin’s complete inability to track Laci from the house directly conflicted
with the state’s case. So did Merlin’s inability to track Laci to the warehouse. And
Twist’s inability to alert in the warehouse did the same. Moreover the state’s notion that
a jury would credit the Highway 132 and 580 alerts performed weeks and months after
Laci disappeared -- and after substantial rain storms in the area -- not only seems highly
unlikely, but ignores the trial court’s own finding that this evidence was “conjectural or
counsel’s success in excluding this evidence, none of this even remotely constitutes a
72
tactical explanation for counsel’s failure to call an expert at the pre-trial hearing to
Counsel’s failure to call Rebman at the hearing was based on his mistake about the law.
Petitioner has pled a prima facie case of deficient performance as to the pre-trial hearing.
Defense counsel gave a different reason for his decision not to call Rebman at trial
than he gave for not calling him at the pre-trial hearing. Counsel explained that he
evidence and calling an expert was “unnecessary.” (Petition Exhibit 4 at pp. 29-30.)
Petitioner has alleged that in light of the flaws in Anderson’s testimony, this decision fell
Petitioner concedes that this presents a much closer question. After all, assessing
the need to present an expert at trial after cross-examining a state expert is a tactical
decision typically well within the province of trial counsel. But that does not mean that
there is a per se rule that any decision counsel makes in this area is immune from review.
To the contrary, even strategic and tactical decisions must be reasonable. (See,
73
e.g., Silva v. Woodford (2002) 279 F.3d 825, 846 [“[A]n attorney’s performance is not
immunized from Sixth Amendment challenges simply by attaching to it the label of ‘trial
strategy.’ Rather, ‘[c]ertain defense strategies may be so ill-chosen that they may render
Tucker (9th Cir. 1983) 716 F.2d 576, 586].) Reasonableness is determined by “prevailing
professional norms” such as those “reflected in American Bar Association Standards and
the like.” (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 688-689. See also Wiggins v.
Smith (2003) 539 U.S. 510, 524 [describing the ABA Guidelines as “well-defined norms”
to which the Court has long referred as guides in determining reasonableness]; Williams
v. Taylor (2000) 529 U.S. 362, 396 [citing ABA Standards for Criminal Justice in
dubious validity that purported to place Laci at the Berkeley Marina – a claim central to
the prosecution’s case. Trial counsel had an expert able and prepared to testify to
numerous specific reasons this evidence was not credible. Counsel’s failure to call that
Given the flaws in the dog-scent evidence which the defense never addressed with
a defense expert (and which were largely minimized by Anderson herself) -- and the
importance of rebutting any suggestion that Laci’s scent was reliably detected at the
74
marina -- counsel’s decision not to call Rebman was unreasonable.13
D. Given The Importance Placed On The Dog Scent Evidence By The Trial
Prosecutor, Petitioner Has Established A Prima Facie Case As To Prejudice.
The state alternatively contends that petitioner has not presented a prima facie case
as to prejudice. (IR 91.) The state repeats its argument that the numerous flaws in
Anderson’s testimony were presented to the jury through cross-examination. (IR 91.) As
noted above, however, the record does not support this assertion. No expert explained to
jurors that it was impossible to determine if Trimble’s alert meant anything because (1)
Anderson failed to perform the missing member test essential to ensure Trimble was not
detecting Scott’s scent rather than Laci’s, (2) Trimble’s prior training lacked either
double-blind testing or randomization, (3) Trimble had failed her prior closed-container
subject searches demonstrating Trimble’s failure to perform the exact same task with
13
The state adds that petitioner failed to plead a prima facie case as to
counsel’s trial performance, noting that had counsel called Rebman to testify “the
prosecution would have, no doubt, undermined such testimony by highlighting Trimble’s
certification by CARDA and OES’s authorization permitting Anderson and Trimble to
participate in search and seizure endeavors.” (IR 90.) Mr. Peterson will certainly
concede that keeping this kind of information from being presented to the jury could
reasonably justify a decision not to call an expert.
The problem with the state’s position here, however, is that this information
was presented to the jury during Anderson’s testimony. (84 RT 16050, 16055 [Trimble
was certified by CARDA]; 16055 [Trimble was authorized to work with OES].) The
decision not to call Rebman could not reasonably have been motivated by a desire on
counsel’s part to keep this information from the jury, since the jury already had that very
information.
75
which, the prosecution claimed, she supposedly detected Laci’s scent, (4) the December
28 search was neither double-blind nor randomized -- both essential to ensure that
Trimble's actions were responsive to detected scents rather than cues from her handler, or
(5) the late timing and intervening environmental conditions under which the December
28 search was conducted precluded an accurate alert to scents which were posited to have
been left four days earlier. Indeed, had defense counsel’s cross-examination been as
powerful as the state now suggests, it is unlikely the prosecutor would have relied on this
evidence in closing argument to tell jurors that Mr. Peterson was guilty “as simple as
The state briefly argues that the dog-scent evidence was not really all that
important. (IR 91.) But as just noted, that is hardly what the prosecutor told the jury.
(111 RT 20534.) Just as important, that is not what the trial judge told the jury either,
instructing jurors they could rely on the dog-scent evidence to infer guilt of capital
murder as long as there was some circumstantial evidence to corroborate it. (19 CT
6071.)
In short, at this early stage of the proceedings, the state has not shown as a matter
of law that trial counsel’s failure to call Rebman prior to or at trial was harmless. In light
of the prosecutor’s reliance on Anderson’s testimony, and the fact that Rebman’s
testimony had only to persuade a single juror for prejudice to be established, summary
76
dismissal based on a lack of prejudice is unwarranted here. Moreover even if this error
was not in and of itself prejudicial, summary dismissal based on a lack of prejudice is
nevertheless improper at this early stage because the prejudice from several errors is to be
assessed cumulatively. Petitioner has pled a prima facie case for relief and Order to Show
77
VI. CLAIM SIX: PETITIONER’S CLAIM THAT THE STATE PRESENTED
FALSE EVIDENCE OF WHERE THE BODIES WERE PUT IN THE WATER
MAY BE SUMMARILY DISMISSED.
At trial the state presented testimony from Dr. Ralph Cheng to support its theory
that petitioner put Laci and Conner in the water when he was in San Francisco Bay on
December 24. Dr. Cheng testified that in light of where Conner was later found the
“highest probability” area for his placement in the water was the area where Scott said he
Because Dr. Cheng admitted he had no experience at all in connection with the
Dr. Rusty Feagin, an expert with extensive expertise with the movement of bodies in
water. (Petition Exhibit 9 at pp. 282-286.) Dr. Feagin reviewed the relevant materials
from this case and concluded there were three equally possible places Conner could have
been placed in the water. (Id. at pp. 285-295.) One of those three areas was the area Dr.
alleged that the state had presented false evidence. (Petition 154-173.)
The state contends that petitioner has not pled a prima facie case for relief. (IR 92-
104.) The state notes that “subjective disagreement among credible experts” does not in
and of itself constitute the presentation of false evidence. (IR 97.) The state is correct.
78
Had Dr. Cheng testified that the area he identified was the only area the bodies
could have originated, such testimony could be considered false. But as the state
correctly points out, Dr. Cheng did not offer any such testimony. Instead, he qualified his
testimony by saying it was the “highest probability” area and was not a “deterministic
prediction.” (IR 96 citing 101 RT 18914.) He hedged his bets, noting that his
conclusions involved some uncertainty. (101 RT 18901.) And the state correctly finds
refuge in the nature of an adversary system by noting that although Dr. Feagin has
identified alternative scenarios which are just as likely “[t]here was no obligation on the
part of Cheng to suggest an ‘alternative scenario’ . . . .” (IR 101.) The state reassuringly
adds there is no showing that “Cheng’s expert testimony was so profoundly lacking in
reliability that the prosecution should have known that it was false.” (IR 102.)
This is all true. Dr. Cheng was a prosecution witness. Under an adversarial
system, it was not Dr. Cheng’s job to offer alternative scenarios which did not advance
the prosecution’s case, and it was not the prosecutor’s job to educate jurors about
scenarios inconsistent with the state’s theory. (But see Berger v. United States (1935) 295
U.S. 78, 88 [noting that the Government’s interest “in a criminal prosecution is not that it
shall win a case, but that justice shall be done.”].) Neither Dr. Cheng nor the prosecution
had any obligation to show the jury there was “disagreement among credible experts.”
(IR 97.)
79
Of course, if neither Dr. Cheng nor the prosecutors had an obligation to present the
jury with these alternative scenarios, who did? It is to that separate issue Mr. Peterson
now turns.
80
VII. CLAIM SEVEN: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
COUNSEL RENDERED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE IN FAILING TO CALL
AN EXPERT ON THE MOVEMENT OF BODIES IN WATER.
As noted above, to support its theory that petitioner put his pregnant wife in the
water when he was on San Francisco Bay on December 24, the state called Dr. Ralph
Cheng to testify. Dr. Cheng testified that given where Conner was later found, the
“highest probability” area for his placement in the water was the area where Scott said he
had been fishing. (101 RT 18914.) The defense called no expert witness to explain that
Dr. Cheng’s testimony was incomplete and that there were other areas where the bodies
could have been placed -- facts of crucial importance since Scott’s presence on San
This was important. As the state recognized at trial, because of the publicity which
attended the case “the rest of humanity knew appellant was at the marina on Christmas
Eve.” (RB 335. See also 69 RT 13406 [prosecution witness Detective Mike Hermosa
admits that by January 2003 “everybody knew” Mr. Peterson said he had been at the
Berkeley Marina on Christmas eve].) Absent evidence that there were areas where the
bodies could have been put in the water other than where Scott was fishing -- and still
been found where they were -- jurors could well believe that they could only have been
put in where Scott was fishing. And that is exactly what the prosecutor argued, telling
81
jurors that if they found Dr. Cheng credible “then that man’s a murderer. It’s as simple as
If defense counsel had retained an expert qualified to testify about the movement
of bodies in water, the jury would have learned there were three areas in which the bodies
could have been placed into the bay, not just one. (Petition 166-170, 176.) As the state
recognizes, because he was a prosecution expert, Dr. Cheng certainly had no obligation to
expand his testimony to talk about these other areas. (IR 101.) Nor was it the
prosecutor’s job to introduce this evidence. But the bottom line is that the jury deciding
whether Dr. Cheng’s testimony was reliable never knew any of this. Accordingly, in
Claim Seven of his petition, Mr. Peterson alleged that it was defense counsel’s obligation
to present this evidence and that counsel was ineffective for failing to do so. (Petition
174-178.) Specifically, Mr. Peterson alleged that (1) counsel’s performance in failing to
call a qualified expert at trial fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2)
In support of his claim Mr. Peterson provided a declaration from trial counsel
explaining his failure to offer an expert on the movement of bodies in water. (Petition
Exhibit 4 at pp. 21-25.) Counsel admitted that prior to trial he retained an expert named
Dr. Kitting with whom he pursued the possibility of performing an experiment to track a
weighted drift buoy in the bay. (Id. at p. 22.) Dr. Kitting indicated no such experiment
82
could be performed; counsel’s contact with Dr. Kitting ended in the summer of 2004.
(Ibid.) Counsel then forthrightly explained his reason for failing to call an expert at trial:
I had no tactical reason for not hiring an expert such as Dr. Feagin, apart
from my very strong belief that Dr. Cheng, who himself admitted that he
was not an expert in the area of the movement of objects in water, would
not be permitted as an expert by the trial court.
Had I believed that the trial court would find Cheng qualified in the very
field he admitted he was not qualified, I would have retained an expert such
as Dr. Feagin to review Dr. Cheng’s opinion and testify . . . . I did not make
a tactical decision not to investigate or present an expert in this area.
The state argues that petitioner has failed to plead a prima facie case, either as to
counsel’s performance, however, the state once again refuses to assume the truth of
petitioner’s factual allegations based on defense counsel’s own explanation for his
conduct. Instead, the state disputes these factual allegations entirely. Thus, at the outset
claims and allegations in Claim Seven . . . . “ (IR 105.) The state is true to its word.
The state disputes counsel’s statement that his contact with Dr. Kitting ended in
the summer of 2004, arguing without evidence that counsel consulted him through Dr.
83
Cheng’s cross-examination in 2004. (IR 109-110.) The state goes further, disputing
defense counsel’s recollection for why he did not retain an expert and offering a different
tactical reason to justify counsel’s failure to present an expert. (IR 109.) According to
the state, counsel did not call an expert to “testify to the perceived infirmities with trying
to plot the course of either Laci’s or Conner’s bodies’ migration to shore” because Dr.
Cheng himself had acknowledged the imprecision of his estimated origin point. (IR 108.)
As petitioner has previously explained, the state’s factual disputes with defense
counsel are inappropriate here. The assessment of whether a prima facie case has been
shown should be made by assuming the truth of petitioner’s factual allegations, not by
assuming the truth of the state’s contrary theories. (Duvall, supra, 9 Cal.4th at pp. 474-
475.) Here, assuming the truth of defense counsel’s statements about his limited contact
with Dr. Kitting, and his actual reasons for not calling an expert, petitioner has certainly
pled a prima facie case that counsel’s decision not to call an expert fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness. Indeed, the state does not even dispute this; the
14
But even setting aside the state’s inappropriate (at this stage) factual
disagreements with defense counsel’s declaration, and assuming the state is right that the
defense was in contact with Dr. Kitting during Dr. Cheng’s examination, this does not
change anything. The fact of the matter -- which the state does not dispute -- is that (1)
counsel could have called an expert to testify that there was not just one but three areas in
which the bodies could have been placed, but (2) did not do so. If Kitting was qualified
to offer such testimony, and -- as the state suggests -- defense counsel was actually in
contact with him during trial, this makes counsel’s failure to call him worse, not better.
And if Kitting was not qualified to offer such testimony, then any continued contact with
him is beside the point.
84
And the state’s alternative explanation for defense counsel’s failure to call an
expert makes little sense on the facts of this case. As noted, the state argues that counsel
did not call an expert to “testify to the perceived infirmities with trying to plot the course
of either Laci’s or Conner’s bodies’ migration to shore” because Dr. Cheng had
acknowledged the imprecision of his estimated origin point. (IR 108.) The argument
Counsel’s error here was not in failing to call an expert to expose “infirmities” in
the exercise of “trying to plot the course of either Laci’s or Conner’s bodies’ migration to
shore.” Counsel’s error was in failing to call an expert to embrace that very exercise and
plot alternative courses which supported the defense theory of the case. As the state does
not dispute, the defense could have called an expert to testify that in addition to Dr.
Cheng’s area, there were two other areas in which placement of the bodies was equally
probable. And some of these areas were easily accessible from Bay Area freeways.
(Petition Exhibit 9 at p. 292.) The state’s proffered tactical reason simply misses the
Indeed, the factual predicate for state’s argument -- that Dr. Cheng admitted the
imprecise nature of his own conclusion -- actually makes defense counsel’s failure to
present expert testimony for the defense even more inexplicable. As a practical matter, in
light of Dr. Cheng’s acknowledged imprecision, it was extremely unlikely the state would
85
have maintained that Dr. Cheng’s area represented the only area in which the bodies
could have been placed. Thus, the state would have been hard-pressed to dispute Dr.
Feagin’s conclusions.
In short, neither defense counsel nor the state has provided a defensible tactical
reason for counsel’s failure to present an expert like Dr. Feagin. Assuming the truth of
petitioner’s allegations, petitioner has pled a prima facie case of deficient performance.
The state alternatively argues that petitioner has not pled a prima facie case as to
prejudice. The state argues that petitioner “overstat[es] the importance of Cheng’s
testimony . . . .” (IR 106.) The state adds that testimony from an expert like Dr. Feagin
would actually “be viewed as inculpatory” since Dr. Cheng’s area was included as a
Petitioner can perhaps be forgiven for “overstating” the importance of Dr. Cheng’s
testimony given the prosecutor’s argument at trial. The prosecutor told jurors in no
uncertain terms that if they found Dr. Cheng credible “then that man’s a murderer. It’s as
simple as that.” (109 RT 20280-20281.) In light of the clarity of the position taken by
the state’s trial lawyers below, if anything, the state’s appellate lawyers are improperly
understating Cheng’s importance. (See New Hampshire v. Maine (2001) 532 U.S. 742,
749 [“where a party assumes a certain position in a legal proceeding, and succeeds in
86
maintaining that position, he may not thereafter, simply because his interests have
changed, assume a contrary position . . . .”].) As juror Greg Beratlis relates, “the most
compelling evidence overall was the location of the bodies where Laci and Conner’s
contrary argument here not only completely ignores the trial prosecutor’s characterization
of Dr. Cheng’s testimony, but this Court’s very practical admonition that in assessing
prejudice “we have seen how important these statements were to the People’s case, and
‘There is no reason why we should treat this evidence as any less ‘crucial’ than the
prosecutor -- and so presumably the jury -- treated it.” (People v. Powell, supra, 67
The state makes one final argument as to prejudice, suggesting that the jury would
have viewed Dr. Feagin’s testimony as “inculpatory.” (IR 110.) The state explains that
Dr. Feagin would have confirmed that Dr. Cheng’s area was one of three possible areas in
The argument has little force. Without Dr. Feagin’s testimony, the jury knew of
only one area that the bodies could have been placed in -- an area consistent solely with
the state’s theory. There was no expert testimony to offer a counter narrative. With Dr.
Feagin’s testimony, the jury would have known that the bodies could have entered the
water at three different areas including two that were not only entirely consistent with the
87
defense case, but completely inconsistent with the state’s theory. Moreover, the defense’s
candor in calling an expert who presented a full picture -- including information that no
point of entry could be definitively ascertained -- would have contrasted sharply with the
In the final analysis, at this early stage of the habeas proceedings, the state has not
shown as a matter of law that trial counsel’s failure to call Dr. Feagin at trial was
harmless. As noted on several occasions above, this is especially true here since the
Court considers prejudice from several errors cumulatively. Here, petitioner has pled a
prima facie case for relief as to a number of instances of ineffective assistance including
the movement of bodies in water, witnesses who saw Laci walking the dog after Scott left
for the marina and witnesses who heard burglar Steven Todd confess that Laci saw him
burglarizing the Medina household after Scott left for the marina. Because prejudice
from these claims can cumulate, summary dismissal of any of these claims on the basis of
a lack of prejudice is inappropriate at this stage of the proceedings. Petitioner has pled a
prima facie case and an Order to Show Cause should issue on this claim.
88
VIII. CLAIM EIGHT: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
COUNSEL RENDERED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE IN PROMISING BUT
FAILING TO PRESENT, TESTIMONY THAT WOULD DISPROVE THE
STATE’S THEORY AND ESTABLISH PETITIONER’S INNOCENCE.
A. Introduction.
As discussed above, the defense theory in this case was simple: Laci was alive
when Scott left for the warehouse, and later the marina, and Scott was therefore innocent.
In his opening statement defense counsel not only apprised jurors of this theory in general
but outlined some of the specific evidence he would be presenting to support the theory.
Counsel told jurors they would hear from witnesses who saw Laci walking in the
neighborhood after Scott left for the marina. (44 RT 8643, 8644, 8645, 8656.) Counsel
left little doubt that he would present this evidence, even telling jurors that as to one of
these promised witnesses the defense was “able to find her through a lot of effort and
finally convince her to come forward.” (44 RT 8645.) Counsel told jurors they would
hear from a witness who saw Laci being pulled into a van in the neighborhood several
days after December 24. (44 RT 8647.) Counsel told jurors they would hear from several
witnesses who saw Scott putting the boat into the water, and there was no body in the
89
Counsel presented none of these witnesses, explaining that he made the promise to
present the Laci-sighting witnesses at opening statement before even interviewing the
witnesses, he learned that they saw Laci after 10:18 on the morning of December 24. (Id.
at pp. 30-31.) He decided not to call them because -- as a direct consequence of his
interview -- counsel’s understanding at the time was that Laci was abducted between
Based on these facts, petitioner alleged that defense counsel rendered ineffective
assistance by promising the jury he would present witnesses he had not interviewed.
(Petition 179-185.) Petitioner’s allegations were simple: it was unreasonable for counsel
to make that promise before interviewing the witnesses. Mr. Peterson alleged that (1)
properly investigated fell below an objective standard of care and (2) counsel’s failure
The state argues that petitioner has failed to plead a prima facie case, either as to
15
Defense counsel subsequently conceded that in light of the handwritten
report of the police interview with mailman Russell Graybill, counsel’s understanding of
the timeline was wrong. (Petition Exhibit 4 at p. 32.)
90
will address each of these contentions. As discussed below, the state’s arguments are
The state argues petitioner has failed to plead a prima facie case as to inadequate
performance for three reasons. First, the state’s appellate lawyers once again take
precisely the opposite position from the one the state’s trial lawyers took. In contrast to
the state’s trial lawyers -- who quite predictably skewered the defense for failing to follow
through on the promise to produce these witnesses (109 RT 20321, 20322, 20323) -- the
state’s current lawyers argue counsel made no promises at all in his opening statement.
(IR 112 [counsel “made no promise that the defense would present testimony involving
the purported eyewitness sightings of Laci and her dog.”]; 115 [with respect to the
witness who saw Laci being forced into a van “there was no promise of defense testimony
in this regard.”]; 116 [no promise from defense that it would present a witness from the
marina].) Since no promises were made, the state argues that petitioner has not pled a
91
The state’s trial lawyers were correct. Every person in court to hear defense
counsel’s opening statement knew he was promising evidence. That, after all, is the
purpose of opening statement. And it seems unlikely that defense counsel was suggesting
the state would be presenting witnesses who would undercut its own theory of the case.
Fortunately, there is no reason to guess at what the participants thought. The trial
prosecutor’s closing argument certainly make clear the state thought defense counsel’s
opening statement contained promises from the defense. (109 RT 20321, 20322, 20323.)
The jurors themselves viewed defense counsel’s argument as a promise to produce this
exculpatory evidence. (Petition Exhibit 8 at p. 184 [“he was going to show that Laci was
alive on December 24, 2002.”]; 220 [defense counsel “promised the jury he would present
eyewitnesses who would say they saw Laci alive on the day she was supposed to have
Brown’s observation about jurors bears repeating here; jurors are not “some kind of
18 Cal.4th at p. 579 [Brown, J., concurring and dissenting].) Both the jurors and the
state’s trial lawyers knew that counsel had made promises which he did not keep.
consequence, the state reasons it may be a perfectly “reasonable tactical decision” for
92
defense counsel to change strategy from the one promised in opening statement. (IR 113-
114.) Mr. Peterson quite agrees with the state on this, at least in theory.
But what this indisputable theoretical proposition has to do with the specifics of
this case is difficult to see. Significantly, the state does not identify anything that changed
to justify counsel’s decision not to call the witnesses he had promised he would call.
Certainly the state’s theory at all times remained the same as it was prior to trial -- that
Scott killed Laci before leaving for the warehouse and then the marina. And Scott’s
theory did not change -- Laci was alive when he left for the warehouse.
The reason the state does not identify anything that changed in this case is because
nothing did. The record shows this is not a case where something happened in the state’s
Here, trial counsel has conceded he made these promises in his opening statement
before even interviewing the witnesses. (Petition Exhibit 4 at pp. 30-31.) He has
conceded that in interviews with these witnesses after his opening statement they gave a
time frame which was not consistent with counsel’s understanding of the case. The only
changed circumstance is that counsel finally interviewed the witnesses he had already
promised. But this was fully within counsel’s control. The state’s apparent position is
that it is a “reasonable tactical decision” for defense counsel in a capital case to promise
93
the jury specific evidence in opening statement before actually knowing what that
evidence is and whether it will be introduced. Nothing in law, logic or common sense
supports setting the bar for effective assistance so low. Indeed, as discussed below, the
managed to bring out much of the information about purported sightings of Laci through
cross-examination of Detective Craig Grogan.” (IR 114.) Similarly, the state notes that
a woman resembling Laci who was forced into a van . . . .” (IR 115.) According to the
state, defense counsel was therefore able to introduce evidence from these eyewitnesses
who “were not subject to cross-examination by the prosecution.” (IR 114.) The state
concludes that counsel therefore had a tactical reason to “proceed in the manner
If indeed defense counsel had been able to introduce evidence from the Laci-
sighting and van witnesses through Detective Grogan without having them exposed to
cross-examination, that might well be a legitimate tactical reason for not calling the
witnesses themselves. Contrary to the state’s position, however, that is not what
happened.
94
During his cross-examination of Detective Grogan, defense counsel tried to show
the police investigation of the case was inadequate. As the state accurately notes, counsel
cross-examined Grogan about police interviews of people such as Grace Wolf, Tony
Frietas, Homer Maldonado, Helen Maldonado and Tom Harshman who -- according to
information they provided police on the tip line -- saw Laci after Scott left for the marina.
(98 RT 18476-18511.) But the state fails to note that in the middle of defense counsel’s
cross-examination, the court explicitly provided the following instruction about the
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I have to sort of -- in order to put all this
evidence we’ve been receiving the last couple days into context. A lot of
this information that the -- Detective Grogan got on the tip line is not being
offered for the truth, okay? It’s being offered to explain the reasonableness
of Detective Grogan’s conduct; what he did as a result of this information
that he received, okay?
(99 RT 18561.) In closing argument, the state’s trial lawyers hammered this point home
The most important thing, I think, of that, that I really want to make clear to
you is, you did not hear a single witness who said they saw Laci Peterson
walking in the neighborhood . . . . You did not hear from this stand a single
witness who said that. You heard officers testify that people reported to
that. You can’t consider that for the truth, not a single bit of it.
Remember that whole thing with . . . the van, and all that crazy story? How
come Tom Harshman didn’t getup here on the stand? Let’s hear what he
has to say if that’s true. None of those people came in and testified. You
know why? You can assume because that what they were going to say was
not credible.
(109 RT 20322-20323.)
Now, however, the state’s appellate lawyers say the exact opposite. Without even
a nod to the trial court’s instruction, or the trial prosecutor’s arguments, the state now
argues petitioner did not plead a prima facie case of inadequate performance because -- in
fact -- “defense counsel managed to bring out much of the information about purported
sightings of Laci through cross-examination of Detective Craig Grogan.” (IR 114.) But
as the trial court’s instruction and the trial prosecutor’s argument both show, the jury “did
not hear a single witness who said they saw Laci Peterson walking in the neighborhood . .
96
. . . You did not hear from this stand a single witness who said that.” (109 RT 20321.)16
The state alternatively contends petitioner has not pled a prima facie case as to
prejudice. (IR 117-120.) Unfortunately, however, the state’s argument misreads the
16
Although the state does not actually say this, it may be suggesting defense
counsel could reasonably decide not to call any of these witnesses in the hopes that jurors
would ignore their instructions. But there are two problems with any such suggestion.
First, defense counsel has explained the reason he promised these witnesses,
but ultimately did not call them, admitting that he simply had not interviewed them until
after his opening statement. (Petition Exhibit 4 at pp. 30-31.) Thus, the state is urging
this Court to summarily dismiss petitioner’s claim not by assuming the truth of
petitioner’s factual allegations, but by disputing them. Duvall does not permit this. (9
Cal.4th at pp. 474-475.) Worse, the state does this without any supporting declarations or
other materials and despite its concession that “[f]acts must be alleged in a manner that
makes the declarant liable for perjury if the allegation is false.” (IR 32.)
The case law is clear. Mr. Peterson discussed it at some length in the
consequences when a defense lawyer makes key promises to the jury in opening statement
but fails to deliver. First, the jury may conclude that the reason defense counsel did not
introduce the evidence is because the evidence is actually adverse to the defense. (See,
e.g., United States ex rel. Hampton v. Leibach (7th Cir. 2003) 347 F.3d 219, 259
and when defense counsel without explanation fails to keep that promise, the jury may
well infer that the testimony would have been adverse to his client and may also question
the attorney’s credibility. In no sense does it serve the defendant’s interests.”]. Accord
Saesee v. McDonald (9th Cir. 2013) 725 F.3d 1045, 1049 [same].)
Second, when defense counsel makes promises which are broken the jury may
come to doubt the “credibility of [defense] counsel.” (Saese v. McDonald, supra, 725
F.3d at pp. 1049-1050.) When a defense lawyer failed to present testimony he has
promised to a jury “counsel has broken ‘a pact between counsel and jury,’ in which the
juror promises to keep an open mind in return for the counsel’s submission of proof.
[Citation.] When counsel breaks that pact, he breaks also the jury’s trust in the client.
Thus, in some cases -- particularly cases where the promised witness was key to the
98
defense theory of the case and where the witness’s absence goes unexplained -- a
counsel’s broken promise to produce the witness may result in prejudice to the defendant.
(Ibid. Accord United States ex rel. Hampton v. Leibach, supra, 347 F.3d at p. 259.)
precisely why “[t]he failure of counsel to produce evidence which he promised the jury
during his opening statement that he would produce is indeed a damaging failure
Mazurkiewicz (3rd Cir.1993) 1 F.3d 159, 166; Williams v. Woodford (E.D.Cal. 2012) 859
Here, counsel promised (1) five witnesses who saw Laci alive after Scott left
home, (2) one witness who saw Laci forced into a van, and (3) multiple witnesses who
saw Scott launch a boat that contained nothing that could have been a body. Counsel then
produced none of these witnesses. And the prosecutor in closing explicitly asked jurors
to draw the precise inference which the case law recognizes as so prejudicial, telling
jurors that petitioner had a “very experienced defense team” with “very good lawyers”
and that the reason these witnesses were not called was because they would not support
In light of the case law, the specific prejudice question here is whether jurors
would actually have drawn an adverse inference from defense counsel’s broken promises.
99
In light of the prosecutor’s specific request that they do exactly that, it seems likely the
jurors did draw such an inference. But this is an unusual case; in fact, there is no need to
writing the inferences they actually drew and it turns out that jurors drew the precise
adverse inference the prosecutor had asked them to draw. (Petition Exhibit 8 at pp. 183,
The state ignores this case law entirely in making a contrary argument. The state
ignores the prosecutor’s argument. The state ignores the statements of the jurors. Instead
of focusing on what the case law has identified as the potential prejudice from broken
promises in opening statement, the state argues that had defense counsel presented the
evidence described, the state could have countered it. (IR 117-119.) Regardless of the
merits of this claim, it has nothing to do with counsel’s error. The state has missed the
critical distinction between two distinct types of claims (1) a claim that counsel provided
ineffective assistance in breaking promises made in an opening statement and (2) a very
exculpatory evidence.
As the case law discussed above shows, the prejudice calculus in the first type of
claim requires a focus on the actual effect of the broken promise. This in turn requires an
assessment of whether jurors would draw an adverse inference from defense counsel’s
100
broken promise, either as to what the evidence would have shown or to defense counsel’s
credibility, or both, and the impact of such an adverse inference on the case as a whole.
The prejudice calculus from the second type of claim-- defense counsel’s failure to
present exculpatory evidence -- is very different. This requires an assessment of how the
evidence would have impacted the trial, and includes consideration of how the state
In its Informal Response, the state has conflated the prejudice analysis of these two
distinct claims. Perhaps because it ignores the case law entirely, the state performs no
analysis whatever of the precise prejudice flowing from a defense lawyer’s broken
promises. (IR 117-120.) For the reasons discussed above, petitioner has indeed pled a
prima facie case as to prejudice in connection with this claim. And for reasons also
discussed above, even if this were not the case, summary dismissal of this claim would be
unwarranted because the prejudice arising from different errors is assessed cumulatively.
Petitioner has pled a prima facie case for relief and an Order to Show Cause should issue
as to this claim.17
17
In its prejudice discussion the state very briefly reprises an argument it
made in connection with the performance prong of this issue, arguing there was no
prejudice because -- in fact -- defense counsel did introduce the evidence he promised
during his cross-examination of Detective Grogan. (IR 117.) As discussed above,
however, the state ignores both (1) the trial court’s very clear instruction to the jury that
this evidence was not introduced for the truth of the matter asserted and (2) the
prosecutor’s explicit argument to the jury that no such evidence was actually introduced.
(99 RT 18561; 109 RT 20321-20323.)
101
IX. CLAIM NINE: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
COUNSEL RENDERED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE IN FAILING TO CALL
WITNESSES WHO SAW LACI PETERSON WALKING HER DOG ON
DECEMBER 24 AFTER SCOTT LEFT FOR THE MARINA.
A. Introduction.
According to the prosecution, when Scott left home for his warehouse on
December 24, he had already killed Laci and put her body in his truck to go to the
Berkeley Marina. Thus, accepting the state’s theory of the case, if the defense could
prove Laci was alive when Scott left home that morning, Scott was necessarily innocent.
This is precisely why defense counsel promised jurors in his opening statement that they
would hear from witnesses who saw Laci walking her dog in the neighborhood after Scott
In his Petition, Scott alleged that defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance in
failing to present testimony from Diane Campos, Frank Aguilar, William and Vivian
Mitchell, Anita Azevedo and Grace Wolf. (Petition 186-194.) More specifically, Scott
alleged (1) eyewitness Diane Campos saw Laci walking her dog at 10:45 on the morning
of December 24, (2) eyewitness Frank Aguilar saw Laci walking her dog between 9:30
and 11:00 that same morning, (3) eyewitnesses William and Vivian Mitchell had seen
Laci walking the dog before, and saw her walking the dog that morning, (4) eyewitness
102
Anita Azevedo saw Laci walking the dog on the morning of December 23 and (5)
eyewitness Grace Wolf also saw Laci walking the dog on December 23. (Petition 186-
194.) Scott supported his allegations with declarations from each of these eyewitnesses,
sworn under penalty of perjury. (Petition Exhibits 12, 13, 14, 15, 16.)18
Defense counsel has explained why he did not call these witnesses. That
explanation was directly tied to the testimony of prosecution witness Karen Servas.
Servas was a neighbor of the Petersons who testified that she put the Petersons’ dog
Mckenzi in the back yard at 10:18 a.m. on the morning of December 24. (48 RT 9422.)
She was able to place the time by looking at the time stamps on receipts she kept from
that morning’s shopping trip. (48 RT 9422.) She saw Mckenzi loose outside the home;
Servas took the dog and put him back in the yard. (48 RT 9428.) To ensure Mckenzi did
not escape, Ms. Servas specifically recalled closing the gate behind her. (48 RT 9428.)
Defense counsel has explained that he did not call witnesses who saw Laci
with Karen Servas’s testimony about the timeline. (Petition Exhibit 4 at p. 31.) The
defense theory, of course, was that Laci was abducted while walking Mckenzi after Scott
left the house at 10:08. Defense counsel believed that when Servas found Mckenzi
outside the Petersons’ house (and put him back in the yard), this meant Laci had already
18
The December 23 witnesses are relevant to rebut the state’s suggestion at
trial that Laci was no longer able to walk the dog by late December.
103
been walking the dog and been abducted. (Ibid.) In light of the inference counsel drew
from Servas’s testimony -- that at 10:18 Laci had already gone for walk with the dog and
been abducted -- counsel believed that any Laci sightings after 10:18 “were either
mistaken or not credible.” (Ibid.) Thus, as counsel himself explains, “[w]hen these
witnesses insisted that they saw Laci later than 10:18 a.m., they were not contacted by the
But as Scott alleged in his petition, the entire factual predicate for counsel’s
decision was flawed. And it was not flawed because of some new piece of evidence that
counsel did not know about. As counsel himself has candidly conceded, it was flawed
police conducted with postman Russell Graybill only three days after Laci disappeared.
interview, Graybill -- who was the Petersons’ mailman and who knew Mckenzi well --
told police (1) Mckenzi always barked at him when he delivered mail, (2) he delivered
mail to the Peterson house that day between 10:35 and 10:50, (3) when he arrived the gate
was open and (4) Mckenzi did not bark that day. (Petition Exhibit 3.) In other words,
after Servas put Mckenzi back in the yard and closed the gate at 10:18, someone opened
the gate and took Mckenzi out. This was why the gate was open when Graybill delivered
mail, and why Mckenzi was not barking at him that morning.
104
In Claim Nine of his Petition, Scott alleged that counsel should have been aware of
Graybill’s statement of December 27 since it was provided to the defense during the
reason for failing to call witnesses who saw Laci after 10:18 fell below an objective
There should be little dispute about this. To his credit, defense counsel has
admitted that he made the decision not to call these witnesses without ever seeing the
Counsel has gone further and explained that if he had seen the statement, he would have
known that after Servas had put Mckenzi in the yard at 10:18 and closed the gate,
postman Graybill saw the gate was open at 10:35 to 10:50 and Mckenzi was not at the
house. (Petition Exhibit 4 at p. 34.) Had counsel known this prior to trial, he would have
(Petition Exhibit 4 at pp. 33-34; Petition 198; Memorandum 104.) Scott also alleged
counsel’s failure was prejudicial; if even a single juror had found even a single Laci-
105
sighting witness credible, that juror would have had to vote not guilty, since it would have
meant Laci was alive when Scott left for the marina. (Petition 199; Memorandum 105-
107.)
The state argues that petitioner has failed to plead a prima facie case, either as to
discussed below, both contentions are meritless and an Order to Show Cause should issue
on this claim.
The state argues petitioner has failed to plead a prima facie case as to inadequate
performance. The state concedes defense counsel decided not to call the Laci-sighting
witnesses because -- based on Karen Servas’s testimony that she put Mckenzi back in the
yard at 10:18 and closed the gate -- he believed that whatever had happened to Laci
necessarily happened before 10:18. (IR 121.) The state says counsel’s decision to accept
the Servas timeline was “not unreasonable” because her receipts enabled her to be
accurate about when she got back and found Mckenzi. (IR 121-122.)
106
The state is correct that Servas’s 10:18 time was supported by substantial
about her timeline actually shows why defense counsel’s decision was completely
As the state notes, Servas’s testimony about placing Mckenzi back in the yard at
10:18 was informed by “store receipts and cell phone records.” (IR 122.) In other words,
the jury would certainly perceive it as an accurate timeline. But if Servas is correct that
she put Mckenzi in the yard at 10:18 and closed the gate, jurors would have been required
Who opened the gate and took Mckenzi for a walk after 10:18, so that when
Graybill arrived between 10:35 and 10:50, the “gate was open” and
Mckenzi was not on the premises barking?
There is a reason the state has never answered this question. The obvious answer
is one that is fatal to the state’s case: it was Laci who took Mckenzi for a walk and she
did so after Karen Servas put Mckenzi in the yard and closed the gate at 10:18. That is
why the gate was open when Graybill came by at 10:35, and that is why Mckenzi was not
107
In short, and by his own admission, counsel decided not to call the critical Laci
sighting witnesses solely because he had not reviewed a critical piece of the discovery
that the prosecution had provided to him months and months earlier. Because that is by
definition not a reasonable tactical decision, petitioner has established a prima facie case
C. Given The Importance Of Showing Laci Was Alive When Scott Was On
His Way To The Berkeley Marina, Petitioner Has Established A Prima
Facie Case As To Prejudice.
The state argues that petitioner has not pled a prima facie case as to prejudice. (IR
123-127.) But the state’s argument runs afoul of Duvall yet again; the state “specifically .
. . controvert[s] all of Peterson’s factual . . . claims and allegations in Claim Nine” and
then advances a prejudice thesis that depends on credibility. (IR 120.) Thus, the state
argues that Graybill’s December 27 statements to police, and the statements of the
19
The state suggests that this Court cannot consider Graybill’s statement -- or
what reasonable counsel would have done with the statement -- because that would be an
improper reliance on “hindsight.” (IR 122.) The observation has utterly no application
here.
Police took the Graybill statement three days after Laci disappeared and
disclosed it to the defense well before trial. Thus, it is entirely proper for this Court to
consider the Graybill statement in deciding whether counsel’s decision not to call the
Laci-sighting witnesses was reasonable. Moreover, contrary to the state’s suggestion,
while defense counsel’s declaration about what he would have done had he known about
Graybill’s statement is not binding on the Court, it is certainly relevant.
108
Laci-sighting witnesses, are not credible. (IR 123-125 [Graybill]; 125-127 [Laci-sighting
witnesses].)
As discussed in detail above, in assessing whether a prima facie case has been
pled, the Court must assume the truth of petitioner’s allegations. (Duvall, supra, 9
Cal.4th at pp. 474-475.) Contrary to the state’s suggestion here, that assessment is
certainly not made by assuming a petitioner’s sworn declarants are not credible. As this
Court has concluded, credibility assessments are not generally made at the prima facie
case stage of the proceedings, but instead are made later -- if necessary -- with the benefit
This is especially true here, in light of the reasons the state gives for why this
Court should find that these declarants are not credible. The reasons the state gives are
remarkable.
First, the state attacks postman Graybill’s credibility. The state argues that his
Graybill’s statement to police was given on December 27, 2002 -- only three days
after Laci disappeared. (Petition Exhibit 3.) Graybill’s testimony itself occurred on June
109
10, 2004 -- 18 months after Laci disappeared. (49 RT 9555.) If there are contradictions,
it seems likely that Graybill more accurately recalled events three days after Laci
disappeared, rather than 18 months later. The state ignores this entirely.
But there is more. The state goes on to argue that two “discrepancies” with respect
to Graybill’s testimony are so significant that the probative value [of his information] was
petitioner’s defense, this Court should examine the two discrepancies on which the state
so heavily relies.
First, the state notes that in his December 27, 2002, statement Graybill said the
gate was open when he delivered mail. (Petition Exhibit 3.) This is true. The state then
notes that in Graybill’s June 2004 testimony -- 18 months after he actually delivered the
mail that day -- he was asked generally whether anything was “out of the ordinary” when
he delivered the mail and he said no. (IR 124.) According to the state, this major
be believed.
As the state concedes, however, during Graybill’s trial testimony, neither the
prosecution nor the defense ever asked him if the gate was open when he delivered the
mail. (IR 123.) He was never shown a copy of his December 27 statement during his
110
trial testimony 18 months later. The inference of a disqualifying “discrepancy” the state
is urging the Court to draw from Graybill’s agreement there was nothing “out of the
ordinary” that day defies common sense. It assumes, without any supporting evidence at
all (or any supporting logic) that an open gate at the Peterson home would have been “out
of the ordinary” or at least considered to be so by Graybill. Put another way, the state is
The state’s second argument for why this Court should discount Graybill’s
December 27 statement has even less substance. The state notes “trial counsel states in
his declaration that Graybill reported to police that he delivered a package to the Peterson
home” on December 24. (IR 124.) The state argues there is a discrepancy because in the
December 27 police report “Graybill did not tell authorities that he delivered a package to
defense counsel. It is, after all, his declaration the state is referencing. Equally important
-- as even a quick examination of the December 27 statement will show -- is that contrary
to the state’s suggestion, Mr. Graybill did not discuss what he delivered that day --
whether it was a package, or mail, or both. The subject was not even covered in the
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December 27 police statement.20
At the end of the day, the state’s attacks on the credibility of these declarants
20
The state’s asserted “discrepancies” as to the Laci-sighting witnesses are no
more convincing. The state suggests Frank Aguilar is not credible because he recalled
seeing Laci sometime between 9:30 and 11:00. (IR 125.) Of course, Aguilar’s
recollection is entirely consistent with the defense theory that Laci took Mckenzi for a
walk after Servas placed her in the yard at 10:18. Given that no party has ever suggested
Laci was out walking the dog at 9:30 that morning before Scott drove to the warehouse at
10:08, it seems unlikely that Aguilar saw Laci between 9:30 and 10:08. Thus, if he did
see her as he states, it was after that time -- when Scott was on his way to warehouse and
then the marina.
The state correctly notes that both Grace Wolf and Anita Azevedo saw Laci
on December 23. (IR 126.) But the purpose of these witnesses was to show that Laci was
still walking the dog at this point in her pregnancy.
Finally, as to Diane Campos, the state argues that her identification of Laci
was “contradicted by trial testimony.” (IR 126.) The state argues that Laci was in no
physical condition to walk in the park where Diane Campos says she saw her, and the trail
was steep and uneven. (IR 126.) The state extracts its assertion that Laci's “compromised
physical condition” is incompatible with witnesses who saw her walking Mckenzi from a
collection of statements about pregnancy-related discomforts dating from October 2002,
mostly reporting tiredness, occasional dizziness, and nausea. (IR 126 citing RB 112-114.)
The state's source for the allegedly prohibitive roughness of the park derives from the
testimony one resident familiar with the area who described a portion of the park as “very,
very rough” and steep (48 RT 9357), and another who testified that she personally did not
walk in that area of the park during her own pregnancy because it was “unsteady . . .
mottled . . . steep and sandy and dusty and uneven.” (87 RT 16751-16752.) While this
testimony may have suggested that Laci had at times experienced pregnancy-related
discomfort and that at least one portion of the park near Covena Avenue was challenging,
it does not “contradict” Diane Campos’s that she saw a woman and a dog matching the
description of Laci and Mckenzi in a different and easily accessible area of the park -- the
portion near the hospital -- on December 24th, 2002.
112
should have no place in the prima-facie case calculus as to prejudice. None of these
witnesses/declarants had any reason to lie for Scott Peterson. And if even a single juror
believed Graybill’s testimony that the gate was open when he delivered mail between
10:35 and 10:50 on December 24, 2002 -- and Mckenzi was not barking -- the inference
from the Karen Servas timeline that Laci must have been abducted prior to 10:18 drops
out of the case. Graybill’s testimony is strong evidence that someone took Mckenzi for a
walk after Servas put McKenzi back in the yard at 10:18. The state has never suggested
who that someone might be other than Laci. And if it was Laci who took Mckenzi for a
walk after 10:18 and left the gate open, no juror could vote to convict since at that point
Scott was well on his way to the warehouse and the marina. (See Exhibit 50 [Cardosi
Declaration] at HCP-000986-987 [“Any evidence that Laci was still alive when Scott was
Similarly, if even a single juror believed even a single one of the confirming
December 24 Laci-sighting witnesses, the same result is required. If Laci is alive and
walking Mckenzi after Scott leaves for the warehouse, he is innocent. Finally, for reasons
discussed several times earlier in this response, even if petitioner had not pled a prima
facie case of prejudice specifically as to this claim, summary dismissal would still be
unwarranted because of the Court’s obligation to consider prejudice from different errors
cumulatively. Petitioner has established a prima facie case and an Order to Show Cause
113
X. CLAIM TEN: ASSUMING THE TRUTH OF PETITIONER’S FACTUAL
ALLEGATIONS, PETITIONER HAS PLED A PRIMA FACIE CASE THAT
COUNSEL RENDERED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE IN FAILING TO
PRESENT EVIDENCE THAT BURGLAR STEVEN TODD SAW LACI LATE
ON THE MORNING OF DECEMBER 24 AFTER SCOTT LEFT FOR THE
MARINA.
A. Introduction.
tip which came to the Modesto police from Lt. Xavier Aponte, a California correctional
officer. (Petition Exhibit 28.) The state takes the position that petitioner did not establish
a prima facie case for relief as to this claim. (IR 128-133.) In order to assess the state’s
Scott and Laci lived at 523 Covena Avenue in Modesto. After Laci went missing
on December 24, police set up a tip line. On the afternoon of December 27 -- only three
days later -- neighborhood resident Diane Jackson called to report that she had seen a
burglary at 11:40 in the morning of December 24, 2002 at 516 Covena Avenue. (99 RT
18562-18563.) She told police she saw a safe being removed from the house. (99 RT
18563.)
114
The same day police received the telephone tip from Ms. Jackson, police officer
Stough went to her home and spoke with her. (99 RT 18564.) Ms. Jackson confirmed the
precise information she had given earlier in the day -- she saw a burglary at 516 Covena
The house at 516 Covena Avenue is directly across the street from the Peterson’s
home. (99 RT 18565.) The Medina family lived there at the time. (99 RT 18565.) As
the prosecutor recognized, the evidence showed the Medinas had left home at 10:32 on
the morning of December 24 to drive to Los Angeles for the Christmas holiday. (109 RT
20318.) When the Medinas returned on December 26, they found that they had been
burglarized; as Ms. Jackson had accurately told police, their safe was missing. (49 RT
9607.)
2003, police Officer Hicks arrested both Glenn Pearce and Steven Todd for the burglary.
(107 RT 20014; 108 RT 20055.) Officer Hicks interviewed both men. (107 RT 20015;
For starters, both Todd and Pearce immediately gave Hicks almost the same
response when asked about the burglary. According to Hicks, the first statement Todd
made upon his arrest was that “I’ll tell you about the burglary.” (107 RT 20016.)
115
Remarkably enough, when Officer Hicks interviewed Pearce, Pearce said almost the same
thing, telling Hicks that “he would tell [me] anything that [I] want to know about [the
Without prompting, Todd immediately added “but [I] had nothing to do with the
woman.” (107 RT 20016.) When Officer Hicks asked Todd “what woman he was
talking about” Todd replied “the missing woman with the baby.” (107 RT 20016.)
Todd went on to explain that the burglary occurred on December 26. (107 RT
20019.) Pearce too told Hicks the burglary was on December 26. (108 RT 20050.)
Ultimately, both Todd and Pearce pled guilty to a burglary occurring “between December
24, 2002 and December 26, 2002.” (108 RT 20055; Petition Exhibit 29 at p. 418; Petition
Exhibit 30 at p. 424.)
The jury heard all this information. Obviously, if the burglary occurred on
December 26 -- two days after Laci disappeared -- it had nothing to do with Laci’s
disappearance. That was precisely the state’s theory; the prosecutor told jurors “[i]t
This is exactly where defense counsel’s error as to Lt. Aponte comes into play.
116
On January 22, 2003 -- only weeks after Laci went missing -- Lt. Aponte was
working as a correctional officer at the California State Prison in Norco, California. (121
RT 21776.) Lt. Aponte was monitoring a telephone call between Shawn Tenbrink, an
inmate at the prison, and his brother Adam. (Petition Exhibit 28.) According to Officer
Aponte, Adam told his brother “that Steve Todd said Laci witnessed him breaking in.”
(Petition Exhibit 28.) According to a declaration prepared by the state in connection with
Scott’s new trial motion, Lt. Aponte tape recorded the Tenbrinks’ conversation. (20 CT
6434-6435.) The state admits that it is “unable to locate” the tape recording. (Ibid.)
“Laci witnessed him breaking in” then -- regardless of whether Todd is involved in Laci’s
actual disappearance and murder -- Scott is innocent. After all, the state itself conceded
the Medinas left home on December 24, 2002 at 10:32 in the morning. (109 RT 20318.)
The burglary necessarily occurred after that. If as Officer Aponte recorded “Steve Todd
said Laci witnessed him breaking in” to the Medina house after that time, then Laci was
alive when Scott was on his way to the Berkeley Marina, and Scott is innocent.
The state disclosed the Aponte tip to the defense in May 2003 as part of discovery.
(20 CT 6380.) Defense counsel did not have his investigator interview Aponte until
weeks after the jury returned a guilty verdict. (20 CT 6133, 6261-6263.) Neither Adam
nor Shawn Tenbrink were ever interviewed by the defense prior to trial, nor did the state
117
ever discover or disclose to the defense the tape recording of their conversation which
In light of all these facts, Scott alleged in Claim 10 of his Petition that trial counsel
provided ineffective assistance in failing to follow up on the Aponte tip prior to trial,
rather than after the guilty verdicts. (Petition 200-214.) Specifically, Scott alleged that
(1) counsel’s performance in failing to investigate the Aponte tip fell below an objective
standard of reasonableness and (2) counsel’s failure prejudiced petitioner. (Petition 200-
214.)
Despite the obvious significance of evidence that Laci saw Todd breaking into the
Medina home after Scott was on his way to the marina, the state argues that petitioner has
failed to plead a prima facie case, either as to performance or prejudice. (IR 132-133
B. The Allegations Of The Petition Show Defense Counsel Was Not Aware Of
The Aponte Tip; Assuming These Allegations Are True, Petitioner Has
Pled A Prima Facie Case Of Deficient Performance.
The state argues that petitioner has not pled a prima facie case of deficient
performance in failing to investigate the Aponte tip prior to trial. The state argues that
118
“Peterson’s defense team pursued this avenue and presumably found it wanting.” (IR
132.)
In light of the plain allegations of the Petition, and counsel’s own admissions at the
hearing on the new trial motion where he raised this issue, the state’s argument is not
entirely clear. But there are only two possibilities: either defense counsel did investigate
the Aponte tip or he did not. Thus, the state could first be making a factual argument that
defense counsel did indeed investigate the tip by interviewing Aponte and the Tenbrink
brothers and he then decided not to pursue it. This may well be the state’s position given
Claim Ten.” (IR 128.) The Petition specifically alleges defense counsel was not aware
of, and failed to pursue, the Aponte tip prior to trial. It alleges he did not interview
Aponte until after trial, did not obtain the tape recording, and did not interview the
Tenbrink brothers prior to trial. (Petition 211.) If the state is genuinely “controvert[ing]”
all of petitioner’s factual allegations -- and arguing that the “defense team pursued this
avenue” -- then the state may well be taking the position that notwithstanding the plain
allegations of the Petition, defense counsel did indeed take these investigative steps.
If this is the state’s position, it bears noting that there is no factual support for it at
all. To the contrary, this position ignores defense counsel’s written new trial motion
which sought a new trial based on the Aponte tip because counsel had “recently
119
discovered new exculpatory evidence.” (20 CT 6254.) It ignores defense counsel’s on-
the-record comments at the new trial motion making clear the Aponte tip was new to him.
(121 RT 21775-21777.) It ignores counsel’s admission at the new trial motion that
although the Aponte tip had indeed been disclosed to the defense during discovery,
counsel did not pursue it because he simply “did not realize the significance of that name
until probably two weeks before the end of trial . . . .” (121 RT 21775.)21
But even putting aside the absence of any support in the record for this position, if
this indeed is what the state is arguing, then summary dismissal is patently improper. As
noted numerous times above, in assessing whether a prima facie case has been pled this
Court must assume the truth of petitioner’s allegations, not simply disregard them. And
here the Petition specifically alleges defense counsel was not aware of, and failed to
pursue, the Aponte tip prior to trial. It alleges he did not interview Aponte until after
trial, he did not obtain the tape recording, and he did not interview the Tenbrink brothers
21
The state criticizes petitioner for submitting a declaration from defense
counsel with the habeas petition which addresses counsel’s other failures, but does not
address the Aponte issue. (IR 133.) The criticism is distinctly out of place; as the state
itself recognizes, the Aponte issue was initially litigated in a new trial motion. (IR 129-
132.) As already noted, during the course of that open-court session defense counsel
made clear he was unaware of the Aponte tip. (121 RT 21775-21777.) The state does not
explain why counsel should have to reiterate in a declaration what he already said in open
court.
120
Of course, if the state is not taking the position that counsel did investigate the
Aponte tip, the only other possibility is that the state is arguing counsel did not do this
investigation because he made a reasonable decision not to do so. This may be what the
state means when it says defense counsel could reasonably have decided not to call Todd
as a witness because he believed the burglary occurred on December 26. (IR 133.)
Petitioner will start with a point of agreement. In theory at least if defense counsel
reasonably believed the burglary occurred on December 26, he could decide not to
investigate the Aponte tip. But the problem with the state’s position is not theoretical -- it
is real. On the record of this case no reasonable lawyer could believe the burglary
occurred on December 26. In fact, not only does the record itself strongly suggest the
burglary occurred on December 24, but the record affirmatively shows this is precisely
The record itself is clear. Aside from the self-serving statements given by Todd
and Pearce themselves, there is no evidence at all on which to base a reasonable belief
that the burglary occurred on December 26. And those statements themselves are suspect;
if Laci did see Todd and Pearce break into the Medina house, they had every reason in the
world to lie to police and say they were nowhere near the Medina home on December 24.
121
Moreover, aside from the obvious motive Todd and Pearce had to lie, the
discussed above, upon their arrest, Todd and Pearce both immediately agreed to tell
police anything they wanted to know about the burglary. (107 RT 20016; 108 RT 20055.)
And then, without even being asked a question, Todd added the had “nothing to do with .
Balanced against the word of two burglars with every reason to lie, and who both
talking about the burglary, is the evidence showing the burglary occurred on December
24. Eyewitness Diane Jackson -- who had no motive to lie -- specifically told police on
December 27 that she saw burglars taking a safe from the Medina residence on December
24. (99 RT 18562-18563.) She confirmed this hours later in a second interview with
police. (99 RT 18564-18565.) And the Medinas -- who also had no motive to lie -- later
confirmed that Jackson was entirely correct -- their safe had been stolen. (49 RT 9607.)
Necessarily, then, the state’s theory is that although Jackson correctly identified
what the burglars stole, she incorrectly identified the date. This too is odd; after all,
Jackson gave this information to police (twice) on December 27. It seems very unlikely
that if the burglary she saw really did occur only the day before -- on December 26 -- ,
Jackson would get the date wrong by so many days. It seems equally unlikely that had the
122
burglary really occurred on December 26 (as the state theorizes), Jackson would neither
have noticed the extraordinary media presence on Covena that day nor commented on it
But that is exactly what the state is now suggesting was reasonable. According to
the state, rather than suspecting burglars with every reason to lie, defense counsel could
reasonably have believed that Jackson -- who had no reason to lie -- was wrong when she
told police on December 27 that the burglary occurred three days earlier rather than the
day before.
This is not all. Although the prosecutor was apparently willing to subscribe to
such a theory, the state’s own witnesses entirely undercut it. Laci went missing on
December 24; the story blew up in the media the next day. Susan Medina testified that
when she returned from her trip to Los Angeles on December 26, there was so much
media presence on the street that it was blocked off. (49 RT 9597-9598, 9607.) Sharon
Rocha -- Laci’s mother -- testified that when she arrived at 523 Covena on December 26,
she saw media in the front yard. (46 RT 9018.) Detective Grogan admitted that at 8:00
on the morning of December 26 Scott called him on his cell phone to tell him there were
already news crews in the front of his house demanding a statement. (96 RT 18160.) And
prosecution witness Brent Rocha -- Laci’s brother -- confirmed that by December 26 “the
media was camped all the way around the [front of] the Covena house.” (47 RT 9248.)
123
Thus, if the burglary occurred on December 26, it would have had to happen in full view
of the media.
Finally, to the extent there was even the slightest doubt as to the date on which the
burglary occurred, the Aponte tip itself resolves it. If indeed “Laci witnessed [Todd]
breaking in” to the Medina home, the burglary had to occur on December 24, before her
disappearance, not two days after it. In short, in light of the record as a whole, no
reasonable defense lawyer would (1) assume the burglary occurred on December 26 and
not to investigate the Aponte tip because he believed the burglary occurred on December
26. At trial defense counsel spent several pages of his closing argument explaining to
jurors his view that the burglary occurred on December 24. (110 RT 20480-20482.) In
other words, to the extent the state now argues that counsel reasonably decided not even
to investigate the Aponte tip because he believed the burglary was on December 26, the
state is once again improperly seeking to defend a tactical judgment that defense counsel
never made. (See Wiggins v. Smith, supra, 539 U.S. at p. 526 [courts and the state alike
Richards v. Quarterman, supra, 566 F.3d at p. 564; Keith v. Mitchell, supra, 466 F.3d at
124
pp. 543-544; Dugas v. Coplan, supra, 428 F.3d at pp. 333-334; Smith v. Mullin, supra,
Aponte tip and to have failed to even investigate it. Petitioner has established a prima
C. Given The Importance Of Showing Laci Was Alive When Scott Was On
His Way To The Berkeley Marina, Petitioner Has Established A Prima
Facie Case Of Prejudice.
The state argues that petitioner has not pled a prima facie case as to prejudice for
two reasons. (IR 133-136.) First, the state argues in a single sentence that “the credible
evidence adduced at trial established that the burglary occurred on the morning of
December 26.” (IR 133.) The state cites 107 RT 20017-20018 to support its reference to
22
In its discussion of the performance prong the state adds that counsel could
reasonably have decided not to investigate the Aponte tip because he reasonably believed
“Todd did not encounter Laci Peterson regardless of when he burglarized the Medina’s
residence.” (IR 133.) But the state never identifies what evidence would permit anyone -
- much less reasonable counsel -- to reach such a conclusion.
The state’s conclusion is certainly not supported by the Aponte tip itself.
According to Lt. Aponte’s recollection, “Steve Todd said Laci witnessed him breaking
in.” (Petition Exhibit 28.) In light of the clarity of this information, the state’s squarely
contrary suggestion that “Todd did not encounter Laci Peterson regardless of when he
burglarized the Medina’s residence” is made not by relying on the record, but by ignoring
it altogether.
125
The pages the state relies on to support its reference to “the credible evidence”
consist entirely of Officer Hicks recounting that Steven Todd said the burglary occurred
who has every reason to lie. In the state’s reference to “the credible evidence” there is no
discussion at all about the testimony of Diane Jackson, or the curious statements made by
Steve Todd to police, or the curious statement made by Glenn Pearce to police, or the
testimony of Sharon Rocha, Brent Rocha, Detective Grogan and Susan Medina that the
media had already descended on Covena Avenue by December 26. The fact that Todd
assured police he had “nothing to do with the missing woman with the baby” does not as
a matter of law render harmless defense counsel’s failure to investigate the Aponte tip.
The state next observes that Todd said he saw mail in the Medina’s mail box. (IR
133.) According to the state, this means that even if the burglary occurred on December
24, it did not occur until after postman Graybill delivered the mail between 10:35 and
10:50. (IR 133.) Noting Diane Jackson’s confirming testimony that the burglary
occurred at 11:40 that morning, the state correctly reasons that taken together, all this
evidence means the burglary occurred after Karen Servas arrived home that morning from
shopping and put Mckenzi in yard and closed the gate at 10:18. (IR 133-134.)
126
This is all true. Every word of it. But contrary to the state’s mystifying
conclusion, this does not show why counsel’s failure to investigate the Aponte tip was
The state concludes from these facts that any failure to investigate the Aponte tip
was harmless because -- in light of Karen Servas’s testimony that she put Mckenzi back
in the yard at 10:18 -- Laci had already disappeared and could not therefore have seen
Steve Todd burglarize the Medina home. (IR 134.) This conclusion depends entirely on
an inference that Laci had to have already walked Mckenzi -- and disappeared -- by
10:18.
The state’s conclusion is off by a full 180 degrees. The only way the state can
adopt the inference that Laci disappeared by 10:18 is by entirely ignoring the December
December 27 statement to police shows he delivered mail to the Petersons between 10:35
and 10:50 on the morning of December 24. (Petition Exhibit 3.) This was well after
Servas had put Mckenzi in the yard and closed the gate at 10:18. Significantly, at the
time Graybill delivered the mail, the gate to the Peterson’s yard was open and Mckenzi
was not at the house. (Petition Exhibit 3.) This means that someone opened the gate, and
127
took Mckenzi for a walk, after Karen Servas put Mckenzi back in the yard and closed the
gate at 10:18. In short, the fact that the burglary occurred -- and Laci saw burglar Steve
Todd -- after Karen Servas put the dog back shows that Steve Todd saw Laci alive after
Scott left for the marina that morning. If that is true, of course, Scott is indeed “stone
cold innocent” as defense counsel told jurors in opening statements. Petitioner has pled a
prima facie case and an Order to Show Cause should issue as to this claim. (See Exhibit
telephone call to a Modesto prisoner saying that the man arrested for the burglary had told
someone that Laci Peterson had seen him burglarizing the house. Any evidence that Laci
was still alive when Scott was already at the marina would have been important to me as a
juror.”].)23
23
The state notes that a declaration from Adam Tenbrink “contains
inadmissible hearsay and is, therefore, not a basis for granting relief.” (IR 134.) The
state again misapprehends the procedural posture of this case.
“[M]istakes in the criminal justice system are sometimes made.” (In re Sanders,
supra, 21 Cal.4th at p. 703.) For all the reasons set forth above and in the Petition and
Supporting Memorandum, petitioner has pled a prima facie case for relief. To ensure that
Mr. Peterson is not executed for a crime he did not commit an Order to Show Cause
should issue.24
August 7. 2018
Dated: __________________ Respectfully submitted,
CLIFF GARDNER
LAZULI WHITT
24
In his Petition, Mr. Peterson also raised a number of claims contending
California’s death penalty scheme is unconstitutional. (Petition 219-276.) The state
argues that no prima facie case has been pled as to these claims. (IR 137-148.) Mr.
Peterson considers the prima facie case inquiry as to these issues fully joined by the
current pleadings on file with the Court. Accordingly no further discussion of those
issues is required.
129
WORD COUNT CERTIFICATE
proportional font was used, and that there are 29,987 words in the Reply.
Cliff Gardner
130
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I am a citizen of the United States, over the age of 18 years and not a party to the
within action. My business address is 303 Second Street, San Francisco, CA 94107. I
am not a party to this action.
upon the parties named below by depositing a true copy in a United States mailbox in
San Francisco, California, in a sealed envelope, postage prepaid, and addressed as
follows:
Mr. Scott Peterson, V-72100
San Quentin State Prison
San Quentin, California 94974
and upon the parties named below by submitting an electronic copy through TrueFiling: