Chicago Sun-Times

Peterson makes long- shot pitch to U. S. Supreme Court

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @ SeidelCont­ent

Drew Peterson is not done fighting his 2012 conviction for his third wife’s murder.

In a long- shot bid, the imprisoned former Bolingbroo­k cop filed a 38- page petition Monday hoping to convince the U. S. Supreme Court to hear his case, defense lawyer Steve Greenberg said.

The move comes nearly six years after a jury found Peterson guilty of the murder of Kathleen Savio, and nine months after the Illinois Supreme Court upheld that conviction.

Peterson is behind bars in a federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana.

A spokesman for Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow said the prosecutor “remains confident in the case.”

Much of the new petition revolves around the bombshell testimony by divorce attorney Harry Smith during Peterson’s trial. Smith testified that Peterson’s missing fourth wife, Stacy, asked him before she disappeare­d if she could get more money in a divorce if she threatened to tell the police “how [ Peterson] killed Kathy.”

The Illinois Supreme Court found that Smith did not violate attorney/ client privilege because he told Stacy at the outset of the discussion that he could not represent her.

But Greenberg compared that discussion to other hypothetic­al conversati­ons people might have with an attorney— confessing a homicide to a lawyer who only handles drug cases; telling a lawyer, “I am not looking to retain counsel, but I had a few questions.”

“The Illinois court’s ruling, if left unchecked, would not protect any of these communicat­ions,” Greenberg wrote.

Smith gave his damning trial testimony after Joel Brodsky, Peterson’s lead attorney at the time, called him to the stand. In Monday’s petition, Greenberg called that move “unconscion­able.”

“He elicited the strongest evidence proving Mr. Peterson’s guilt during the defense case,” Greenberg wrote. “It is difficult to imagine a greater abandonmen­t of the adversaria­l process than producing evidence to support the adversary’s case.”

Greenberg told the high court that the prosecutio­n “did not present any physical evidence linking Peterson to Savio’s death, nor did it present a witness who placed Peterson at Savio’s home during the estimated time of her death.”

Savio’s body was found in a dry bathtub on March 1, 2004. Authoritie­s first ruled her death an accident but later exhumed and re- examined her body before deciding her death was a homicide. Peterson was arrested for her murder in May 2009.

Meanwhile, Stacy Peterson has been missing formore than a decade, and no one has been charged in connection with her disappeara­nce. Peterson remains the prime suspect.

A Will County judge gave the now 64- year- old Peterson 38 years behind bars for Savio’s murder. Peterson has since landed a second conviction — and another 40 years in prison— for a murder- for- hire plot that targeted Glasgow.

As it stands, Peterson is not due out of prison until May 7, 2081.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/ AP FILE PHOTO ?? Convicted wife killer Drew Peterson is serving time in Terre Haute, Indiana.
RICHARD DREW/ AP FILE PHOTO Convicted wife killer Drew Peterson is serving time in Terre Haute, Indiana.

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