Defense:
8 minutes ago via Mobile ·
In Session ‎"Like all divorces, this one came to an end… It was a bifurcated divorced… They were actually getting along… things are calmed down, coming toward an end." The divorce case is continued twice, to April 6, 2004. "Kathy is not saying anything about Drew threatening to kill her…it's just all about money. Drew wanted to keep as much money as possible, and Kathy wanted to get as much money as possible."
In Session Brodsky now moves to the weekend of Savio's death. He notes that Kathleen and her boyfriend had sex that weekend; despite earlier plans to get together Saturday night, her boyfriend begs off. "Kathy wants him to come over; she wants to discuss marriage. He's not ready to discuss marriage. The call ends about midnight, and that's the last time anybody hears from Kathy Savio."
In Session According to Brodsky, Drew Peterson is home on that Saturday, "surrounded by people" (including Stacy). He attempts to drop his sons off at Savio's house on Sunday night, but gets no answer. Because it's a holiday weekend, he keeps the kids on Monday, thinking he's supposed to. But when he tries to drop them off on Monday, there is again no answer. "Now he's getting worried."
24 minutes ago ·
In Session “Going into the house that Monday was not Drew's idea; it was Mary Pontarelli's idea." So Drew calls a locksmith. "Why call the police? Drew IS the police. He's just doing his job."
In Session Brodsky: Bolingbrook police are contacted, who defer to the Illinois State Police. They see no signs of foul play…just to be extra careful, they bagged her hands. There's a full and proper autopsy…the cause of death is undisputed; the cause of death is drowning.
17 minutes ago via Mobile ·
In Session The coroner's autopsy notes indicate that Savio may have fallen. A toxicology report came back negative. A coroner's jury found the manner of death was "accident . . . and the case was closed . . . nobody did or said anything to contest that finding. The reason is because it was an accident. There's no witness to foul play, no murder weapon, no crime scene, no sign of forced entry, no sign of a struggle. The bathroom was in perfect order . . . there is not one shred of evidence that Drew Peterson or anyone else was in that house. Why? Because this was a household accident."
11 minutes ago ·
In Session ‎"What happened in the bathtub? Nobody was there, so nobody can tell us. The State will say Drew Peterson snuck in there and drowned her. . . (but) she died in the middle of the morning; who's going to sneak around in
black at 10:00 Sunday morning?"
9 minutes ago ·
In Session Brodsky concedes that interest in the case revived after Stacy went missing. He notes that the body was exhumed, and ridiculed the autopsy conducted by Dr. Michael Baden on "FOX Entertainment News . . . of course Dr. Baden's going to say it's a homicide, because if it's an accident there's no story."
5 minutes ago via Mobile
In Session Brodsky now ridicules attorney Harry Smith, who he claims came forward "only after the media circus started . . . it was good for business, free advertising." He also dismisses Sue and Anna Doman, Kathy Savio's sisters, for not originally coming forward with the claims they later made.
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