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Death of Ex-Cop's Wife Called a Homicide

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[November 17, 2007]  JOLIET (AP) -- A nationally known pathologist has examined the remains of a former police officer's third wife at her family's request and determined her death was a homicide, according to a published report.

Former New York City chief medical examiner Dr. Michael Baden examined Kathleen Savio's remains on Friday and determined that she died after a struggle and her body was then placed in the bathtub where she was later found, Savio's family told WFLD-TV.

"She was beat up and placed in the bathtub as a cover-up for whoever done this," Sue Savio Doman, Savio's sister, told the Fox affiliate.

A coroner's jury initially ruled that Savio's 2004 death was an accidental drowning. But now, with Drew Peterson's fourth wife missing for more than two weeks, authorities are re-examining the circumstances of Savio's death.

"There was marks on her hips, her arms, her elbows, on her legs, her feet. ... There was a struggle. She did fight," Savio Doman said.

Peterson, 53, who resigned this week as a Bolingbrook police sergeant, has not been named a suspect in Savio's death. But he is a suspect in the disappearance of his fourth and current wife, Stacy, who was last seen Oct. 28 and whose case authorities have called a possible homicide.

Drew Peterson has an unlisted number. He has denied any involvement in either case and said he believes his 23-year-old wife left him for another man and is alive.

Savio's body was exhumed this week at the request of Will County State's Attorney James Glasgow, who has said after examining evidence he believes her death was a homicide staged to look like an accident.

The state's attorney's office allowed Baden to use the county morgue for his work and a state's attorney's investigator attended the autopsy, spokesman Charles Pelkie said.

The results of Will County's official autopsy will not be available for days, authorities said.

Savio's brother, Nick Savio, told WFLD-TV that Baden's report, which Pelkie said would be reviewed by investigators, was a step forward in the case.

"It gives us a little bit of closure ... but we're still far, far, far away from getting the closure that we really do need, and that is if whoever is responsible for this, that person should be put behind bars and justice hopefully will prevail this time for the Savio family."

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Steve Carcerano, who says he was there when his friend Drew Peterson first saw Savio's body in the tub, said he was called by a grand jury looking into Savio's death and is to testify next week.

When Peterson first saw Savio's body, he was obviously surprised and distraught, Carcerano said.

"He checked her pulse right away to see if she was dead or alive. Then he was, `Oh my god, what am I gonna tell my kids? What am I gonna tell my kids?'" Carcerano said.

Documents released by Savio's family show she had accused Peterson of once stealing her car while she was in church with one of her children. According to one letter the family said was sent to Will County prosecutors in November 2002, she also accused Peterson of beating her a number of times so severely she "ended up in the emergency room."

She also described in the letter one time she believed he would kill her: "He pulled out his knife that he kept around his leg and brought it to my neck."

Pelkie said it remains unclear if that letter ever came to the office. He said it was not in the files Glasgow read when he began reinvestigating Savio's drowning.

But many allegations in the letter are consistent with those Savio made in an order of protection filed against Drew Peterson in 2002, as well as accounts given by her family members.

Carcerano said he never once saw Peterson strike or shout at his wife in anger, though he said he saw Savio attack Peterson.

"I've seen her slap him in the face right in front of me, seen her spit in his face and chasing him around with an extension cord, hitting him with it," Carcerano said.

Attorney Fred Morelli, who once represented Peterson, said he never heard the knife claims about his former client.

"That's the first I've heard of that," Morelli said. "That's crazy. ... (Peterson) was a very pleasant, personable fellow. Other than that, I don't know."

[Associated Press; By MICHAEL KUCHWARA]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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