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The mix of those witnesses is part of a broader strategy to make the second-hand evidence more plausible and persuade the judge to allow as much as possible at trial, Sullivan said. That's likely why much of the hearsay evidence has focused on Stacy Peterson. A minister who said she was afraid of her husband testified that she told him Drew Peterson was wearing black and carrying a bag of women's clothes the night before Savio's body was found. Drew Peterson's stepbrother said he helped Peterson move a blue barrel out of his house and suspected it contained Stacy Peterson's remains. Dozens of other witnesses provided small pieces of what prosecutors contend is a puzzle that will help jurors believe Peterson could have killed Savio. Drew Peterson's attorneys, meanwhile, have asked about medication Savio was taking and pointed to a doctor's report that said Savio complained of dizziness. And while under no obligation to call witnesses in the hearing, they have now decided to do so.
Neither side wants to leave anything to chance, Geragos said. Prosecutors "want to make sure that when they put evidence in ... that there's nothing that comes back to bite them," he said. Attorneys also anticipate challenges to the state's hearsay law, perhaps to the U.S. Supreme Court. "It's a perfect storm for both sides to have to deal with it," Geragos said.
[Associated
Press;
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