You're Wrong About - Deep Dive Week 2: Nancy Grace v. The Defense
Episode Date: July 13, 2020This week, Nancy Grace makes her case against defense attorneys in general and Scott Peterson’s lawyer in particular. Digressions include Batman, tough on crime mixtapes and the Iraq War. After two ...and a half years, Sarah finds her first Satanic cult — but maybe the real Satanic cults are the friends we made along the way. This episode summarizes the cases in Nancy Grace’s "Objection!," which include two child molestation and murder cases and a lengthy description of the autopsy report on the deaths of Laci and Connor Peterson.Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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I think we all cancel people in our hearts, and that's where the reality of the term resides.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, where the Nancy's of the past become the Karen's of the present.
Except Nancy Kerrigan. I think she's fine.
I thought it would take you longer to bring that up.
You had that ready. Well, if you say the word Nancy,
I just see an image of just a woman in a white Vera Wang leotard just giving it her all.
I am Michael Hobbs. I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall. I'm working on a book about the satanic panic.
And we have a new theme song. I'm so excited about this. Do you like it?
Oh, yeah. We have gotten the comment many times from our listeners that we have a sort of surf rock
but a little bit spooky energy. And we're now replicating that in our theme music.
Yeah. I sent you, Mike, a batch of songs. And I sent that one in kind of on a whim,
because I was like, well, I really like this. There's no way Mike's going to go for it.
I'm just going to toss it in. And then you're like, none of these work, except for that one
spooky surf rock one. And I was like, yes. This is my doing. So if you hate change as much as I
do, then blame me and I'll be the most sympathetic to you of anybody.
We made our logo a little bit happier. We're making our music a little bit happier.
I mean, we're just over time figuring out what kind of show this actually is versus what we kind
of started off imagining it might be like. And yeah, I feel like we have a scary surf rock heart.
Yes. And I updated the logo without telling you. So we're even.
And we are on Patreon at patreon.com slash you're wrong about and PayPal lots of other
ways to support the show. And we have been gathering questions for our first AMA. And
we are going to be telling you more about that when we know more. Very excited.
And today we are talking about Nancy Grace again. I'm so sorry. We're just all stuck here in this
dinosaur killing pit together. So I have no idea what this episode is about. The only thing that
I know is that at one point you told me I just got off the phone with a lawyer for research. So
all I know is that there are lawyers involved. Nancy Grace's book is saying disparaging things
about defense lawyers. So I feel like I have to talk to defense lawyers. Like I literally had a
conversation where I was like, let me tell you what Nancy Grace says and like respond to Nancy
Grace's accusations. So yeah, it's getting real. So yeah, what what are we talking about today?
What's where are we diving in? Well, I mean, as you'll recall in our first Nancy Grace episode,
we kind of started at the beginning of Nancy Grace's book and she told us her origin story and we
fact checked that a little. And yeah, tell us about that experience. I mean, basically what we
learned is that Nancy Grace became radicalized against the American criminal justice system
as a result of her fiance being murdered and everything going exactly as it's supposed to.
That the person who killed her fiance did a life sentence. And then over time her origin story
has slowly morphed into this thing where it's like a lifelong criminal and he's on parole
and the justice system was too easy on him. And if only it was different then her husband wouldn't
have died, etc, etc. But that launched her career as like a tough, talking, tough,
prosecuting prosecutor. Yeah, we kind of have done like Nancy Grace rises. Yeah. And now we're doing
the dark grace. I don't know. Yeah, I've been watching a lot of Batman movies lately.
All of your tweets lately have been about the Batman movies. So I'm bracing myself for like,
how many Batman metaphors are we going to get this episode? Well, I was just thinking, I mean,
the way that Nancy retools her origin story reminds me of like, if in the Tim Burton Batman
Bruce Wayne was like, Oh, my God, the Joker killed my parents. And then he was like, Oh,
no, he didn't actually, I just really hate the Joker. Right. So we've had the story of Nancy
Grace begins. And now we're going to talk really just go through Nancy Grace's book as quickly as
possible. Thank you. And talk about her various chapters and her various arguments and the things
that she is objecting to. And a lot of this episode, I think is going to be about Scott
Peterson, because a lot of Nancy's book is about the Scott Peterson case, I believe because that
had been really the big headline making case in the years before this book came out. So she has
to talk about it. And so do we. Yes, we're back to our Anastasia series of things Mike is only
vaguely aware of. Thank God. And also, we're back to talking about a case involving a dead baby,
which I'm very sorry. Oh, God. Yeah. But let's dive in because the sooner we get started, the
sooner we'll be done. We're just we're it's this is like the part in the Hobbit where they're going
through the scary forest. You gotta get through it. Yeah. So let's start with defense attorneys and
other wily characters I have known. We've already heard a little bit of this chapter. I'll give you
Nancy's first paragraph. I was just doing my job. That's the tired excuse offered up by every
defense attorney. Whenever they're asked how they do what they do, how they pull the wool over
jurors eyes to make sure the repeat offender they're defending walks free. This is an interesting
first sentence for like one reason that's jumping out at me. Do you want to do you see it? No. She's
assuming that it is the nature of every defense attorney to defend repeat offenders and to ensure
that they walk free because I mean a lot of our system in the United States is based on plea
bargaining and like right I think there are a lot of cases that you would look at and be like my
goal is not freedom here. My goal is like something less than what Nancy Grace wants. Right. Right.
Let's try and get through this whole paragraph. I'll never know how they can look in the mirror
when their client goes out and commits yet another crime causing more suffering to innocent victims.
So this is great also because the implication here is that all defense attorneys defend repeat
offenders. All offenders repeat their offenses and all crimes have victims. Right. And there's a
clear delineation between criminals and victims. Yeah. What does the phrase innocent victims mean?
I think we could do a whole episode of that. Yeah. I know. Like something that when I was a little
kid I remember like hearing the phrase white trash for the first time and being like that's
so weird. Like isn't that weird to anyone else where like if white people are trash you have to
specify that they're trash but the implication is that like it's weird for white people to be
trash and everyone else is implied to be trash. Right. And so like innocent victims is like well
if someone's a victim of a crime then they're a victim. Like they can't how can you deserve a crime
to happen to you. It's not impossible if we're saying that no crimes should happen in our society
at all. And the purpose of the criminal justice system is not to determine how innocent the victims
were. It's to determine whether something bad took place. Yeah. And Nancy says I've heard
I'm just doing my job. It's in the Constitution too many times to count. I love how she's like
the Constitution whatever. As she makes a wanking motion with her hand. Yeah. Totally.
She does not like the Constitution. So the first actual case that she brings out is the 2002
murder trial of David Westerfield. I have no recollection of this crime. I don't think I've
ever heard that name before. Neither do I. It apparently got a lot of media attention at the
time. David Westerfield went to trial for the murder of a little girl named Danielle Van Dam.
She was seven years old. And basically this is just a story about how the defense attorney
defended their client. Okay. This is kind of gross. So here's what Nancy says. Knowing full well
his client was a child killer. Feldman went into open court to launch a defense that consisted of
dragging the seven year old victims parents through the mud ruining their reputations within the
community and revealing to the jury and the world that the couple had once been swingers.
The defense boldly claimed the Van Dam's had unwittingly introduced a sexual predator into
their home. Knowing it wasn't true. Feldman argued that someone else had killed Danielle.
Some predator linked to her parents. It's also I mean it seems to me like a bad defense. Like I
would really say that like that suggests this guy is flailing you know to me because like that is
something that like makes you and your client like so bad. Yeah. Like you don't have to be Nancy
Grace to think that that's outrageous. And also like it's not really a good alternate theory.
It speaks to me of like someone doing their job badly. Yeah. Or it's just an adversarial
system and this is all they had. Right. It's not clear to me that that's like an argument
that defense lawyers shouldn't exist. Yes. And so well let me read you this is from the LA Times.
Okay. Defense attorney Stephen Feldman suggested that police bungled the case by not investigating
people who may have been drawn to Danielle's home to partake in her parents sexually adventurous
lifestyle. Feldman later quizzed Damon and Brenda Van Dam about their sex lives and called witnesses
to show that Brenda propositioned people at a local bar to come back to the couple's home and tidy
upscale saber springs. And then it seems like the defense is alleging that you know someone who
would come to the house like as a swinger is a likely suspect. But what's interesting to me
about that is that like of course the media is also going to latch on to like the swinger aspect
of it. Yeah. And it's also like if you want to raise the argument of like well there's like
people coming into the house who like know how to get into it who have familiarity with it who
know that there's a child there. Like if someone comes to the house for like some wholesome swinging
activity or whatever like the point is that you end up with all these different data points about
people who know about the house and who lives in it. So then if you're bored from mentioning
the sexual activity of the parents of a murdered child or like whatever Nancy's law
would have us do then suddenly you have potentially a very reasonable theory that could
actually explain some other crime and you can't talk about it. In the same way if these people
were hosting book clubs and every month it was a different group of eight people that they were
hosting that does seem like that's a relevant piece of information that there are people who
are familiar with the home are familiar with the age of their child etc. If that's your theory I mean
it still seems like a pretty weak theory but like it seems like it's within the rights of a defense
attorney to bring up an alternate theory of the crime. I mean if your client looks really bad then
like what are you gonna do are you gonna just be like well I give up sorry no argument. Well what
was the what was the outcome was this guy put away? Yes he was convicted and sentenced to death
and he's at San Quentin. Okay well I mean not to say like the process doesn't matter as long as you
get the outcome you want but that seems like the outcome that Nancy Grace wants. Yeah I think that's
exactly what Nancy Grace would ask for. Right. Okay and so her next story is about being on Larry
King live in 2002 with the defense attorney who defended another accused killer of a young girl
this one was Alejandro Avila who was accused of killing a five-year-old named Samantha Runyon
so this is another similar so it's interesting that she starts her book it's I wonder if Nancy
looks at the cases she features in her book the way someone making a mixtape does right where you're
like okay first case murder of a seven-year-old girl second case murder of a five-year-old girl
like that feels tactical to me. Oh totally I mean that's the whole thing is you want to have the most
grisly crimes. So Alejandro Avila is facing the death penalty for this case Nancy says at his
court appearance Avila dressed in an orange jumpsuit over a white t-shirt and sporting a goatee
stood demirally beside his court appointed lawyer paid for by us the taxpayers. There's her hatred
of the Constitution again. And then she says Samantha's horrific death could have been avoided
the dream died when John Pazza Avila's defense attorney at his first trial waged war against the
two nine-year-old girls his client was accused of molesting and basically her argument is that if
his attorney hadn't successfully defended him against this earlier molestation charge he wouldn't
have been able to allegedly commit this murder and like yeah that's a compelling argument. Yeah
to me it's interesting to be like if I accept all this is true like I don't buy your conclusion
which is that once again that defense attorney shouldn't be able to defend their client because
sometimes someone will be successfully defended and then they will commit a worse crime than what
they were accused of before what they maybe did before like that happens it does. I mean isn't the
whole thing whether you consider an innocent person going to jail a bigger injustice than a guilty
person going free yeah you have to calibrate the system somewhere right you have to put like for
various things about like evidence and you know which witnesses are able to be admitted for all
of these little tiny systems you have to set the threshold somewhere and typically the thresholds
are set somewhere to prevent innocent people from going to jail and what that means is that
some percentage of guilty people are going to go free and the fact is if you design a system
to catch every single guilty person and convict every single guilty person you're gonna end up
convicting a shitload of innocent people on like pretty bad evidence you're gonna admit
circumstantial evidence you're gonna admit janky forensic evidence you're not gonna be able to
question witnesses that really don't have high reliability. So this is jumping ahead but later
in the book Nancy says when allegedly wrongful conviction has taken place we hear about it
eternally my question is why do we rarely hear the truth about perpetrators of violent crimes
who are released to become repeat offenders? Citation needed. Full of tales Mike. Full of
tales. I do actually I mean on some level I do actually agree that wrongful convictions like
straight up wrongful convictions do actually get media attention but also I mean I think
that those are limited to a relatively small category of wrongful convictions that they
tend to be murders and they tend to be people that are like it's pretty obvious that it was a
wrongful conviction or forensic evidence exonerates them. I think underneath that there's a much
larger number of people who are either wrongfully convicted of much lower crimes you know assault
aggravated assault robbery. Crimes that the media isn't interested in generally like it is like
murder or bust almost entirely in our trial coverage. And then we also have a lot of people
that actually are wrongfully convicted but it's very difficult for us to ascertain that right
because it's like one person's word against another person or a jailhouse snitch or who did
something. Yeah or they did something and I've had people send me tips I mean I think this is
the experience of every reporter you get these tips that like you know my brother was wrongfully
convicted and they send you a bunch of like case files and a bunch of information it's really hard
to tell if it was a wrongful conviction right there were witnesses against them or there was
some forensic evidence against them. But where you have to get people to talk to you and you have
to take yeah this is why journalism costs money because like part of it is like how much time
does it take to get sources to trust you like how long do you have to be in a place how many
drinks do you have to buy. Yeah like I have not pursued these because I haven't had time and like
you're doing some dumb podcast with some lady who wants to talk to you about shows she likes.
But it's just like there's a huge gray area right like the legal system itself is not interested
in these cases at all which is which is the problem and which is the problem that Nancy Grace
does not seem concerned about. No well and then she like lately though like she does like we're
gonna have to talk about this later but like she does have a show now called Injustice with Nancy
Grace that like purports to like delve into wrongful convictions to some degree which is like
fascinating to me because it's like the the tide of what true crime is trying to be this like woke
true crime comes to oxygen thing it's like it's come for Nancy Grace that's an interesting moment.
Okay let's get back into the book and we have a section called Learning from the Master which is
about Nancy doing her breakout first show Cochrane and Grace in 1997 with Johnny Cochrane. I don't
know what to make of this description I'm just gonna read it to you. Working with Cochrane gave me
the chance to study the king of criminal defense for the next couple of years and I found it incredibly
enlightening. I began to see something I've never been able to see before to understand what exactly
it was that Curie sometimes saw in defense lawyers. I had always viewed them as quick and
wily like a beautiful snake that you kept in a cage but wouldn't dare touch. A snake cage. I still
feel that way but now I understand why Curie's can be captivated by lawyers like Johnny Cochrane.
I studied him carefully. I watched the way he talked. I listened to the words he chose to use
his mannerisms. I learned that Curie's can be struck by someone who is charming attractive and
askable. Cochrane can give an opening and closing argument that could charm a bird out of a tree.
I had always been so focused on the truth and the facts of a particular case. So hell bent on
justice that I was almost immune to a defense attorney's charms. I learned through watching him
why Curie's are sometimes bowled over by someone like Cochrane. Wasn't she a fucking prosecutor
for like 10 years? This is the first time she's met a defense attorney or like seen them at work?
She's like I had no idea why defense attorneys were found charming by anyone until I met Johnny
Cochrane. Right. But also what do you think of her statement? Like she's always been so
focused on the truth and the facts. I mean this is the thing. It's like only my opponents ever
use like storytelling devices or emotion in the courtroom and like I'm just there reciting facts.
Only Johnny Cochrane is trying to use charisma on a jury. I've never heard of that before. Exactly.
So it's like someone who's like been a chef for 10 years. They worked in like a Michelin star
restaurant and then they like get a cooking show with some other chef and they're like
it never occurred to me to caramelize the onions before and you're like yes it did. That's like
one of the main things that you did every day. We know that. You were on CNN Nancy. We heard you
go accent. Okay. So this is where Nancy swoops in for kind of her main topic this chapter and
one of the characters who we're going to see a lot of in this book,
Mark Garagos. Okay. You know who that is? No. He defended Scott Peterson. Okay. A case is that I
am in no way familiar with. Tell me everything you know. I just did. I literally have heard that
name. I could not tell you where or when. Do you know what kind of a case it is? He murdered,
like it's a murder case, right? But I don't know if it's like his kid or his wife or anything. This
was in the news in like 2003. Do you remember? Where were you then? I was living in London.
Did people in London care or was there like some kind of big brother fiasco? There was like
soccer happening. I don't think people noticed. Okay. So Scott Peterson was accused of murdering
his wife Lacey. She was pregnant at the time and so the issue of whether the death of his unborn son
can be also considered murder is one of the themes of the trial and the media frenzy around it.
Okay. And I actually am going to outsource some of the description of this to a 2003 Vanity Fair
article by Maureen Orth called A Made for Tabloid Murder. Okay. So here's our description in a
nutshell. The Peterson case, like the OJ Simpson and Jean Benet Ramsey cases before it, has everything
to make it the number one human interest reality TV soap opera in America. The pretty young pregnant
wife goes missing on Christmas Eve. Her handsome husband's girlfriend reveals the affair they've
been having. The wife's body and that of her unborn baby are later discovered a few miles from where
her husband claims he was fishing when she disappeared. He dyes his hair and is arrested
carrying $10,000 in cash. Scott Peterson later says that he goes fishing on the day his wife
disappears. They spend the morning together. Then he is on his computer for a time.
And then he goes out in his boat where he's observed fishing by various other
Fisher people. Fisher people, yes. And this is theoretically the time when he would apparently
have needed to be dumping her body. And then her her body and her baby's body are found sometime
later. And so kind of from the start, he just doesn't look good. And this becomes a big story.
This was something that I did not make any effort to pay attention to at the time, but it was just
ambiently in the news. And then Nancy says, another less than winning quality of the usually
smooth defense lawyer is his pension for sarcasm. In late July 2004, Detective Dodge Hendy was on
the stand testifying about what he found while searching Scott Peterson's warehouse. During
cross examination, he told Garagos he found what appeared to be cement residue in what looked like
five rings, which indicated that Peterson had made five anchors, but only one was found.
Garagos, trying to punch holes in Hendy's theory, showed the pictures of the so-called rings and
commented that they looked more like right angles than rings. He mocked Hendy saying,
is this a ring? And is this a ring? Is this a circle? His attempt at witty sarcasm fell flat.
Although there were a few chuckles in the courtroom, some of the jury's looked disgusted
by the treatment the detective received. When Garagos's long anticipated cross
exam of Peterson's former lover Amber Fry was set to commence, he deadpan in open court, no
questions. He then paused for a fact before adding, just kidding. Well, there were a few people who
thought this was hilarious. Certain members of the jury looked on stoically and never even cracked
a smile as if to relay the message, what's funny about murder? Oh, God. I mean, I don't know,
defense lawyers are bad because in this one case, a defense lawyer was kind of a dick. I don't know,
is that the overall? Yeah, that's the thrust of her argument. I kind of agree that defense
lawyers shouldn't be jocular like that. But I also, I don't know how typical this is. She
still at some point has to prove that this is a larger problem in the criminal justice system.
I mean, is it even a problem? Because like my feeling about these examples is like,
is that it? Like you have this whole trial to draw examples of like this guy behaving
inappropriately from and your example is like, he's kind of snarky one time. And then he like
makes kind of a bad joke before he questions someone else. Like, I mean, trials go on for months.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, I don't know. Like I feel like everyone is going to make like somewhat
inappropriate attempts at levity in the course of their job. And like, I don't know how you
legislate against that. Right. You know, I mean, I do that on this show constantly.
I don't want to be subject to criminal sanctions. And so do I. And then you edit it out. Nancy Grace
can't talk about how terrible of a person I am. I mean, the thing with the cops, it's like,
what's even happening? The lawyer's like, this doesn't look like a circle to me. I don't even know
what you're supposed to do except do that. I'm sure that prosecutors belittle witnesses all the
time too. Like that's kind of part of the cross examination. No, prosecutors are always nice.
It just seems like if you're concerned about people being mocked when they're on the stand,
that's probably a separate issue from whether it's only defense attorneys that do this,
and it's only police officers that get this treatment. Yes. So Maureen Orth's article is
partially from the perspective of the two national inquirer reporters who the Vanity Fair
journalist is kind of hanging out with and observing and watching them get their scoops.
And so we have a quote in which one of them says, the Peterson story has broken perfectly.
The tabs kept lacy going during the Iraq war. And as soon as the war finishes, her body washes up.
And then as they're hanging out in this bar, a quote, tough looking construction worker
pops in to ask whether something he has come across is worth anything.
Hanner-Hen says the man has contacted the inquirer, which routinely pays $500 per tip,
because he believes he has uncovered a satanic mural in a house he is remodeling.
Nice. Hanner-Hen leads him over to a booth, pulls a notebook out of his back pocket,
and starts writing. Deeply disturbing that that's the same amount of money that I have been paid
for like 3,000 word feature stories. But is it a tip about finding a mural that you think is satanic?
In the same town where a murder has taken place.
Are you saying that Nancy Grace is sort of picking up the torch from the tabloids?
I really want you to talk about the satanic mural theory with me for a second here.
I'm very pleased with how I managed to get us to satanic cult theory in like record time.
I'm just like skipping over the satanic mural thing just because it seems so outlandishly wrong.
That's why we have to talk about the satanic mural. There's not like column A, yeah satanist
did it. Let's talk about it. Column B, it wasn't the satanist, so let's not talk about that theory.
You're like, geez, that's my whole field talking about satanists who weren't there.
So this becomes a theory. This is in the news a lot. Like this guy is not dropping in for no
reason at all. Like he has smelled on the wind, this prevailing interest in satanic cult.
And this is what Nancy Grace is going to take Scott Peterson's lawyer to task for,
is that he's advancing the satanic cult theory and other stuff. She doesn't like him generally.
This is like an official theory, the satanic cult theory is like an actual-
You gotta throw a bunch of spaghetti at the wall, Mike. It's not as if this didn't work
to convict people in the 80s. I mean the guy is just late to the party honestly.
And like it doesn't stay in the mix for that long. But yeah, there's a period when the speculation
about Lacey Peterson's murder involves a lot of talk about satanists.
Holy shit.
So Nancy says,
Garagos tried out a series of theories on the public via statements and court papers to see if
any would stick. At the beginning of the trial, we heard a host of stories about people and events
that might be tied to Lacey's disappearance and murder. First came the story about a brown van and
a missing shoe that would explain everything. Then came a mysterious woman with important
information. Those were followed by various incendiary tales including Donnie the dope dealer,
the evil burglars, the homeless killers, a besotted neighbor in love with Scott Peterson,
a possible jewel heist, a deranged sex offender, a Hawaiian gang, and of course a satanic cult.
How many moral panics are we gonna have? We've got homeless people, we've got sex offenders,
we've got street gangs, throw in some human trafficking and some cancel culture and we've
got the whole like Pokemon gang. All right, so this is the satanic cult case at its strongest.
So I'm gonna present this to you. So Lacey's body is found in San Francisco Bay in April of 2003
and her baby was found the following day, her baby's body. And so
they're found separately. So the question is, did something called coffin birth take place?
What the fuck is that? So Maureen Orth describes this and she describes it as the built-up gas
and the decomposing body inside of the mother expels the baby. Shut the fuck up, that's a fucking thing?
Evidently. Yeah, so that's something that could have happened. However, when the NBC correspondent
comes forward with the Addendum to the Autopsy report, the information in it that catches the
media's imagination is that there is quote a post-mortem tear going from the baby's right
shoulder to the right lateral abdominal wall. I want to bury my face in a pillow right now so bad,
this is so gross. So this is very troubling to hear, right? And this is what shows up in the media
and people start being like, yeah, I don't know, sounds like a satanic cult to me or like something
weird. It's just horrible, right? Because she's been dumped in the water apparently and is found
very badly decomposed and her baby who has been inside of her is found in much better condition
than she is, which is also extremely haunting. So again, I mean, this plays into the whole,
you know, the way Nancy Grace's career works. Like there's a reason why this is one of the case
that she spends a lot of this book talking about. And there's a reason why the Casey Anthony case
was such a big part of her career also, like she really like the deaths, the deaths of tots.
That's her. Yeah, man. Her wheelhouse. I mean, she talks about how like wrongful convictions
get so much media attention, but like no wrongful conviction has ever received as much forensic
every tiny little detail type dissection as these fucking white lady murdered cases. Yeah,
and yes, and it's and again, I think that, you know, if you contemplate these details,
like I think it's important to like, I don't want to, you know, sure, you can do whatever
you want, but it's important for me as someone who disagrees with Nancy Grace to be like, yes,
Nancy, like, you're right, this is horrible. Like I don't want these things to happen to babies.
Like we agree. Yes. But the sadness of Lacey Peterson's death and of her baby's death, like
is not in itself stronger evidence that her husband did it. Yeah, true. Yeah. And there's
this thing that I think we just kind of happens, right, and especially in kind of cable to crime
media where it's like, aren't you sad and people are like, yeah. And then it's like, doesn't that
tell you that we should push harder for like bad things to happen to this person who we're saying
we know did it. And it's like, um, right, it's sort of like, don't you think Scott Petersen did it?
And you're like, I don't know. And it's like, well, look at the grisly details of this murder
what do you think now? And like, well, the evidence that he did this grizzly stuff is the same,
regardless of like how grizzly the murder was. Right. It's just evidence that it's horrible.
And so like if you already suspect him, and then you're pumped full of details about how terrible
this crime you already think he committed was, then you're just like, fuck you, Scott. I feel like
you control F through this book for dead baby. I really didn't. I suspect you. I did control
F for satanic cult. Unfortunately, those two terms gravitate toward each other.
They control F for you. Yeah. Yeah, they did. So they release the addendum to the autopsy report
with this weird new information about the cut on the baby's body, the fact that Lacey does not have
her baby inside her anymore when she's found. And Maureen Orrith says here now was the tantalizing
idea that the baby may have been cut out of Lacey's womb. The combination of a knife and a satanic
cult sent the media pack racing and 30 minutes later the cult idea was being discussed on Fox
Cable by Linda Vester and Rita Cosby. Jesus fucking Christ. At 3pm, Pat Buchanan and Bill
Press abandoned national politics in order to focus almost exclusively on the breaking news
first reported here on MSNBC by Dan Abrams. By then the prosecution had made a complete U-turn
and at four o'clock CNN announced that the prosecution had set out a press release saying
it would request that due to quote numerous leaks to the media today, the judge make public
the full autopsy report. At 5pm, both Wolf Blitzer on CNN and Lester Holt on MSNBC discussed the
feeding frenzy. MSNBC editor-in-chief Jerry Nockman characterized the story as quote crack for us in
the business. We can't stop ourselves. I don't even know where to go with that. It's like,
do these people not know that the satanic panic was fake? No, no one knows that. That's why I talk
about it all the time. I mean, people do know that, but it is something that we haven't reckoned with
and we really hadn't in 2003. Like this is like five years after the San Antonio 4 were convicted.
This is yeah, no one's in a thoughtful place about this yet apparently. So it really hadn't
been like thoroughly debunked by then? Oh no. Huh. But yeah, I mean, it is very interesting because
like I guess we have higher expectations of 2003 than we do of 1983, although God knows why.
I think you can actually say that like the early aughts and kind of the era around the start
of the Iraq war were this kind of golden moment of counterfactual thinking in the United States
because like every conversation that wasn't about Lacey Peterson, I think was about whether Saddam
Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and I feel like it's almost like the Nancy Grace thing on
the macro scale. It's like we have been hurt. Right. Look at how terrible 9-11 was. Like we
have to do something. Like aren't we sad? Look at Saddam Hussein, aren't you mad? Like he's almost,
it's almost like he and Scott Peterson were like similar figures in the same moment. It was his
different scales and one of them was this guy in Modesto. This is you at your grad school best.
It's almost like Scott Peterson and Saddam Hussein were the same. They were. They're like this,
you know, this guy who like is guilty of something, right? Like Scott Peterson was having an affair
and he was being real slimy about it and he had a pregnant wife and he like didn't look great. He,
you know, but it's like looking at someone who like you have no reason to like or feel sympathy
for but who also like you maybe lack the ability to prove did the very specific thing that you
need to prove that they did. And at the end of the day, it's like, yeah, but come on. Yeah, this guy
sucks. We're sad and we're mad and look at this fucking guy. Yeah, that's true. Yeah. So my point
about this is that like it's not as if Scott Peterson's lawyer is the only one who's pushing
this narrative. Right. This is something that the NBC legal correspondent is like excitedly
offering to the public and that like we've just watched this timeline of this entire day of the
cable TV media first excitedly reporting details and then reporting on more details and then
reporting on the reporting of the details. So to me, the point is that, you know, Nancy Grace is
right to think that a satanic cult conspiracy is kind of a bad theory, but also like her blaming
the defense attorney for being the one who like pushed this topic onto the American public feels
a little disingenuous. Right. And so actually, this is a weirdly credible theory. So let's get
into that. Wait, what? The satanic one is? I'm not saying that's where this is going, but I was
surprised by the relative depth for this theory. I would love it if the you're wrong about about
this episode is actually that it was a satanic cult. That's like your dedication to truth,
like no matter where it leads us, man. This turns out this is one of them. Sorry, everybody.
Okay. So Maureen Orth tells us, in fact, there were reports of a brown van in Lacey
Peterson's neighborhood at the time she disappeared. And what the media is saying is like, hmm,
there was a brown van, Satanist, maybe van equals Satan because, you know, the Satanists, they love
vans. Famously van drivers. The police claimed the van belonged to landscapers. But Maureen's
source says witnesses reported that the vehicle had had no lawnmowers or rakes in it,
and that the arguments were not identified. The way we do this with these fucking trials,
it's like we zoom in on these like completely absurd pieces of information. Like, were there
fucking lawnmowers in the van? Also, when can you ever see what's inside of a van? The reason
these panel vans don't have windows in them is so that you can't see the equipment in them
that might be valuable or were stealing, or so it's not like knocking around like breaking windows
potentially. Yes. I mean, first of all, it's never a van. Secondly, if there weren't lawnmowers in
the van, that's not evidence that like it was Satanists. No, it's either lawnmowers or Satanists.
It's like, if you're in a van, you are either mowing a lawn or sacrificing a baby. So yeah,
so that's not super convincing. The Vanity Fair article also tells us that the defense
has claimed that there is apparently this anonymous young woman who has gone to a rape
crisis center in the area who says that she was raped in the brown van that was spotted in Lacey's
neighborhood. And apparently one of her assailants told her, if you want to see the other part of
the sacrifice, keep a close look at the newspapers and read about it on Christmas Day. Oh, really?
Yeah. Oh, and one of the van's occupants allegedly had a tattoo on his arm. 666 supposedly a satanic
symbol. This is not the strong case I'm giving to you by the way. This is like the satanic argument
at its saddest and most hilarious. This is sad and hilarious. Yes. Yeah. And so the defense is
saying there's this anonymous woman who said something to someone about what someone else
told her and it's like, how do we know this person exists? Right. How did the rape crisis
center know to contact you with this information? Right. Okay, so now I'm going to read you an
article from the Modesto B. Before Scott and Lacey Peterson, there was a Selina massacre.
And then the sub headline in the Modesto B article is a cult or just bizarre? I mean,
brunch or breakfast? So the murders, they kill four victims and they're apparently
a group that has defected. So we have a former group member named Angela Young who left before
the murders who says, quote, it was very serious, not just dabbled in. Leader Gerald Cruz manipulated
group members through bizarre activities that included indoctrination into various forms of
being cult, sleep deprivation and brainwashing. At his direction, witnesses said some members
beat, raped and tortured each other. The deputy district attorney who tried this case says there
was no evidence of any cult or rituals that the defense tried to make it seem that way.
Which is also interesting to me because we have like the prosecutor is not the one who's trying
to make the cult argument. Right. So a lawyer for another one of the defendants in this case
says they remember stories of rituals under the full moon at midnight and says diaries and letters
by group members made reference to desecrating graves, beatings for disobedience and even murder.
Modesto attorney William Arthur Miller recalled many of the same things plus allegations of animal
sacrifice. He said group members listened to heavy metal music just before the murders and
remembered talk of group members dancing at one point as if in a ritual. Oh my god. Miller said
crime scene photos revealed a scrap paper scrawled with a ritual prayer or chant. A length of hair
from one of the victims was affixed by a magnet to a refrigerator door, he said, noting that Satanists
are said to use parts of a victim's physical being to cast spells. A lot looked like satanic
worship, Miller said of the writings. He recalled a member saying that quote the sacrifice of a
newborn baby was the cleaningest thing you could do. I took that to mean most cleansing,
Miller said. Review of some of the writings revealed references to altars, witchcraft,
bloodletting curses, dining with the dead, pentagrams, demons, goats, visions, secret oses and
quote the father of darkness. Goats. The saliva group referred to itself as children of Satan,
children of the night, false prophets of revelations and judge and jury of people's fate.
I mean this actually sounded pretty convincing to me at the beginning and now I'm like extremely
less convinced. What part sounded convincing to you initially? Well just the idea that like this
is a fucking cult and like there's some dude in charge of it who brainwashes these people into
committing murders for him. Like that's something that has happened. Yeah. But yeah it's interesting
that like the media needs there to be these like weird dumb artifacts of like ritualistic stuff and
like heavy metal and hair on a magnet and these sorts of things that don't actually really matter.
Like the media has to believe in the power of the satanism to consider the satanism important.
Exactly and it's like it reminds me of the panic over street gangs that you'd have like three or
four kids that are arrested for like beating somebody up or whatever and they would try to
exoticize this group of kids who's like they had signs and symbols that they sent to each other and
they wore the same clothes and it's like they're they're accused of an assault. Like an assault is
bad enough. It really doesn't matter if they had like a secret handshake. Like that doesn't make the
crime any more exotic but it's like this push to make it like this separate thing like it's a different
category of crime. It's the same thing here where it's like I don't like goats. I mean I care if
they have writing about goats because I like goats. Goats are cute. Yeah I mean I guess the question
is like why does the cult part matter? Like why is that important and like it seems to be important
to the defense attorneys in this case because talking about how they were part of a cult is a
way to talk about how their own agency was abused and shipped away over time and like that's potentially
a useful defense. Right. And then if you're the media then I guess it matters if it's a cult because
like that's a scary story that moves units. Right. Well there's also this thing where like
what happens when you zoom in on these pieces of evidence and you start having a debate about like
was there a lawn mower or was there not a lawn mower is you forget the zoomed out thing that like if
all of this is true. If there was an occult murder in this city some number of years before the
Lacey Peterson murder and if there was a brown van parked in that neighborhood on that day
neither one of these are evidence that Lacey Peterson was killed by a satanic cult. Like you'd
need actual evidence of that. Yeah I mean I think what I find most interesting about this whole
cul-de-sac actually is that like the satanic cult murder aspect like is credible in itself.
It's true that they're like talking about worshiping satan and if that's what they believe themselves
to be doing and you know and then it depends on how you define cult but if you have like a group of
people living under the thumb of a charismatic leader who's controlling their behaviors and
thoughts then like yeah that's probably a cult. These things happen sure. And then if worshiping
satan and talking about satan and the committing murders in a way that relates to that larger
culture as part of it then like I just feel like we found our first satanic cult. I'm like here it
is here they are. They didn't kill Lacey Peterson there's nothing to indicate that. Right. But like
sure here's a satanic cult murder. What amazes me most though is that I've been researching the
satanic panic. I mean I say it at the top of every episode I've been doing this for like three years.
I've never heard of this case no one talks about it. Like here is like as close as it seems like
we're going to get to a satanic cult murder and everyone's like no I guess what a wrongly accused
lesbian. Right. No thank you. But that of course is like so telling about moral panics right is
that the actual things the actual harms are so unexotic right in the same way that there are
real cases of like actual sort of like human trafficking like people recruiting poor and
marginalized people into doing sex work. But like people are not interested in those cases
because it's like it's just like a 26 year old asshole guy and like this 14 year old girl whose
parents were on drugs because she's not an innocent victim. Right. And it's the same thing here
where it's like yeah I guess it was a satanic cult but it's like it's only a couple people and like
it's kind of a boring satanic cult. Yeah. This is the early 90s at a time when like
Dr. Bennett Braun is arguing that the satanists have infiltrated you know the highest seat of
American government which like these people in the Modesto area clearly have not. And they're
killing former members rather than like plucking people out of society at random. So yeah it's
funny because like the satanic cult element I'm like sure yeah why not I buy it. And the part
where it falls apart is this idea that the Peterson defense is putting forth that like
this could be connected to the cult that killed Lacey and Connor Peterson. Like it's it's these
people who we put in prison years and years ago and this cult whose leader is out of commission
and isn't capable of committing any more murders apparently. Like this is the long game. Like
that's where it gets silly actually. In terms of the existence of the cult I'm like sure why not.
I'm Sarah Marshall I'm working on a book about the satanic realness.
About the satanic proportionate response. Yeah.
None of this has anything to do with Nancy Grace but I fucking love this.
Because this is the way we enjoy Nancy Grace is by sneaking away.
Because we don't talk about her. So here's because my favorite passage in this article and maybe in
anything ever in Vanity Fair one of the people who the media was desperate to talk to and who
this article describes their hunt for is Amber Fry whose relationship with Scott is considered
by members of the press and the prosecution as one of his motives for killing Lacey.
Because if he did murder his wife then it's best to blame it on a woman. Yeah.
So Maureen Orth tells us I have since learned that when Amber's name surfaced last winter
a number of producers and reporters hoping to catch her visiting her dad
embedded themselves for up to two weeks at a time in Ron Fry's 81 year old mother's house where he
lives. They'd all be sitting here all day long. He said they were here so much they know my dog's
name my mother's name. They would talk about my little dog send who is kind of smart. He dresses
himself but they never got to see that and Maureen Orth says pardon me and he says my little dog
puts his own shirt on. My god. I feel like this whole episode maybe this whole podcast
has been leading us toward the sentence my little dog puts his own shirt on.
We're done. We're done. Play the theme song. This is it.
We've done a lot of good work today. One of the interesting things about Nancy Grace's audio book
is that it is read by the same reader who also does the audio book of one of my favorite books
ever written which is Janet Malcolm's The Journalist and the Murderer. I love that book. Yes. Yeah and
there's a scene in that where Janet Malcolm has been interviewing one of the jurors in the trial
that she's studying and this woman has got on this long confusing monologue about how she loves
the Constitution and she loved it as a girl and she bought it on a trip to Washington and she
couldn't get through it but she respects it so much and just this weird beautiful strange soliloquy
and Janet Malcolm writes, as I listened to Lucille Dillon, I felt more acutely conscious
than ever of the surrealism that is at the heart of journalism. People tell journalists their stories
as characters and dreams deliver their elliptical messages without warning, without context,
without concern for how odd they will sound when the dreamer awakens and repeats them.
My little dog puts his own shirt on. Oh my god.
So yeah, let's finish up Nancy Grace's argument against the existence of defense attorneys and
then I think we can be free the rest of the day. Okay, so then her example and this is an interesting
one too. This is about, okay, this is another Garagos case. She's just sticking with this guy.
This is Scott Peterson's attorney? Is Garagos? Yes. She really, yeah, she really does not like him.
He's a worthy adversary. So Garagos defends Michael Jackson. Oh wow. When Michael Jackson
is accused of child molestation. So Michael Jackson pleads not guilty in January 2004 and
then basically puts on a little show for his supporters outside the courthouse. He dances
on top of an SUV and he invites fans to join him at Neverland Rank and he has refreshment
and again, this is an argument against Garagos. Okay. What exactly were they celebrating? Jackson
being indicted for child molestation, the anguish of a family who along with their cancer-stricken
son must now endure a long drawn out trial. The entire episode was a bizarre mockery of the
justice system regardless of whether Garagos orchestrated the whole performance. He let it
happen. I mean, I kind of agree with her. I don't know. I mean, that whole thing was so gross. I
don't know. I mean, to me, it's like, yeah, like it's gross to think about someone putting us back
in like our 2004 brains. Like whatever we didn't know, whatever we believed about Michael Jackson
or wanted to believe about him then, it's like, it's incredibly insensitive to be publicly celebrating
and offering parties for your supporters. And I guess celebrating the fact that you have supporters
is what I would imagine that's about, you know, when you're accused of something so serious. And
it does suggest things aren't well. It suggests someone who's not well. So yeah, it's a strong
indictment of his client's character. I mean, also, if I can take you back to the clip that we
watched last week, she has a guy that is on trial for killing his wife and then burning their house
down and making it look like an arson. She gets a conviction of him. And we have a clip of her
celebrating the conviction of this guy. We see her saying like, God, another one. Like, is she
really saying that like people on the other end of this system of justice don't also celebrate
an outcome that they wanted? Like, I'm sure prosecutors have celebrated like someone who
shoplifted from Walmart getting like 10 years in jail because it's a mandatory minimum thing or
three strikes thing. Oh, sure. And to me, the craziest part of this personally is that like,
she's blaming his lawyer for this. And it's like, I challenge any lawyer to control the behaviors
of a pop star that they're representing. Like pop stars are used to doing whatever
ridiculous thing they want to, which is part of the reason why they seem to edge into crimes in a
way that people around them just sort of soften and abet. There's also the thing, I mean, I don't
know super duper much about the justice system, but I also think that we have like the only court
cases that we interact with and see in detail are celebrity court cases like the kind that take nine
months. And those are not typical like to extrapolate from like, Hey, here's a celebrity case that
went the wrong way and a client and a lawyer who acted wildly insensitively in the kind of celebrity
trial of which we have, I don't know, four or five every year, you can't just extrapolate to the
entire system from like a very unique circumstance. It's like studying Hollywood by like studying
the Batman movies and being like, as we can see in 1997, things got really campy. So in conclusion,
Michael Jackson threw a party and Nancy Grace thought that was gross. And I agree with Nancy
Grace. Like I think honestly, the interesting takeaway of this chapter and really of this book
is like, how much it's possible to agree with Nancy Grace about the very limited, low stakes
argument that she's making and then like, yes, and through it, you know, and just be like, yeah,
sure, like I can believe everything you're saying, but also like truly Nancy, like what
bearing does that have on the systemic problems that we're trying to solve? Okay. Hiding behind
the constitution, the founding fathers set up our constitution in a way that allows defense
attorneys and defendants to literally get away with murder. These are the rules lawyers have to
play by and they aren't going to change. They may fluctuate a tiny bit based on Supreme Court
rulings, but generally speaking, those are the rules. I also hate due process. Glad that we're on
the same page. Oh, and then this is great too, because she's previously complained about a defendant
wearing, well, she hasn't complained about it, but she's like, he was wearing a JLA suit jumpsuit and
he looked like a criminal. And then she makes one of my favorite tough on crime arguments,
which is defense attorneys very wisely dressed clients and their Sunday best and have them sit
there and look serious and thoughtful for the duration of the trial. And it's like, what are
they supposed to do Nancy? Are they supposed to let them wear their prison jumpsuits so you can
talk about how much they look like a murderer? Well, exactly. What are people what do you want?
Right. I feel like Nancy Grace relating to the legal system is like a toddler who's clearly
just like had a big day. They're not going to be pleased by anything you offer them. But you're
like, let's continue with this charade. You're like, do you want a snack? She's like, no. And
you're like, do you want a video? And she's like, no, you're like, Nancy, we both know that like,
you're not going to want anything I can bring you. You're not going to want jumpsuit. You're not
going to want no jumpsuit. Like you just are upset. Right. I mean, my understanding is there's
like Supreme Court cases about this and stuff that it's like, to have the presumption of innocence,
you have to allow somebody to look innocent in court. And of course, this ends up coming down
to resources because who can afford a suit and a haircut and like a way of looking nice during
their trial. But the idea is that humans are affected by the way that things look a lot more
than we want to admit. And so putting somebody in a suit makes them look a little bit more innocent.
And if we actually believe the presumption of innocence, then we should be able to let people
do that. It's this weird mobius trip, right? We're like, the point of the trial is to determine
guilt. And so if you are going to get upset that someone is dressed up in a way that doesn't
communicate the idea of their guilt to the very people who have to decide whether they're guilty
or not, like, you just want everyone to be found guilty. Yes. And that is really the
conclusion of Nancy Grace's case against defense attorneys. So it is basically like three or maybe
four anecdotes. There's the child murderer guy. There's the other child murderer guy. There's
Scott Peterson. And there's Michael Jackson. Those are our four examples. These are the four
cases against lawyers. This is actually more robust than like any article about like campus
political correctness gone wrong that I've read in the last 10 years. So in conclusion,
Nancy Grace is like doing more hard hitting journalism than many of us would like to believe
given the context and what poorer excuses pass for journalism. And Satanist cults are real,
and there is a little dog out there that can put his own shirt on and be waiting for you.
I'm amazed you didn't close with anything Batman related. This is unprecedented.
There's a little dog that can put his own bat shirt on. Here we go. We got there.