The Megyn Kelly Show - Scott Peterson May Get a New Trial - A Look Back at the Case: A "True Crime Christmas" Special | Ep. 975
Episode Date: January 2, 2025"True Crime Christmas" comes to an end as Megyn Kelly is joined by former prosecutor and district attorney Matt Murphy, to discuss the latest developments in the story of Scott Peterson, including whe...ther Peterson could actually get a new trial, the truth about "circumstantial" evidence in most murder trials, the decision by the Los Angeles Innocence Project to take up the case, the significance of the dog in the Peterson case, the truth about the reliability of eyewitness testimony, the power of juries to detect human behavior and use common sense, the claim that a "burglary gang" could have been behind Laci Peterson's murder, Peterson's suspect behavior after his pregnant wife went missing, and more.Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Transcript
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at noon east.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show and the conclusion to our true crime Christmas series.
Today we're looking at the Scott Peterson case, which we've covered on the show before, but there is new information this year. It's actually kind of unbelievable. And an effort underway to get the man convicted
of killing his pregnant wife, Lacey, and their unborn son, Connor, a new trial.
Joining me today, our pal, Matt Murphy, former California prosecutor and district attorney.
Matt, good to see you again. Thank you for being here. All right,
so this is so crazy. The more I hear about this case, the more it feels like Scott Peterson
actually has a shot at a retrial, which just seems insane to me. But since you're a prosecutor
and you're from California, I'm going to play devil's advocate
here and I will try to make the case on his behalf. Okay. It's more interesting if we,
if we have both sides. So he's just been given wide access to a whole new host of discovery
that he says he was entitled to in this case, which my understanding is the judge
had earlier said, you're not getting this. Go back to prison. Goodbye. But now he is getting
access to a bunch of new evidence that would support allegedly this whole theory that what
happened on the day Lacey Peterson went missing and was murdered was not that Scott Peterson
killed her and then disposed of her body and that of their unborn son. It was that she witnessed a burglary across the street from where they lived.
She either tried to stop it, which is what Scott Peterson says he believes,
or she was just an eyewitness and therefore became a target. They abducted her. They killed her. They then drove around with her body
for some sort of period. And then when the police made clear that Scott Peterson was believed to
have been at this harbor, this marina on the day that Lacey went missing, they thought, aha,
this is our chance. We're going to dump the body over there so that he will be blamed for this crime.
And it does appear like this judge has at least opened up discovery again for him to start probing that theory more meaningfully.
Is that about where things stand?
Yeah, that's about where things stand. I mean, it's utterly absurd. But yeah, it's look, I hate it when women who are seven
and a half months pregnant go charging in to stop burglaries and then burglars who are there to
steal drive around for days and days with a dead body in their car of somebody that they killed
just because apparently and then they get really smart at that point and
decide that they're going to drive to probably a Marina that will have more law enforcement
witnesses and everybody else because the intention given this case back in the day,
and they're going to take the body out and go to pretty much the exact same place that Scott
Peterson was fishing according to him and dump the body the body. Yeah, it happens all the time.
You know, I mean, let's give him a new trial. And not to help you out because, yeah, I'm supposed
to be taking the other side. But the other piece of that story that's just so nonsensical is if
that's what they wanted to frame him, why would they weigh down the body in the ocean with a
bunch of anchors? Why wouldn't they just throw the body on the shore
or go out in the middle of the night and dump it overboard so it would float back in?
Because burglars go and make fake anchors with cement that they purchase all the time. That's
why. I mean, anybody, anybody knows that. It's like, look, this is this is one of this is the
latest case in a few of these that are going on right now where it's kind of like, you know, a couple of decades have gone by and everybody has forgotten the overwhelming evidence against Scott Peterson.
And this guy, look, this is a domestic violence murder. And I don't have to say alleged because the guy is convicted right now of it. So, you know, everybody forgets Amber Frey and all of the stuff regarding the affair and the fact that he dyed his hair and had fifteen thousand dollars and was down in San Diego.
It looked like he was going to flee to Mexico. It's like we get these cases.
Menendez Brothers is another one right now where everybody forgets. And then all of a sudden, you know, hey, the L.A. Innocence Project is on there, which is a misnomer if there's ever been one.
Yeah, tell us about them.
I mean, look, they they they did some really good work back in the day when right when DNA became ubiquitous in when CODIS went online and every state joined it. And right when they were using
modern co-filer and profiler DNA kits, which are way easier than the old RFLP to understand that
that's the gel, you know, that they used to inject. So they they found they found some people
that were wrongfully convicted. And that happens in our system. I sit on a board with Purdue
University where that's our sole task is trying to identify people who are wrongfully convicted. And that happens in our system. I sit on a board with Purdue University
where that's our sole task is trying to identify people who are wrongfully convicted. But since
that initial flurry of kind of glory, if you call it that, where they're doing good work,
you know, finding people that were wrongfully convicted, it seems like they've really settled
more into stuff like this high profile stuff that that gets a lot of
headlines. And then as soon as you all your all your viewers have to do is just read the Wikipedia
on this case. The California Supreme Court affirmed this conviction seven to they reversed the
they reversed the death part because of some irregularities during jury selection.
But they affirm his conviction.
And another term that we keep hearing, there's a Newsweek article on this.
And, you know, the defense alleges it was circumstantial evidence.
We've all heard that.
We've seen that in TV shows, right?
Like you see Starsky.
I mean, I'm going to date myself here.
Starsky and Hutch are tagging.
I know the reference. You know, whoever the cops are today, we have this concept and it's a myth that circumstantial evidence, quote unquote, is somehow inadmissible or bad evidence.
And that's exactly what Newsweek wrote their article on this that I read this morning.
Case based on circumstantial evidence, according to L.A. Innocence Project, it's like every single domestic violence murder guys in America and in the world throughout history involves some degree of circumstantial evidence.
Direct evidence just means a witness comes into court and they say they saw something.
Circumstantial evidence is pretty much everything else. I mean, circumstantial evidence. It's like, you know, this guy had every poker tell that you
could ever want during this investigation, including refusing at one point to communicate
with her family, refusing to speak to the police anymore. He told his his his paramour mistress,
whatever we want to call Amber Frey, that Lacey was dead when she was very much alive.
He said that he was a widower. He bought this boat two weeks before she disappeared.
He bought cement, which is consistent with the way her body was found. Her body was heavily
decomposed. And they believe that the coroner testified at the time that it was consistent with
several anchors holding her down. There's so much overwhelming evidence here.
And circumstantial evidence is that good old fashioned common sense stuff like somebody
running away from a crime scene, somebody in possession of stolen property from a recent
burglary that happened down the street. Circumstantial evidence is the bread and
butter of every domestic violence
murder case in the history of justice and that really is the right word for it is justice like
holding people accountable for what they did the the the evidence against this guy is is laughably
overwhelming and they come in they get the headlines, Ellie, Ellie Innocence Project. And then everybody forgets all that stuff.
And it's like, ooh, there was a van down the street with a mattress in it.
And essentially, that's what the current legal action is about.
They want to test a mattress that was found in some burnout van somewhere in the neighborhood
of where Lacey Pearson lived. Okay, so if they get in there,
and I can already tell you what the argument's gonna be.
This is the mattress, which they say has blood on it,
but the initial test suggested maybe it was blood.
Then the second test done by the officials
suggested it was inconclusive,
not clear whether it's blood or rust.
Go ahead.
Sorry, Matt.
Right, if they get that thing,
they're going to
swab it. And modern genetic and DNA testing is so sensitive, I can virtually guarantee you will find
unknown male DNA on that mattress. And the next thing that the Innocence Project is going to do
is they're going to say, aha, that's the DNA for the real killer, and it doesn't match Scott
Peterson. But without a link to lacey peterson
it is it is literally meaningless and and look we see that all the time in a lot of cases like
like i said there are cases where dna has legitimately freed people that didn't do it
and thank goodness for that and that's why we want this system to work and forensic technology is
unbiased and it thank goodness, right? But there's
also a lot of these cases, Megan, and this is something that drives me crazy, where you'll have
something that happened, maybe say a rape murder in the 1980. And somebody will have been convicted
of rape murder. The jury who, in my experience, and I've done a lot of capital case litigation,
I've done a lot of cases like this, which are bifurcated murder trials, the juries take their
task very seriously. The judges tend to be the most experienced and the best. The detectives
tend to be the most experienced and the best. And it's imperfect, but everybody really wants
to do their job. So then a couple of decades later and say it's a homeless drifter. OK, and that
guy is convicted and maybe he's got some some sex offenses in his past. And the way it works over
and over again is he'll say, hey, it was consensual sex. I understand that she's a stockbroker and I
was living in a tent. But trust me, we really had a spark. And boy, did we hit it off. And so that's
why my sperm was found all over the place
but um somebody else came along later and killed her and that will be the absurd ridiculous defense
that they will run and the jury will reject it properly and he'll get convicted and then what
happens is that you know that the dna comes back like 20 years later or 30 years later and they'll
test the scrapings under her fingernails or they'll test some object that's found at the crime scene.
And, you know, if she pat if she patted a little boy on the head that day or if she shook hands with her mailman or something, you can discover unknown male DNA that has no link whatsoever to the actual murder. But the standard on appeal is could a jury, could a reasonable jury have found differently?
Essentially, could they have could they've come to a different result based on that new
evidence?
And the answer under those circumstances is, yeah, if they didn't consider that, maybe
so.
So that's the standard for reversal on appeal.
So the case comes back for a retrial and Aunt Millie, who worked in the evidence room, put it in the wrong box or the evidence got washed away in the great flood of 82 or and they can't redo it or the critical witnesses have died.
The investigator necessary to lay the foundation for that evidence has has passed away. You can have this entire host of problems that can afflict a case like that
30 years later, so they can't retry it. And then what happens is you've got people like Barry Sheck
in front of the cameras going, another innocent man exonerated, which is the term they love,
exonerated from DNA evidence when they weren't exonerated at all. They were granted a new trial
and the
prosecution couldn't proceed. And then that guy goes out and this has happened over and over and
over again in America because we know sex offenders keep doing it again. So they'll get out. They'll
sue the county. They'll get settlements for a couple of million bucks and then they get caught
for doing it, doing it again. And nobody wants to talk about those. And it drives me insane. Scott Peterson is a relatively young man. I mean, if he were to get out,
I think he would pose a danger to other women and other people. Like I, obviously it would take
the most stone cold sociopath in America to murder one's eight month pregnant wife and one's unborn child with your bare hands and then
dump them in the ocean like they were trash while you're talking to your lover with these nonsense
claims while you're actually, I, we actually have this queued up cause it's just so amazing
while you're actually at the vigil for your missing wife and child talking to your lover
in Amber Fry's defense here, she did not know he was married. And at this point,
the reason it's on tape is because when she saw his picture all over the news,
she called the cops to say, holy cow, I'm dating your suspect. And so she got him on tape and he's
claiming he's in Paris on New Year's Eve
while Lacey's still missing. They haven't found the body. He's there. The vigils there,
the people with the candles, he's on camera like, oh, poor, poor husband.
And he's talking to the lover about the fake Paris fireworks. Here it is. unreal is exactly the word now matt i want to ask you a couple things okay so first of all you meant
the i i understand there is a distinction between the innocence project and the la innocence project
um i don't know about this la Innocence Project because in my experience,
the bar is a little high for the Innocence Project to take on your case. I don't know about LA
Innocence. I've seen this. There's like a cleavage there in the reporting about these two. Maybe they
have a lower standard. Secondly, the judge did say before she ordered all this discovery of all this extra stuff, like the van
and things around the van, and we'll get to the specifics. She did say, you can go back and do
DNA testing on the duct tape that was found on Lacey's pants when they found her body. There
was still some duct tape wrapped around her from whoever wrapped her and connected her to
anchors. That could be one of those situations. The results of that are under seal, but that could
be one of those exact situations you just mentioned where maybe they won't find Scott's DNA on that,
but maybe they'll find the DNA of the guy who worked at the Lowe's from whom Scott Peterson
bought the duct tape. Now, if they found DNA that matches the DNA of one of the two
burglars, although they're saying it wasn't them, it was their network. But let's just say they
found DNA that matches one of the two burglars that she allegedly caught in the act. Now you're
talking, right? Now, okay, now you've got our attention so far. He's still sitting in prison and there's no retrial. So I'm guessing they didn't get that on the DNA return. OK. And then the second thing I wanted to point out is you mentioned the absurdity of him going to take his boat, his brand new boat. He'd never taken out before. He wasn't really a fisherman. He takes his boat out on the water Christmas Day, just for the very first time on Christmas Day.
And he initially, when asked, where were you while your wife went missing and the dogs running around the neighborhood and all this, he initially said he was golfing.
And then he changed his story, right, to make it fishing, presumably because he realized they had something
that could prove he was in the area of the Marina. That's right. And not only, not only did he say
he was golfing to, he said that in front of neighbors, whoever heard it, he said that about
a dozen times. So it's not like one person might've misrecollected. He said it over and over
and over again. And that was his story. He didn't want anybody knowing that he was there, apparently. And, you know, I mean, look, this is, you know, when you
see enough of these, it's like he he did everything that you expect to see. And that's one of them.
Like when when the truth is, you didn't do it. OK, and not like in any murder case, there's a
quality of the way people behave.
And and if the truth is you didn't do it, you don't build a ladder to the truth with a bunch of lies.
And, yeah, he said he he said he was golfing.
You know, there there are you know, he bought the boat two weeks before.
And here's another thing that, again, it's like I shout at my TV when I see this come on.
They found her hair in pliers inside the boat.
You know, they matched it with mitochondrial DNA.
That's hair, teeth, bones, things like that.
So the numbers aren't, you know, overwhelming.
It's not like one in octillions.
But it's Lacey Peterson's hair in a pair of pliers in the boat, which is totally consistent with him dumping her body and using that tool as he's affixing her to these homemade
anchors. There's so many individual small points of corroboration with the prosecution's theory
that just nobody wants to talk about. You know, it's when you put it together, every one of these
cases, Megan, is like a collage. You know, each piece, it's like, where does this fit in the
picture? And sometimes, like a mattress down the street, it probably has no where does this fit in the picture? And sometimes like a mattress down the
street, it probably has no part of it in any way. But, but when you start putting little pieces
together, you start to see the big picture. And here, you know, you've got Amber Frey saying his
wife is already dead. He buys the boat two weeks before he's actually in the Marina, you know,
in this, in this place and left her a voicemail saying, hey, beautiful, I'm back from the marina, which is also odd because he left his house in where they live,
which is not super close to the marina. And and he leaves it 90 miles away.
Right. It's 90 miles away. And he's calling her at 230. He leaves at 930. He's calling her at 230
saying, hey, beautiful, I'm on my way back. So he goes fishing by himself on Christmas day.
And he went, how much time is there to launch a boat that he probably isn't that skilled with.
At that point, he goes and fishes for 30 minutes, you know, like, and he never used a single lure.
No, give me a break. There's so many problems with that. And then when he's arrested,
he's in San Diego, he's changed his appearance. He's got $15,000 in cash and he's got survival
gear in a car and he's got two different IDs. He's in possession appearance. He's got $15,000 in cash and he's got survival gear in a
car and he's got two different IDs. He's in possession of his brother's ID. Like, I mean,
those are the types of things. Each one of those things is something that a jury gets to weigh and
consider and on determining whether or not he's the guy. And so you have these, there's always
a burglary down the street. There's always some, somebody got.
Okay. Okay. But now, now this is where I'm going to try to defend the defense theory
because it's really Scott Peterson's sister-in-law who has been his biggest advocate.
She's married to his brother and she's been, I mean, all over this, like white on rice,
like to the point where she went to law school much later, long after he was convicted,
not necessarily to try this case for him or to, you know, pursue, but because she was so immersed in the legalities around it. So then they get Innocence Project involved or LA Innocence.
So here are some of what they say are the facts that suggest he didn't do it, that they should have been able to argue all of this
to a jury and that they weren't given full disclosure by the prosecution of what the
prosecution had done on some of these leads. All right, I'll give you a couple of them.
First of all, there's a neighbor named Diane Jackson who claims she saw three men and a van in the neighborhood at the time Lacey went missing. So Diane can presumably place a van and three men in the neighborhood would like to argue. Then there is this guy named Tom Harshman,
who claims he saw a pregnant woman being forced into a van, Matt, and called in a tip,
but it was never followed up in on. He called back to say, I'm telling you, I saw, I think it was this guy who called back in any
event that he had seen this. And in this discovery, sorry, in this Peacock channel
show called Face to Face with Scott Peterson, where they got Scott Peterson on camera and
doing an interview from the jail. Very well done. They have a clip of this guy. Do we have it team? Tom Harshman. All right,
we'll drop it in. But he sounds a little drunk to be perfectly honest. I, his words are kind of
slurry, Matt, but he does say he saw a pregnant woman being forced into a van. I mean, those two
things alone, you got to admit as a defense defense attorney, you'd like to know about those,
and you would certainly be arguing to the jury. Let me tell you what that van did to Lacey Peterson.
We seen a girl, and she was pregnant, and she was in a van. We was worried about her.
She had to pee, so they took her over to a fence and then said, forced her back in the
van. It was
kind of manhandling her.
She was kind of fighting.
My wife says, don't get into
this. Stay out of it.
She says, if they're bad people,
they'll hurt you.
Yeah.
Okay. So, number one,
passionate belief, Megan, and look, we see this all the time.
We see this politically in our country on both sides. Passionate belief has no necessary connection to the truth.
OK, just doesn't like you can you can have a sister in law who's banging the drum and absolutely I'm sure she personally believes this, but that doesn't
equal evidence.
OK, so it's also very important to remember that Lacey Peterson and, you know, again,
I don't want to age myself here, but I remember this case very well when it happened, as I'm
sure you do, too.
You're way younger than me, Megan.
But look, she was missing. Okay. And when it comes,
when you prosecute cases like this, when somebody is missing before the body's found, those are the
ones that get all of the national media. It's like my Samantha Runyon case back in the day,
a little five-year-old girl that disappeared. We had international media attention. The president
of the United States was talking about that because that catches the headlines.
My Tom and Jackie Hawks case, that couple was missing. They were the ones tied to the anchor and thrown overboard.
Right. Those get overwhelming media wise because it captures the public public's attention.
This was an absolute run of the mill bread and butter domestic violence murder in almost every way to be almost to the point of
being boring. Okay. This is so common, but for the fact that Lacey Peterson was pretty,
she was pregnant and she was missing. Okay. So we all saw that photo of her.
So what happens that, and I can tell you this from personal experience,
good, you know, good hearted, well-meaning members of the community, people, neighbors and complete strangers come out of the woodwork because they want to help.
So when you talk about this guy, you know, Tom Harshman, you know, that that is something that this was the biggest case in the world for the period of time that she was missing and she was missing for a long time.
This was Christmas Day. Her body wasn't discovered until April.
So this was something there's been movies made out of this. So well-meaning people come out of the woodwork. And I'll tell you what, you know, when you talk about another big thing that the defense has raised is one of the arguments they made in their court documents that I read was, look, if there are all these neighbors that say they saw her, you know, after she had died and all these people.
And if even one of them is right, that means Scott Peterson couldn't have done it.
OK, that's that's the way the argument goes.
There were ready for this.
Just to be clear, just to be clear, that's because the defense would like to say Scott Peterson left the house early that morning to, quote, go fishing.
And so if Lacey Peterson was out and about walking around after Scott had left the house, obviously he didn't do it. Keep going, Matt. sightings of Lacey Peterson in 26 different states and overseas during the time that she was missing
74. Those are regular folks who were like, Hey, I saw, I think I saw her. I think I saw her in,
you know, um, Amagansett, New York. I think I, it's like Madeline McCann, right? No,
a hundred percent. Everybody's like, I saw her here. I saw her there.
How many people saw Elvis?
You know, it's people.
And the thing is, some people really want to help their well-meaning.
And also, I can tell you again from personal experience, every wackadoo comes out of the
woodwork saying, I'm certain of this.
And what happens when you get like, look, and I don't want to criticize the defense
too much.
It's it's their job to raise issues, you know, especially at the trial level.
But my problem is sort of the public's willingness to indulge nonsense, you know, in something like this.
This is a horrific double murder. This woman, seven and a half months pregnant.
Scott Peterson did it. He's convicted of it. The California Supreme Court, which is absolutely not.
I can also tell
you, not a rubber stamp for for criminal convictions. The California Supreme Court
upheld this seven to zero, you know, and they again, they reversed the death penalty part
for reasons unrelated to the guilt of Scott Peterson. Seven. It was because the judge on
the jury selection said to the jury, could you if he's found guilty, could you impose a sentence of death potentially?
And he said, if you can't, then you can't sit on this case, something like that.
And you're not allowed to say that. Right. Right.
Yeah. And the thing is, if they just it was a it was kind of an innocent way of I don't know if that judge hadn't done enough capital case litigation. Essentially, what was happening was when jurors were saying, I do not believe in the death penalty,
the court has to ask the additional question, could you follow the law? Could you set your
personal beliefs aside? And the vast majority of time they say, no, I actually had a woman
who voted death on a case who said, I'm religiously against it. I believe the death
penalty is murder, but I could follow the law. So the judge and I kept her on and she imposed
the death penalty. So the judge didn't ask that next question. Can you set it aside? Like you
simply because somebody is opposed to it politically, religiously doesn't mean they're
necessarily disqualified as a juror. That was the problem. So we are taught, I mean, the common use of that or the common term would be that's not only a
technicality, that's kind of a hyper technicality. I don't disagree with the California Supreme
Court's decision on that. That was a mistake. This is why Scott Peterson's death sentence
was reversed and commuted to life in prison. But now, obviously, they're seeking much,
much more than that on team defense. And I've also I read one article where it's like the the way they wrote it was so disingenuous.
It's like the California Supreme Court has already had reservations.
That's not true.
That is absolutely not true.
It's like I drive.
This drives me crazy.
It drives me crazy. They're reversing. Let me keep going with the with the evidence that Scott and his sister in law and his defense team say warrants a retrial or the reopening of this case. who came in with a tip claiming that he heard something that would exonerate. I might be
mixing up my, my witnesses. Hold on. This one says a tip came in from Xavier Aponte late in the trial
that claimed Lacey had confronted the burglars, which could have led to her murder. That's yeah,
this is the guy. And the defense
claims we were never given this information, even though the police talked to this guy.
The prosecutors claim that the statement was recanted. But again, this Peacock piece,
face to face, has an interview with Xavier where he denies recanting it. It appears that he may have
overheard a prison conversation to this effect. And he says, I didn't recanting it. It appears that he may have overheard a prison conversation to this effect.
And he says, I didn't recant it. But apparently he admits that it was like a rumor he was hearing.
My name is Xavier Punting. I was a correctional officer at the California
Rehabilitation Center in Norco. In January 2003, one of the correctional officers
responsible for monitoring inmate calls
overheard a conversation.
There were rumors on the street
that Lacey Peterson had walked up
and interrupted a burglary down the street from her house.
I contacted the Modesto PD's tip hotline
because somebody might want to follow up on it.
At no time have I ever recanted my statements.
What I did say is that his conversation
seemed to be a hearsay from the talk on the street.
I don't know. Like, I understand how you and I are like, oh, come on. But if you're Garagos,
right, who was his defense lawyer at trial, you want all of this because now you're like,
okay, that is supportive of my theory. There was a van in
the neighborhood. We know there was a burglary across the street from Lacey. Um, we have a
witness who says they saw three guys and the van. And then we have another witness who says
he saw a pregnant woman being forced into the van. Now you have this guy who says Lacey confronted
the burglars. It's all coming together. You can
see a defense lawyer trying to drive a freight train through that in front of a jury that may
or may not be gullible or susceptible to this kind of argument. And then the final piece is
her watch. Let's just stop before we get to the watch with Xavier Aponte and this alleged claim that Lacey confronted the burglars.
Yeah, I mean, look, it's like with a cape on.
Another thing to keep in mind on that is that remember all the neighbors that came out because because his dog was running around.
Remember this? This is 930 on Christmas, Christmas Day.
So this is a like every neighbor on that street, it seems like, saw their dog.
Remember, they all came forward and or heard Scott talking about how you went golfing.
So there are people out and about. This is not this didn't happen at three o'clock in the morning.
So so when everybody sees the dog, right. And literally, and one of the neighbors,
actually, it was seen by multiple neighbors that it was important for establishing the timeline.
And one of the neighbors actually went and put the dog in the backyard with them. And it was
the muddy leash and all that. It was a golden retriever. And we can all picture that. So it's
like, everybody sees the dog, but nobody sees Lacey getting forced into a van on their street
on Christmas day at nine 30 in the morning when everybody's out and about.
You know what I mean?
Like, are we really having this conversation?
Not you and me, but like seeing some good publicly.
OK, so you've got three guys in the van coming through.
Like, are they ninjas?
Are they invisible? You know, like, you know, and so some dude is interviewed 20 years later who said, yeah, well, I heard a rumor in jail, which and this is another thing that kind of drives me crazy.
Sorry to rant here, but jailhouse informants have are bad.
Right. Like I thought, I never used a jailhouse informant in my entire career because of all the inherent problems with a criminal who's going to try to throw somebody
else under the bus and say what they heard. Like they're inherently unreliable witnesses.
And that's something that I have to agree with a lot of public defenders about. Like that was
something that there was a big scandal in Orange County about it. Like they're inherently unreliable.
But now there's a rumor in a jail and this means
everything. This is the, this is the key to the whole thing. Look, I know Mark Gary goes very
well. Mark and I go way back. We did cases together and I got to say, Mark is an outstanding
lawyer and Scott Peterson had him as a trial lawyer. And yeah, like I, yes, absolutely. This
is called Brady evidence. Like you want the defense to have everything, you know, and if the if the prosecution sat
on that or didn't provide it, that's an issue under Brady for potential because the defense
is entitled to everything.
It's not just that the prosecution wants them to have it.
It's that they have a constitutional right to it.
Absolutely.
And they should and they should.
But but there are also limits there. There have to be rational limits to what is what is provided to it. Absolutely. And they should. And they should. But but there are also limits.
There there have to be rational limits to what is what is provided to them. It's like.
All right. So let me ask you that. So if if if if the investigatory team speaks with some random
guy who's like, I saw a van take the pregnant lady and they're like, oh, my Lord, like, let's
say they can. This is hypothetical. They can smell the alcohol on his breath. They ask around about the guy.
He's some vagrant, whatever. Did, do they have to turn that over? Like the things that are easily
ruled out? They should turn that over. They should. Yep. They should turn that over. And I
don't know. I don't know. You know, part of this is we've got allegations from essentially a family member and from from one side here.
So I don't know the reasons if I haven't read that report, if there's something like that.
Yeah, they should turn that over. Like when I when I went through training, I had a guy that Chris Evans was his name.
He's now a superior court judge. He trained us when we were baby.
And his philosophy and discovery is give the defense absolutely everything and then just beat him with it.
So the prosecution shouldn't be they shouldn't be deciding what's relevant or not.
It's just be turning it all over. But under Brady, it there is there are limits to what are called Brady events.
And that's the prosecution's obligation to discover it. Okay. And that is, is it, you know, is it reasonably likely to, um, you know, lead to, uh, you know,
corroborative of a defense or reasonably likely to help the defendant in their claims. And,
you know, that's, there's, there's gray area there. Uh, there's a little wiggle room in there.
Yeah. Okay. Let's talk about, let's talk about two other things. Cause you mentioned the eyewitnesses in the neighborhood on the
timeline. So the, you know, loosely the timeline by the prosecution was that morning by 10 30,
she was missing and Scott had left to go to either golfing or the marina as he later changed his story to. And that's in fact where he was.
There was an issue about the dog because the dog was found running around in the neighborhood with
its leash on. I think you and I believe, and the prosecution argued, like I believe Scott let the
dog out. It was like, this is part of creating his story that somebody got her, somebody abducted her
in broad daylight on Christmas Eve
and they're walking around their neighborhood.
And there was a question about whether,
well, like what time the dog was returned
by a well-meaning female neighbor who found the dog,
knew it was the Petersons and opened up their gate
and put the dog back into the backyard
as a good Samaritan.
And if it was early,
I'm trying to remember how it went down, but basically there's a mailman who is saying that
when he dropped off the mail, the dog wasn't there. And he came a little later in the morning
and, um, he always got barked at by the dog. But this day when he dropped off the
mail around 1030, there was no barking. He doesn't believe the dog had been returned to the
neighborhood. And therefore, Lacey must have been out walking the dog at 1030. This is the defense
theory. And therefore, Scott could not have committed this murder because Scott was already gone. The defense wants Scott gone as early in the day as possible.
And Lacey running into trouble as late in the morning as possible so that Scott couldn't have done it.
And they want to rely on this mailman as proof the dog had not yet been lost or returned to the backyard. If the viewing, I mean, if the listening audience
could just see Matt's face, it's worth watching this on YouTube just so you can see his facial
reactions. Sorry, I'm not, I'm terrible at poker. Yeah. Not into it. No, it's there's any irregularity.
We're talking about human beings and we're talking about the frailty of human recollection,
first of all.
So everything is an estimate.
I mean, you see your neighbor's dog walking around.
Can't reopen a case on that.
Well, you shouldn't be reopening a case on that.
And we're talking 20 years later and it's like, oh, yeah, I think I got there on my
route, you know, about 1030 based on the following.
And but also it's so there's so much inherent speculation and supposition, like, well, the dog usually would bark at me and I don't remember barking that day.
But the thing is, also, there's there's a thing and there's an instruction regarding circumstantial evidence and it's two reasonable interpretations. OK, so that it there's an instruction that every jury is provided about whether there's one
reasonable interpretation or two, one pointing towards innocence, one point towards guilt.
And the problem is, is that, you know, when you when you have to jump through a million different
speculative hoops about, well, so the mailman remembers the dog barking. Okay, good. But that's also consistent
completely with the idea that the dog got out when he is, when he's loaded his dead wife into the
boat and somehow he leaves a gate or the garage open up long enough for the dog to get outside
and, and leaving at nine 30. And that just means the dog is running around the neighborhood
at the time. You know, that, that is not one of those things that you can say,
aha, it's totally. Well, and by the way, if your dog's not barking, it could mean
your dog has found a bone. Your dog has found something more interesting than the mailman.
Your dog is asleep or the dog just got out when he left at nine 30 and the mailman comes and the
dog's not barking because it hasn't been returned yet because the neighbor doesn't remember exactly
when she did it. You know, you know, there's the other thing is to your point, Matt, when I, when
I was a young lawyer myself, um, I practiced law with this very smart woman and she told me this
amazing story about when she was in law school. At the time, she was
a nurse. She wound up pursuing law later in her life. And her teacher came in late one day. Her
law school professor came in late one day, was all huffing and puffing. Sorry, I'm so late. There
was like crazy incident on the road. Almost got run off the road, like a road rage situation, but sorry, I'm fine. Two minutes later,
the guy with whom he had the road rage confrontation comes banging on the door to
the classroom and the teacher's like, Whoa. And the students are like, Whoa. And the guy comes in
and starts threatening the professor. And everybody's like, oh, my God, and draws a gun. And the professor's like, oh, my God. So he runs and the guy runs after him. And it's great because my friend Sandy, who is, you know, like some people are good in a panic situation and some people aren't. And it was like a George Costanza thing, the way she explained there were all these big burly men
who ran for the door.
Like they didn't want any part of this.
They weren't going to protect
any of the people who were exposed
in the classroom.
And then there's Sandy,
my like very small boned nurse
who was like,
get the guy in the wheelchair
away from the door right now.
You barricade the door.
You make sure whatever.
It's like she took control.
Of course, you know where this is going because you're a prosecutor. Of course.
Ten minutes later, five minutes later, the professor comes back into the classroom.
He's totally fine. And he admits to the class that this was an exercise. And he says, take out a
piece of paper and a pen. And all I want you to do is write down a description of the man.
And they were all over the board. You know, one person said he was in a neon orange jacket. One
said he was wearing all black. One said he had shorts on. One said he had full body pants and
arms covered. And of course, the whole exercise was an attempt to show how unreliable eyewitness testimony is, especially when there's any sort of adrenaline involved or high stakes involved.
A hundred percent. Right. So the example that we would always give for in explaining that concept to a jury is that the clown came running through the courtroom and bopped somebody on the head with a rubber hammer.
You know, some people might remember the red floppy shoes. Some might remember the fuzzy buttons. But if somebody didn't remember one of those things, it doesn't mean if the issue is
what was the clown wearing? It's very important. If the issue is, did somebody come in and get
bopped, bop somebody on the head with a hammer. If that's what the jury is, is that if
that's their task to figure out that happened, then those types of details don't remember,
don't matter. And the adrenaline in that situation, there's a whole other thing called
weapons focus, where I guarantee half that class got everything wrong because they were just
wide eyed at the gun. So that's a great exercise. You probably couldn't do that in law school today
because everybody would get sued for the trauma. Right. And, and I can tell you again, from personal
experience, it's funny that you say nurse, because we used to joke about this. Nurses
are the best prosecution jurors of any potential profession because they are in the real, real
world and they don't like falling for BS. So it doesn't surprise me a bit that your
friend in America is a woman to control, but I love the whole story. Yeah. And by the way,
today, depending on where you went, like you do that South of the Mason Dixon, you're going to
get shot by one of the good guys with the gun in the, in the class. So for all sorts of reasons,
it wouldn't happen now. So, but, but so, so the question is, did somebody was the professor?
Did somebody point a gun at him?
If that's the issue, then it doesn't like all of those details that everybody got wrong.
Doesn't matter because they they're still they're being honest.
They just recollect different components of it.
And sometimes they'll get something completely wrong.
You see that a lot with facial hair, interestingly enough. So what you see the defense doing in things like this case is they're going, well, wait a second,
there was a woman in the back and yeah, maybe she couldn't see that well with her glasses,
but she insists that the man had a bright red cape and our guy didn't have a bright red cape.
So he's entitled, even though his DNA was found and even though there's a manifesto about
how he hated everybody that cut him off in traffic and like all of these evidence. But wait a second.
She insists there was a red cape. So we have to do a new trial here. That's kind of what we're
seeing over and over again with with cases like this, especially in the modern era and especially
with, you know, I think this is I'm a huge proponent that kind of the interest in true crime is a good thing.
People are getting educated, but there's also like, you know, there's,
there are downsides too. And that is, you know,
people kind of believe some of the things that they see that can be very
skewed and one-sided and it's, it's presented. Look, I work for ABC News.
I'm a firm believer in the professionalism of a lot of the media organizations that cover true crime when it's done right.
But still, it's not presented in the legal context.
And another thing to remember, and you know this, Megan, because you're an attorney.
Our law is based on what's called stare decisis. And what
that means is we're different than a lot of other legal systems in the world that is Napoleonic or
code-based. It's called civil law, where essentially a legislature sits down and they write a rule.
OK, our law is based on common sense and wise decisions based on real situations involving real people that have tested, that have withstood the test of time over the years.
So when you're talking about the legal application of instructions, those instructions essentially reflect 500 years of wisdom of real people and real human frailty and real misrecollection. And when a jury applies those laws, as they did in the Scott
Peterson case, in my experience, 99 plus percent of the time they get it right or they get it
pretty close to right. Not always, but they get it. They get it right. Sometimes that the right,
quote unquote, is is an acquittal. Sometimes they can't reach a decision. A lot of times it is a
conviction like here. The jury in this case got it right based on the law, in my view, based on on all of the evidence that was presented,
not fanciful. Yeah. And now it's hard to go back in a quote documentary and second guess them. But
it's happening. And they did just get this favorable ruling and all this new access to
discovery. And the ultimate goal by the L. the LA Innocence Project is a retrial for
Scott Peterson. So you can't rule it out, especially in California. You can't. One other
thing. The watch. This is actually something that I didn't know about, but consistent with this
whole lane that the defense is trying to open the van, the bad guys. I mean, it's really kind of
crazy to me that they say it wasn't the two
burglars who actually burglarized the house across from Lacey who killed her. It was part of their
gang because these two alibied out. The investigators did check out these two to say,
is there any chance they abducted Lacey? And they were, I apparently they're like on videotape with
their families during the relevant
time where they would have had to been, you know, doing nefarious things. So then they expanded the
theory to, well, it was their gang, their gang did something with Lacey. Okay. So let's say it was
their gang. The other piece of proof that they mentioned in this documentary is her watch. She had this sparkly watch. And the allegation is that this
watch was offered up to a pawn shop on, um, let's see a pawn shop claims that a lady came
in to sell the watch. I mean, about a week after Lacey went missing new year's Eve from 2002 to 2003. And she had gone missing December 24th, 2002.
It wasn't clear if this was Lacey's watch or what happened to it after, um, you know, it was,
or what, whether, you know, it was sold, what happened to it. But here is Scott Peterson from
prison on that piece of jewelry. It was missing.
But the first time I heard that the police knew about it being pawned
was well after I was arrested.
The police have to provide the defense with discovery
when they ask for any solitary information.
The police hadn't shared this with us at all.
And now I know why, because they covered it up.
Eh, anything? Okay. and shared this with us at all. And now I know why, because they covered it up. Anything?
Okay.
Do you know how many pawn shops there were around Modesto in this area?
They call it Meth-desto.
I mean, if they cannot connect that watch to Lacey Peterson,
if you don't have a serial number saying this is the one that was
purchased, there's no like how wide does the does the prosecution detectives have to cast the net
for the guy that's dyed his hair and has 15 grand and looks like he's about to split after,
you know what I mean? Like compared to all the evidence against Scott Peterson,
every pawn shop has a sparkly watch that's been gotten pawned or a ring or
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Another thing to remember facts wise in this, and you got to keep bringing this case back to the facts.
When police searched the house, they found Lacey Peterson's purse. They found her sunglasses.
So I guess the theory is she is out walking the dog with expensive,
sparkly jewelry, but didn't take her sunglasses, didn't take her keys, didn't take her purse.
That just doesn't make any sense. You know, so so there's immediate problems based on the real
evidence that was discovered. And the idea that then they go, well, hey, there was somebody that
pawned something in the central in central California during the height of a methamphetamine epidemic where every car is getting broken into and burglaries are happening all the time.
Like it's it's just absurd. And the idea also, let's think about this.
You've got two guys that are in a burglary gang, which, by the way, I've never heard of.
And I worked in the gang unit, a burglary gang. OK, so the burglary gang, which, by the way, I've never heard of. And I worked in the gang unit, a burglary gang.
OK, so the burglary gang, somebody identifies them. So so if the thing is, she jumps over a
fence with her pregnant woman cape on and they kidnap her because of a burglary. But oh, no,
they didn't kidnap her. The gang came in and kidnapped her because they weren't actually there
and committed a murder because of an offense that you could, for a residential burglary back then, you might do,
you might do a bullet, you might do a year county jail. Maybe you get no time. Maybe you get,
you're going to get probation or low term. No, let's murder a pregnant woman so that she can't
identify the guys in our gang is laughably absurd.
Like it's just that there's no such thing as a burglary gang, by the way.
It just doesn't exist.
There's gangs and they commit horrible crimes like a burg gang, like, you know, that they're
going to go and commit a first degree murder of a pregnant woman to to help the
guys that she saw is absolutely just it.
It is ridiculous.
And again, going back to that instruction, reasonable versus unreasonable.
The jury is instructed to reject unreasonable interpretations of evidence, you know, and
that is to hold on to their common sense when they're unreasonable in the courtroom. And what I love, though, is the chutzpah of Scott Peterson, you know, saying, oh, the police withheld it. That's another thing that we should probably dispel is the idea that the cops just want to make an arrest because there's you know, they just want to make an arrest that by itself, like to any professional law enforcement officer, you look like a buffoon if you arrest the wrong person. And if somebody murdered a pregnant,
a pregnant, beautiful woman like Lacey Peterson, you don't just arrest her husband so that you
look good having arrested somebody. And then you let the real killer stay free so he can what
murder the next person, the neighbor down the street two weeks later like nobody wants to do that no cop wants to arrest an innocent guy they arrested scott peterson because
of the overwhelming evidence that they accumulated against him and the way he behaved the way he
repeatedly lied to everybody um and you know it's it's like that that whole notion that it was withheld to frame him from him.
It just kind of gets my blood boiling a little bit.
I'm sorry.
And the cops in the piece, they deny they deny that they withheld and inappropriately withheld any evidence from the defense.
I will show you this.
Scott Peterson.
Maybe he's been working on his acting skills. He managed to work up a bit of emotion when he was on the phone in this documentary. I mean, it was interesting because he didn't cry at all. He showed no emotion the entire time she was allegedly quote missing. I told you at the vigil, he was talking to his girlfriend.
He wasn't looking for Lacey. Um, and he didn't even flinch when they found him guilty or sentenced him to death. He explains that in this documentary saying, I, the media had been so horrible to me.
I didn't want him to have his satisfaction, but then they end the piece with Scott getting all
watery eyed over Lacey.
Watch this.
Is it easy to remember what life was like 20 years ago?
Every moment is so real.
It's so tactile.
It's still there.
It smells and the lighting,
the sound of when I say goodbye to Lacey
and then my family was gone
i drove away expecting to come back that afternoon and have our wonderful christmas
together after we both had you know fun mornings and about they were gone and it's still very very
uh present but there are certainly times that I become a wreck.
He's wiping his face.
Excuse me.
Yeah, I try not to
be too emotional
out here in the day room
of the prison.
Take it you don't buy it.
Well, the problem with that, number one, look, anybody who had murdered his pregnant wife so that he can go continue his dalliance with a
woman that he likes better. Um, nobody should be shocked that a guy who would do that would
turn around and then lie about the circumstances of it. Okay. So for it, it always gets us,
you know, when, when a grown man cries, you know,
but it's like the first time I saw. Yeah, the first time I first time I saw a criminal defendant
lie and cry, you know, it kind of got to me. And the second time I saw a murder defendant do that
and the third like it's this is it's again going back to the evidence here. The lead detective on
the case when they interviewed Scott Peterson, he said he showed a shocking lack of emotion and a shocking lack of additional follow-up questions.
He didn't ask for their cards.
He didn't ask for where's the state of the investigation.
Can I call you if I have questions?
He didn't ask any of those things that you would expect from somebody that whose wife had gone missing. Like this is that what your viewers just watched is the exact opposite of the way that he was behaving.
And this is something that I've seen before. This was my Sam Lopez performance with my Kathy Torres case.
That was a boyfriend who murdered his his girlfriend and she was also missing.
Found a week later in the trunk of her car. And we we convicted him largely based on his interview where they they often will play the wrong role. Megan, the innocent husband, spouse, boyfriend, whatever, will collected and sort of like peacefully answering questions, respectfully going through it versus a real husband who
loved his wife, who's innocent, who would be losing his mind during all of those initial
investigation.
Like Chris Watts.
This is reminding me of Chris Watts, too.
Right.
And look, people react to grief differently.
But but when you're when you're cold about it, it's totally inconsistent with what we just watched. So. him. And this was when the search was on for Lacey and Connor and the phone rang and he didn't even
look at it. It was like, didn't happen to your point, to exactly the point you're making.
Right. How would an innocent guy not know that that's that that's the police going? Great news.
We found her. She was tied up in a warehouse or or like that's exactly what I'm talking about.
The thing is, Megan, jury, when you take a jury, you have five hundred twelve deliberating jurors.
You have about five hundred years of life experience. You have five hundred years of
collective common sense wisdom on that. And they may not be experts on DNA or on the forensic
processing of like cell phone data or whatever
it is. But I'll tell you, juries are very, very good at human behavior and how somebody should
act under under certain circumstances and how they shouldn't. And that jury, you know, they got all
that evidence back then. I don't I don't know if they I don't think they ever introduced that
that interview, but you spotted it just like I did. did like how does he know if he's innocent that
that's not them saying great news or hey she needs a blood transfusion like when your wife is missing
you pick up the freaking phone right every time and that's that's the type of thing and with scott
peterson and when we're talking about the collage that's one more piece of that of the collage and
then you look at you know you put all of that together and you compare that, of the collage. And then you look at, you know, you put all of that together
and you compare that and the affair and seeing that she was going to die. And the fact that he,
according to his own changed story, but later admission, he went from the Berkeley Marina,
which is exactly consistent with where they found her body. You add all that up. And the fact,
again, her hair was found on flyers in his boat. Okay. You put all that up. And the fact, again, her hair was found on flyers in his boat. Okay.
You put all that together versus, oh, we've got a theory. There's a drunk guy who thinks he saw a
pregnant woman getting into a van, right? Like, well, the other thing is Matt, and I know this
isn't like, this is just anecdotal between us, but his use of the term wonderful, we were going to have our wonderful Christmas together.
I'm sorry, but that's just not how real people in love talk. And his message to her,
hey, beautiful. I think they'd been married, what, like a few years. Might've been as many
as seven at the time he left this alleged voicemail. Hey, beautiful. I mean, in my experience, like your man might call
you like babe, honey, you know, I don't know. It all, yeah, it all sounded false to me. Like
somebody who's intentionally trying to insert these, you know, superfluous terms. So to try to
convince you that they're feeling something they're not.
Okay. Beautiful. I just left a message at home. Uh, two 15,
I live in Berkeley.
I won't be able to get to develop arms to get that basket for Papa.
I was hoping you would get this message and go on out there.
I'll see you in a bit. We love you. Bye.
Right. And, and this is the golf slash of trip. Right. Like that, which had to be the shortest
surgeon fishing trip in history, 90 miles away. Hey, just leaving at 230. Right. So
no, you're exactly right. He didn't open up one lure, not one lure. They were all sitting there
still in their plastic wrap in his boat. Right. Right. But you see that over and over again,
when you actually do murder cases like this, you and look the theory always on him and what they convinced the jury of this was a planned murder he bought the
boat he bought cement um they were never able to account for a he made the anchors one well he they
found they found one but he had a 90 pound bag of concrete and they couldn't find the rest of it and
the theory always was the rest of it was attached to Lacey. So there's a bunch of missing cement here too, guys. Like there's, there's so much
that you see that all the time because even dumb criminals are smart enough to go, Hey, I, if I
leave a false, you know, um, voicemail and, and look, that's like my Daniel Wozniak case that
there, that you see that all the time especially domestic violence cases when the body
is missing it's like hey wonderful or beautiful and you you pegged it you're exactly right it's
like they've been married for a long time it's and if he's so in love with their like kind of
weird that he's i don't know that he's i would probably want to go fishing on christmas day too
if i had the day off or golfing but it'sing. But there's an inherent inconsistency with that.
There's a lot of problems with it.
And when you break it off, that's why it stinks.
That's why the jury convicted him.
The accumulation of all of that evidence, that's why the California Supreme Court affirmed the conviction seven to zero.
And that's why when you're, you know, with the defense running around going, wait,
we have a drunk guy who thinks he saw somebody get into a van. That's that's why I'm reacting.
So in sum, we do not believe it is likely that they get ordered a new trial.
Oh, God. You know, in my fair state of California, I mean, I I hope not. I have a strong opinion on this.
I don't think the court should grant a new trial based on this.
But also, look, Brady evidence is a tricky thing because Brady evidence has been an evolving
area of the law.
And essentially, the prosecution is obligated to turn over basically anything that can be
helpful for the defense.
There's been a lot of litigation, a lot of new cases in California, and you have to err
on the side of caution on that.
So in my view, what the court does is going to depend on whether or not they find that there was a Brady violation on this.
And a Brady violation, by the way, is not a statement of innocence.
It's it's it is it's a technical issue that that would violate the due process rights of any criminal defendant if if if
exculpatory evidence is withheld. OK, but but where the parameters on that's kind of been a
moving goalpost in the state of California. So I in my view, I feel very strongly that what the
defense has come up with here is laughably short of where I believe the standard should be on that.
But, you know, prosecutors also make mistakes.
Detectives make mistakes and you never really know how it's going to be seen. So I I don't
think he should be granted in trial. I really hope he's not. But if he is, I really hope that
the Stanislaus County District Attorney's Office approaches this case with as much vigor that,
first of all, they defend and they advocate on behalf of their conviction because look,
this guy, in my view, not my case here. He's, he really did it.
It's a horrific murder. He should have been convicted.
I believe the California Supreme court was exactly right for affirming it for
all the reasons that they did. And hopefully if he is granted a new trial,
he's retried properly and he's convicted again,
you know,
that they take it seriously.
They don't,
they don't just go with like,
you know,
the,
the,
the emotional public momentum.
Like we,
like we're starting to see over and over again.
Yeah.
Like with Menendez.
He served his time.
Well,
I mean,
at least in Menendez,
they have an argument that there was mitigating evidence, right, like that they had been tortured by their father.
In this case, there's no such there's no mitigation. rather than just getting the old fashioned divorce, decided to murder his own baby and
beautiful young wife with a loving family who had everything going for her, who truly believed she
was married to the man of her dreams. The theory is that he looked that sweet woman in the eyes
and strangled her to death on their marital bed. That sick effer should never see the light of day.
He should be on his knees every night, thanking God that the death penalty was reversed for him.
That's good enough for him. I mean, that's the best victory he could hope for, in my view.
Matt Murphy, thank you so much. Happy to be here.
Thanks so much for joining us today. And all week, we are back on Monday,
live. Looking forward to seeing and talking with you
then. See you there. Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.