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Kathleen Savio

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HeDidIt
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« on: July 19, 2008, 09:15:26 pm »

More Kathleen Savio Information @ ACandyRose.Com:

Direct link: http://www.acandyrose.com/kathleen_savio.htm




http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/May-2008/Unanswered-Cries

Unanswered Cries - Part 1

Before she died in 2004, Kathleen Savio, the third wife of former Bolingbrook police sergeant Drew Peterson, repeatedly warned authorities she would be killed. Now her death has been reclassified a homicide. Why wasn't there a stronger response to her pleas for help?

By David Murray

One October afternoon in 2001, Kathy Savio Peterson walked out to the mailbox in front of her house on the west side of Bolingbrook and found an envelope containing a single sheet of paper, an anonymous letter. The writer claimed that Kathy's husband, Drew Peterson, a Bolingbrook police sergeant, was having an affair with a 17-year-old village employee. "Village officials (Mayor, trustee's,) [sic] and everyone at the police department have complete knowledge of this situation," the letter said. "It has been an ongoing joke within the department." The letter went on to warn her: "Protect yourself and your family."

By then, Kathy had been married to Drew Peterson for almost ten years, and their marriage—it was his third, her first—had always been volatile. But this affair was more than Kathy could handle.

Soon after she got the letter, Kathy and Drew separated, and Drew filed for divorce. As the proceedings moved slowly toward settlement, their relationship continued to be rocky, and the Bolingbrook Police Department was repeatedly called on to intervene. All the while, according to Kathy's sister Sue Doman, Kathy predicted: "He's gonna kill me and it's gonna look like an accident."

With increasing desperation, Kathy sought the protection she thought she needed, including, her lawyer says, reaching out to the Bolingbrook police and the Will County state's attorney's office. Little was done on her behalf.

On March 1, 2004, she was found face-down in her master bathtub. The tub was dry, but her hair was wet, and there was a gash on her head and blood in the bottom of the tub.

"Did he kill her?" Sue remembers asking when another sister, Anna Doman, called at 1:30 a.m. with the news.

"I don't know," said Anna.

Two months later, a Will County coroner's jury ruled the death an accident.

As the world has learned by now, authorities reopened the case late last year after Drew Peterson's fourth wife—Stacy, the young village worker with whom he had had the affair—disappeared, setting off a frenzy of media coverage. This past February, a new autopsy led to a different finding: that Kathy had been murdered—the victim of a "homicide staged to look like an accident," according to state's attorney Jim Glasgow. No one has been charged, and Drew Peterson has denied any involvement in the death.

As the state's attorney's office and a grand jury continue to investigate the case, one question that keeps coming up is why no official responded aggressively to Kathy's alarms. Her family says she came to believe her husband's connections in the tight network of officials in Bolingbrook and Will County predisposed the authorities not to take her pleas seriously.

Several local officials deny that they ignored her. Bolingbrook mayor Roger C. Claar, for one, says that he knew Kathy but that she never contacted him with her concerns. Bolingbrook's former police chief, Mike Calcagno, says he gave her his cell phone number.

Still, her widely shared and repeated predictions that she would be killed came true. The story of her futile efforts to get help bears further examination.

* * *

Kathleen Savio was the youngest of four children of a heating and air conditioning installer named Henry Savio and his wife, Mary, who brought their kids up near Leavitt and Taylor streets in Chicago's Little Italy neighborhood. They divorced when Kitty, as she was known within the family, was two. Later, the mother remarried and moved the family to Melrose Park. Kitty dropped out of high school, moved into her own apartment at 17, got a GED and later an associate's degree in marketing at Triton College. The stepfather didn't work regularly and Henry Savio didn't pay child support, Anna remembers, so under the "tough" circumstances, the kids moved out early.

"It was very important for her to accomplish things," Sue says, listing Kitty's ambitions in order: She wanted a career, she wanted a home, and she wanted kids. Anna agrees: "She wanted everything right. She wanted to fall in love, that Ozzie and Harriet family. That's why she didn't get married until she was almost 30."

Kathy worked in an accounting job. Shortly after ending a five-year relationship with an accountant from Bridgeview because, according to Sue, he didn't want to get married, she agreed to a blind date with a police officer from Bolingbrook. She would soon find out that Drew Peterson was in a crumbling marriage to a second wife, but any qualms she had were overwhelmed by other feelings. "She was crazy about him," says Anna. He also owned a house, and Sue remembers Kathy almost boasting one day about having found so prosperous a prospective partner: "He wants me to come over to help him buy a washer!"

Within six months of their first date, he divorced his wife and proposed to Kathy. She was somewhat troubled by the fact that after their dates he would regularly call and demand that she tell him she loved him. But she later admitted to a friend that she was attracted to Drew's "bad boy" narcotics cop persona. She accepted, and they were married in 1992. She was 29.

In some ways, Kathy Peterson had everything Kitty Savio had wanted: Two boys were born, Tommy and Kris; she and Drew owned a tavern, called Suds Pub, in Montgomery, Illinois, and Kathy kept the books. They lived in a thriving Chicago suburb, and they thrived themselves, taking occasional vacations—including one trip to Hawaii—that exceeded the surly bonds of her working-class upbringing.

But the marriage was fiery. During one altercation with Drew in 1993, she hit her head on the dining-room table, according to a Bolingbrook Medical Center report. Her sisters think Drew physically abused her, though they say Kathy didn't want to talk about it. "But we saw the bruises," says Anna. (Through his attorney, Joel Brodsky, Drew denies there was any physical abuse in the relationship.)

People who knew her outside the context of her marriage described her as charming and likable, but the divorce battle with Drew—they argued over custody of the children, proceeds from the sale of the bar, and other issues—apparently ignited her emotions. One friend described Kathy during that period as alternately panic-stricken, tense, and lonely, "like a trapped animal." Harry Smith, the Wheaton-based divorce attorney who saw her through her split with Drew, said Kathy was "excitable and anxious" about matters involving Drew, but he added that exaggerated emotionality is not uncommon among parties in divorce cases.

* * *

Bolingbrook didn't exist when Kathy Savio was born in 1963. The oldest subdivision in the town dates to 1964, and in 1970, only about 7,000 people lived in the just-incorporated village due south of Naperville. Now Bolingbrook's population pushes 80,000 and, until the recent housing slowdown, it was one of the fastest-growing suburbs in Will County, which is one of the fastest-growing counties in the United States.

But inside Bolingbrook's Town Center—a brick complex that houses all village government functions and an amphitheatre—things haven't changed all that much. In many ways, the culture of the place recalls the days when Bolingbrook was a small town, when most of this land was still planted in corn, when Drew Peterson was a young star on the little suburban police force, and a feisty school administrator named Roger Claar was working his way from village trustee to become the town's hard-charging Republican mayor. (See "Reporter," Chicago, October 2007.)

So in 2001, when Mayor Claar got wind that Peterson, the police sergeant he had known for two decades, was involved with a young staffer named Stacy Cales in the village clerk's office, Claar saw it as something to deal with directly. In a recent interview, Drew Peterson told Chicago that Claar called him over to his house and angrily demanded, "Where the f*ck is your head?" Claar warned him he'd never make lieutenant if he kept it up with Stacy. Nonetheless, Drew said, Claar seemed amused by the sergeant's romantic escapade and told him, "Hey, all right, Drew!"

Through his spokesman, Bolingbrook village attorney Jim Boan, Claar acknowledged having had a conversation with Drew and asking him, what was he thinking when he chose to pursue a relationship with a woman that much younger than himself? But Claar said he didn't remember the meeting taking place at his house and insisted he never condoned Drew's relationship with Stacy Cales. Claar also said that he knew Kathy, but that she never contacted him "to express any concerns or complaints about the police department."

* * *

Kathy had repeated contacts with the Bolingbrook police, however. In response to inquiries from reporters, the department released a list of 19 calls for service, over about two years, starting in February of 2002; most involved minor disputes over visits with the children—they had what Smith, the lawyer, calls "traditional joint custody," giving Drew the kids every other weekend and some weekdays—but several confrontations turned physical. Twice Kathy had been reported for domestic battery, but charges were eventually dropped and the record was expunged. At the very least, the complaints show two people willing to go to great lengths to torment one another.

On March 11, 2002, Kathy filed for an emergency order of protection, which was granted by Will County Circuit Court judge Jeffrey Allen. Kathy wrote on the petition that Drew had threatened her over the phone and later had run after her. "[Drew] wants me dead," she wrote on the petition, "and if he has to he will burn the house down just to shut me up." But on March 19th Drew's attorney filed a motion to reopen the order, and on March 22nd it was dismissed. Anna says Kathy reluctantly let the order drop because she was concerned the legal action would impinge on Drew's livelihood, on which she and her children still depended.

Several months later, on July 5th, an incident between Kathy and Drew came to the attention of the state's attorney's office. By then, Drew had moved to another house in the same subdivision. Their versions of what took place differ, as recorded in a Bolingbrook police report. By Kathy's account, she came down the stairs one day carrying a basket of laundry and Drew surprised her: "He pushed her backwards, causing her to sit on the stairway," the report says. "He told her not to move and when she tried to get up he pushed her back down. . . . He asked her if she was afraid and she told him she was. She finally told him to go or do what he came for, kill her. He said, OK, where do you want it. She told him in the head. He took out his knife but then said he could not hurt her."

As recounted in the same report, Drew maintained that Kathy had invited him over to talk, and he denied he had carried any weapons. He said they met on the stairway and sat on the stairs, talking. "They discussed the divorce, the children, what had gone wrong, etc. for approximately three hours. They cried, hugged, and Kathleen tried to kiss him, but he did not kiss her. She exposed her breasts and pubic area to him and asked if he missed this at all. . . ."

The Bolingbrook police submitted the report to the office of the Will County state's attorney, who at the time was Jeff Tomczak, a Republican political ally of Roger Claar (and a passing acquaintance of Drew). Kathy told her sister Anna that the state's attorney's office did nothing to help. Bolingbrook's current police chief, Ray McGury, thinks the state's attorney's office decided not to pursue the July 5th incident because Kathy had waited almost two weeks after it happened before reporting it to the police.

In November that year, Kathy frantically wrote Elizabeth Fragale, an assistant state's attorney under Tomczak: "On three different occasions I have tried to reach you over the phone," Kathy wrote. She went on to describe a number of physical and verbal altercations involving her, Drew, and Stacy, and she said of Drew, "He knows how to manipulate the system, and his next step is to take my children away. Or kill me instead. . . . I haven't received help from the Police here in Bolingbrook, and [am] asking for your help now. Before it's to late [sic]. . . . Please return my call, or write with answers to my questions."

Fragale, now a prosecutor for Illinois attorney general Lisa Madigan, and Tomczak, who now runs his own law firm in Joliet, won't discuss their response to Kathy's pleas. A spokesman for the current state's attorney, Jim Glasgow, says the office has been unable to find any documents indicating how the letter and the police report were addressed. Anna, who helped Kathy write the letter, says Kathy got no response from the state's attorney. Smith, who advised Kathy throughout her separation and divorce proceedings, said the state's attorney's office invited them to come in once for what he characterized as a cursory interview that was never followed up on.

(Kathy sent a copy of the November letter to Walter Jacobson, then a Fox News Chicago anchor. A separate cover letter argued that her story was not "your typical domestic" dispute, but a story about "corruption in Bolingbrook, and Will County." Jacobson says he can't recall getting the letter.)

At one point, Kathy appealed directly to the Bolingbrook chief of police for help. She had come to know Mike Calcagno during her marriage to Drew, and considered him a friend. "If anything happens to me," she told Calcagno, according to her sister Sue, "it's because Drew's killed me." Though there was an internal Bolingbrook PD investigation in conjunction with the July 5th incident, Calcagno did not officially discipline Peterson for that incident nor for any other matters relating to Kathy, and it's not known whether or how he took things up with Drew unofficially.

Now retired, Calcagno told Chicago that it would be "inappropriate" for him to say anything about the case with an investigation ongoing. He said that he took Kathy's warnings seriously enough to give her his cell phone number. He added, with his voice full of emotion, that she was "a beautiful person."

Why didn't Mayor Claar dress down the sergeant personally for the ruckus he and his wife were causing in their Bolingbrook subdivision, the way he had confronted Drew about his affair with Stacy? Boan, the village attorney, says that the mayor "had no knowledge at the time about the number of [911] calls that were placed to dispatch by these individuals."

Drew Peterson offered Chicago another theory: The mayor sympathized with him because "Kathy was known as a hellcat." Drew recounted a public event in the 1990s where a drunken Kathy leaped onto Boan's lap and kissed the mayor. Boan and Claar say they don't recall this incident. At any rate, the mayor concurs with Drew's assertion that, when it came to his noisy, lengthy dispute with his third wife, "Not a word was said" to him by the mayor.

Drew's attorney, Joel Brodsky, has his own theory as to why no official intervened in response to Kathy's many cries for help: In his experience, Brodsky says, it is not unheard of for women going through divorces to claim their husbands are trying to kill them. Brodsky adds an old divorce attorney's saw: "In criminal cases, you have very bad people acting very good—'Yes, sir,' 'No, sir.' In divorce cases you have very good people acting horribly."

Veteran Chicago divorce attorney Tracy Rizzo agrees that often people going through a divorce are hysterical, but as to whether they accuse a spouse of trying to kill them, she says, "Absolutely not."

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« Reply #1 on: July 19, 2008, 09:16:09 pm »

* * * Continued from above:

By the fall of 2003 Kathy had a boyfriend, a new career path, and a plan: Once her divorce was finalized, she would sell the house and move her boys to nearby Mokena, where, upon graduating from the nursing program she was attending at Joliet Junior College, she would work at St. James Hospital. Her attorney, Harry Smith, says a temporary support hearing early in 2004 indicated that in the divorce settlement Kathy was likely to be awarded the house, child support, maintenance, a percentage of Drew's pension, and cash proceeds from the sale of Suds Pub.

"We were going to have a big party,"; Sue remembers. "The balloons were going to say, 'You made it!'"

Kathy remained fatalistic, however. Anna and Kathy's nursing-school colleague Mary S. Parks offered to let Kathy and her boys move into their homes for protection. Parks recalls that by late 2003, Kathy "felt [Drew] was going to get her" no matter where she went. "She felt like he was omnipotent."

Jan Russell, who runs a program against domestic violence for the Chicago Police Department, says that attitude is typical. Russell will not comment directly on the Peterson case, but she says that abusive officers often convince their wives they have connections throughout the law enforcement and political system, whether they actually have the connections or not.

Kathy's body was discovered March 1, 2004. "Local officer finds estranged wife in bathtub," read the article March 3rd in Joliet's Herald News; "no signs of foul play."

* * *

In the days immediately following her death, records show that state police, who had been brought in to investigate because the matter involved a Bolingbrook policeman, presented the case to then State's Attorney Tomczak as a potential homicide. The Chicago Tribune has reported that a state police investigator in this case also appeared before a grand jury at that time. A spokesman for the state's attorney will not comment on the grand jury, but adds that when the current state's attorney took office half a year later, in the fall of 2004, his administration received no indication that the case was ongoing.

A coroner's jury also looked into the circumstances of Kathy's death. The coroner's jury system, now widely considered anachronistic, involves a hearing at which the coroner questions investigators and other witnesses in front of a six-person jury. The jury rules on the manner of death, and its ruling is often factored into the state's attorney's decision as to whether to pursue the case. (In January 2007, Illinois law was changed to make the use of an inquest optional.)

In the hearing on Kathy's death, Will County coroner Pat O'Neil questioned Sue Doman. According to the transcript, Sue said it was "very hard for me to accept" that her sister's death was an accident, given the impending conclusion of the divorce case and in light of her history with Drew. "She was just terrified of him."

Next, state police officer Herbert Hardy represented the state police's opinion that the death was an accident. He wasn't the lead investigator in the case and had not visited the crime scene. But he said Drew Peterson had an alibi, corroborated by his wife, Stacy. "His current wife was interviewed, his job was interviewed, all those neighbors around in his area were—were talked to," Hardy testified. "We have no reason to believe at this time that . . . he was not where he said he was."

After just two witnesses and O'Neil's presentation of the pathology and toxicology reports, the jury took less than an hour (as one juror told Fox News anchor Greta Van Susteren) to determine that Kathy's death was accidental.

O'Neil told Chicago he thought all along that the proper ruling would have been that the manner of death was "undetermined." In the aftermath of the inquest, he recalls feeling "kind of empty." (O'Neil, a Democrat, is up for reelection in November. Recently, his Republican opponent, Charles Lyons, has made the handling of the inquest an issue in the campaign.)

Sue remembers feeling shocked and defeated. "We left with our heads down," she says. The family believed there was nothing else to be done. Their overwhelming feeling was, "We lost."

* * *

Drew Peterson married Stacy Cales in October 2003, and when she disappeared mysteriously last October 28th, investigators took a new interest in Kathy's death. Her body was exhumed and Larry Blum, an independent forensic pathologist, conducted a new autopsy. In February, nearly four years to the day after Kathy's death, Blum concluded that her death had been a homicide by drowning. Now a special grand jury is investigating the case. Drew Peterson expressed surprise and skepticism at the new finding.

Kathy's sister Sue says she regrets not having made more noise after the coroner's inquest. Both she and Anna have suffered from depression since their sister's death. Anna wishes she had "got [Kathy's] butt out of Bolingbrook," she says, adding, "maybe we should have brought her to a safe house."

Others sharply second-guess the actions—or lack of same—of officials alerted to Kathy's fears. Bolingbrook's new police chief, Ray McGury, says that given the same set of circumstances as his predecessor, Mike Calcagno, he would have reprimanded Peterson officially after reviewing evidence. "Two or three internal investigations should have been done," he says. "I'd have had him in with his union representation. I'd have said, 'Your personal life is affecting your professional life.'" (Drew Peterson retired from the force in November.)

DuPage County state's attorney Joe Birkett, who is president of the Illinois State's Attorneys' Association, says that if he got a police report like the one forwarded by the Bolingbrook PD or got a letter like the one Kathy sent, he would at the very least "bring the victim in for an interview" and determine the strength of the case she had. If indeed her concerns were ignored, Birkett says, "that is awful."

* * *

While they wait to see what happens in the murder case, Kathy's sisters have filed a lawsuit seeking to reopen Kathy's estate in preparation for a wrongful death suit against Drew Peterson. They say they are also considering suing the institutions that failed to respond to her calls for help.

They believe Kathy herself would want them to do it. "She is persistent—she's reaching out from the grave," says Anna. "Maybe she is a hellcat."

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« Reply #2 on: July 20, 2008, 11:09:12 am »

I'm confused....I thought this was supposed to be Ashley's new site but "hedidit" seems to be running it.  Did I miss something?
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« Reply #3 on: July 20, 2008, 02:39:25 pm »


This is such a tragic and heartbreaking story.  These two beautiful women, and those poor kids.  God, what a horrible, horrible, heinous crime.  It takes a very, very, evil, callous, cold hearted, murderer to be able to kill, in cold blood, not just one, but two mothers of your very own children.  SAD, SAD, SAD, that there is a person in this world, who did this, and can still continue to carry on and "Joke" about everything connected to this case.  It's not a "Joke", it is a horrible scar on these young kids hearts, and minds.

  Their own Father has sentenced them to "Life" .   A "life time" to have to live with the knowledge that their very own Father, killed, not just one, but two of their mothers.  A "life time" of, confusion, hurt, betrayal, pain, and questions.  "Why, Dad, Why, Why, Why?  Why would you do this to us?  Why did you take our mothers away from us?  Why, Dad, Why?    Why did you kill our mothers?  Why did you lie and say, our mother didn't love us, she left, ran off, and never came back?  Why Dad, Why?  We know our mothers loved us, and would be with us if they could be.  We remember them, Dad, their laughter, their love, their hugs, how they made us feel so happy and special, We miss them so much, Dad, we miss the fun we had with them.  We know you keep telling us, and everyone that we are O.K., but we are not O.K, inside.  We have no one we can trust, and talk to.  We are scared of a lot of things.  We are unsure of what is going to happen to us, we are scared.  At night, we lay in our beds and silently cry, for all that you have taken from us, the pain is so bad, and all we can do is ask, "Why Dad, Why did you kill our mothers"?

Now Dad, they are going to take you away from us,  They have given you a sentence of "Life".  "Why, Dad, Why did you kill our mothers?  "We love our mothers, too".  "Why, Dad, Why"?   Cry  Cry  Cry  Cry

See what you have done Drew?   Do you see how this is going to play out, or unfold as you say?  Those kids deserve a wonderful life, and to get the right help to cope with all of this, so someday they can have a chance at "Life".

Feel sorry for you, NO,  Feel sorry for what you have so callously done?  Yes,  because of all the hurt and pain you have inflicted upon so many "innocent people".  That breaks my heart, for all of them.   


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JUSTICE FOR KATHLEEN AND STACY !!!!!!
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« Reply #4 on: July 20, 2008, 03:08:44 pm »

Bubbasmom , this is my Site but to be honest I have been busy so I think HeDidIt was just being nice with posting the new daily threads and  posting other articles for everyone to read  , feel free to do the same , once I get extra time I will finally finish this site and we'll be rolling ..
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« Reply #5 on: July 20, 2008, 07:37:04 pm »

Why do people have problems with others that start a thread?  I don't get it.
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« Reply #6 on: July 20, 2008, 10:14:40 pm »

Why do people have problems with others that start a thread?  I don't get it.


Beats the hell out of me, Wolfie!  HDI is one of the finest researchers on these forums, she's smart and level-headed, witty, steers clear of drama, always willing to help and share all of her "finds".  I don't know -- there's an awful lot about HDI to admire, but there's always going to be those who have to turn admirable qualities into a reason to be envious or suspicious.  Too bad if anyone misses the goodness and dedication of HDI in her quest for justice for Kathleen and Stacy.  Keep up the good work, HDI!

Just wanted to add that I believe it's totally appropriate for HDI to introduce this article on Ashley's site.  In case you are not aware, HDI is the only person on all of these forums to devote her time to develop the only video tribute to Kathleen that you can find on these forums.  Thanks for remembering Kathleen once again, HDI!   
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« Reply #7 on: August 18, 2008, 09:11:55 am »

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-savio_18aug18,0,7919543.story

Questions abound over initial probe of Kathleen Savio's death
Family members wonder why investigators quickly thought foul play didn't kill 3rd wife of Drew Peters
on

By Erika Slife and Matthew Walberg | Chicago Tribune reporters
August 18, 2008

When Kathleen Savio's lifeless body was discovered in the empty bathtub of her Bolingbrook home in 2004, state police immediately decided her death was not suspicious, a Will County deputy coroner's report obtained by the Tribune shows.

The investigators and experts re-examining her death as a possible murder are now asking how police could have been so quick to overlook signs that something sinister may have happened to the third wife of Drew Peterson, then a sergeant for the Bolingbrook Police Department.

They are suspicious about the absence of blood residue or a sediment ring on the walls of the tub where she was found, sources said. If she had bled from a head wound while drowning in slowly draining water—as the theory went—why was the tub not stained?

No towels or clothes were in the bathroom where she was discovered, a paramedic noted. Shampoo bottles were in upright positions along the small tub, unlikely if she had suffered a fall, according to a source. Books and papers were spread across her unmade bed and a picture was facedown on the floor near the nightstand, according to Illinois State Police reports also obtained by the Tribune.

Although a state police crime-scene technician had covered Savio's hands with bags to preserve evidence—a procedure that typically precedes a homicide investigation—the statements of police that night indicated no evidence of trauma or foul play, according to the deputy coroner's report.

An autopsy would show a 40-year-old woman in good health had drowned. A coroner's jury ruled her death an accident after a state police special agent testified Savio had probably fallen, hit her head and drowned in the water before it leaked out the drain.

But the case was reopened in November after Peterson's fourth wife, Stacy, then 23, disappeared Oct. 28. Authorities named Peterson the prime suspect in her disappearance, and in February, State's Atty. James Glasgow called the Savio inquiry a murder investigation after a second autopsy indicated her death was a homicide. Glasgow said it appeared the scene was staged to look like an accidental drowning.

Peterson, 54, has not been named a suspect in Savio's case. He has denied any wrongdoing.

The police reports confirm speculation that Stacy Peterson gave him his principal alibi for his whereabouts in the days before Savio was discovered. The reports also show he was walking around the scene before state police arrived. At one point, he was alone in the bathroom with Savio's body and told emergency responders, "This is my ex-wife. Treat the scene with respect."

According to a report from that night, Deputy Coroner Mike VanOver asked Robert Deel, a crime scene technician for the state police, and "detectives if there was any reason to believe that this was a traumatic death and they stated NO, therefore the homicide/suspicious death protocol was not followed."

VanOver wrote in his report that he had notified his superiors that "the protocol was not being followed . . . because it was felt at that time by all parties that there were not signs of foul play or trauma for this death investigation."

Only a streak of blood was found in the tub, according to VanOver's report, police documents and testimony by the state police special agent at the coroner's inquest.

State police Lt. Scott Compton declined to comment on why his agency's technicians and investigators concluded the death was not suspicious, noting that crime-scene technicians "make observations and document those observations as part of their investigation and processing of a crime scene." He declined to comment further.

In an interview with the Tribune, VanOver said he was following the direction of state police. The coroner's office has been under fire for its role in Savio's investigation. On Monday, the Republican-controlled Will County Board will consider putting a referendum measure on the November ballot asking voters whether the elected coroner, now Democrat Patrick O'Neil, should be replaced by an appointed medical examiner.

"When they bagged the hands, that was when I asked the question, you know, 'Do you think anything is out of whack here?' " VanOver said. "Bob Deel was asked by me if he thought there was anything hinky here, and stuff like that, and if we should be doing something different, and I was told no."

Deel could not be reached for comment.

Savio's body was found March 1, 2004, in a semifetal position on her left side, according to the reports. Neighbors discovered the body after Peterson contacted them because he couldn't get ahold of her to drop off their two children from a weekend visit. About 10:40 p.m., a locksmith let them into Savio's home, and Peterson waited outside while neighbors went into the house. He rushed inside after one of them screamed.

Illinois State Police arrived about midnight, after Bolingbrook police called them.

Police interviewed Stacy Peterson for one hour March 3. She said she and her husband had spent the weekend with the children, backing up Peterson's statements made to police a day earlier. She said they had spent Saturday hanging around the house and had gone to the Shedd Aquarium Sunday. The only time Peterson left was Sunday morning to get doughnuts. Savio was found the next day, a Monday.

Peterson told police during his 65-minute interview that his divorce from Savio was "difficult at times," but that their "relationship had gotten a lot better" after he married Stacy.

Savio's relatives, who were never convinced she died in an accidental drowning, said police ignored their suspicions. For one thing, said Savio's older sister, Anna Doman, her body was found with short fingernails.

"It looked like somebody had cut her nails. She always let her nails grow; she was into that natural, long nail," Doman said.

Doman said no one in her family was interviewed by state police. She said authorities ignored her request to look through a suitcase full of documents Savio had saved regarding her ongoing fight with Peterson.

Savio's body was found weeks before their divorce's financial settlement was to be finalized.

"We tried to get somebody to at least look, investigate," Doman said. "Nothing, nothing, nothing."

eslife@tribune.com
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Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.~There are horrible people who, instead of solving a problem, tangle it up and make it harder to solve for anyone who wants to deal
HeDidIt
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« Reply #8 on: August 18, 2008, 03:34:11 pm »

http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/bolingbrooksun/news/1113233,jo18_county_web.article

County officials nix vote on medical examiner

August 18, 2008Recommend

By STEWART WARREN / SWARREN@SCN1.COM
JOLIET -- After a nearly two-hour special meeting Monday, a Will County Board Committee of the Whole rejected the idea of a vote at Thursday's regular board meeting to put the medical examiner issue to a referendum.

Much of  Monday's meeting was taken up by speakers urging the board to ask voters whether they would be in favor of replacing an elected county coroner with an appointed medical examiner. The issue has gained momentum because of the disappearance of Drew Peterson's fourth wife, Stacy, and the reclassification of his third wife's death from accidental to homicide.


 
Arline Rudolph (left) and Brenda Korneder react to tesimony during discussion by a Will County Board committee Monday whether to let voters decide if the county should eliminate the coroner position and replace it with a medical examiner.
(Steven Buyansky/Staff Photographer)


Among the petitioners was Stacy Peterson's aunt Candace Aikin, who sent a letter from El Monte, Calif., urging the referendum.

After rejecting the idea of a vote on the referendum Thursday by a 14-12 tally, county officials hinted they may form a special committee to investigate the issue further.



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Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.~There are horrible people who, instead of solving a problem, tangle it up and make it harder to solve for anyone who wants to deal
HeDidIt
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« Reply #9 on: August 18, 2008, 04:17:30 pm »

http://www.suntimes.com/news/peterson/1113543,will081808.article

Group cites Peterson, Savio case as need for appointed medical examiner
Board denies the group's effort to get referendum on Nov. ballot


August 18, 2008Recommend

BY DAN ROZEK Staff Reporter
Friends and relatives of Stacy Peterson pushed for the referendum, but Will County board members today rejected a proposal to ask voters if they favor replacing the elected coroner with an appointed medical examiner.

Board members voted 14-12 against putting a referendum question on the November ballot that would seek voters’ approval to abolish the coroner’s office now held by Democrat Patrick O’Neil and replace him with a professional medical examiner.

But the debate quickly became entwined in the notorious 2007 disappearance of the Bolingbrook woman, whose husband, Drew Peterson, has been named a suspect by police--and the 2004 death of Kathleen Savio, Drew Peterson’s third wife.

Savio was found drowned in her bathtub in March 2004--a death that a coroner’s jury at that time concluded was an accident. After 23-year-old Stacy Peterson vanished last Oct. 28, Savio’s death was re-investigated and authorities now say she was murdered.

Nearly a dozen friends and relatives of Stacy Peterson attended the county hearing in support of the referendum, arguing the mistake they attributed at least partly to the coroner’s office contributed to Peterson’s disappearance.

“I believe in my heart that had Kathleen Savio’s case been properly handled, my sister would most likely be alive today,” Peterson’s sister, Cassandra Cales, told county board members. “I cannot help thinking about that on a regular basis and believe that no family member should suffer the emotional roller-coaster that I have been on the last 10 months.”

Several county board members who backed the referendum also cited that case, contending it showed the coroner’s system needs to be replaced.

“Clearly, something went wrong four or five years ago,” said Republican board member Kathleen Konicki, referring to the Savio case. “I can’t get away with telling my citizens we have a great system. It failed.”

O’Neil didn’t specifically address the Savio case, but said replacing an elected coroner with a professional medical examiner wouldn’t change or improve the way deaths are investigated in the county.

“The simple answer is nothing would be different in terms of the process and functions we use in Will County,” O’Neil said. “The cost would be higher and the results would be the same.”

Questions about the costs of shifting to a medical examiner system were cited by several board members who voted against putting the question on the ballot.

There was a political element to the vote, with all 12 votes in favor of putting the question before voters coming from Republican board members. Seven Democrats who voted against the referendum were joined by 7 Republican board members.

Neighbor Sharon Bychowski said Peterson’s relatives and friends won’t abandon their efforts to change the system in Will County.

“We’re a little disappointed the voters won’t get to choose, but we’re not going to give up,” Bychowski said.
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Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.~There are horrible people who, instead of solving a problem, tangle it up and make it harder to solve for anyone who wants to deal
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« Reply #10 on: August 20, 2008, 02:02:22 pm »

Wow, that's a bunch of information that I had never heard before. I saddens and sickens me so much at the same time.
I am greatful for the time you took to post all that HeDidIt. Thank you.
I also find it so interesting that Kathy and Stacy were both going to Joliet Junior College for nursing programs.
Maybe he pushed them to get into it.

That way they could take care of him when he's older.
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