News

The Indiana Fever ended the first half of the WNBA season with a visit to play the New York Liberty, and that's how they start the second half. The Fever (12-11) face a familiar issue, as ...
Joan Phyllis Ruhnke Peek Peterson, 83, was born Aug. 25, 1941, to Harold and Hilda (Larsin) Ruhnke, in St. Joseph. She passed away on July 16, 2025. She attended Diamond School, a one room school in ...
For the true-crime-loving public, the Innocence Project and Scott Peterson occupy opposite ends of the moral spectrum.
An L.A. affiliate of the Innocence Project, a respected exoneration group, is trying to free convicted murderer Scott ...
Scott Peterson said in a declaration seeking to overturn his murder conviction that he had "absolutely nothing to do with the disappearance and deaths of my wife and son." ...
After investigating the case for more than a year, the Los Angeles Innocence Project has filed voluminous evidence it says shows Scott Peterson did not murder his wife and unborn son in 2002. In a ...
Scott Peterson, the man convicted of murdering his wife and unborn son, was injured after an interaction with another person in prison ...
Scott Peterson was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in 2004 in connection with the deaths of his pregnant wife, Laci, and their unborn son, Conner.
The judge presiding over the Scott Peterson case greenlit a discovery process for the convicted murderer on Monday, two decades after he was found guilty of killing his pregnant wife.
Twenty years have passed since Scott Peterson was convicted. Despite multiple attempts to reverse that conviction and to secure a new trial, he has failed each time.
Scott Peterson, who is serving a life sentence for allegedly killing his wife and their unborn child in 2002, theorizes that burglars "took" Laci Peterson in a jailhouse interview.
Over 20 years after Laci Peterson and her unborn son were murdered, her husband Scott's conviction makes news. A new docu-series interviewed him and the Innocence Project is involved.