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Post by Lorie Taylor on Apr 19, 2008 20:30:38 GMT -6
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Apr 21, 2008 9:54:53 GMT -6
www.kwqc.com/Global/story.asp?S=7430056Pastor: Peterson told him she feared her husband before disappearance Associated Press - November 29, 2007 9:14 PM ET BOLINGBROOK, Ill. (AP) - A church official says the missing wife of a former police officer told a clergy member two months before she disappeared that she feared her husband. Stacy Peterson requested the late August meeting with a member of the Westbrook Christian Church pastoral staff when the church made a routine call to see why she and Drew Peterson had not attended services in recent months. Rob Daniels, the church's pastor of spiritual formation, says Peterson "feared for herself because of her husband." Asked whether Stacy Peterson was afraid her husband would kill her, Daniels would only say she feared "bodily harm." Drew Peterson's attorney, Joel Brodsky, did not immediately return messages today. Stacy Peterson was last seen October 28th.
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Post by Lorie Taylor on May 7, 2008 21:26:55 GMT -6
12/10/2007 Stacy Peterson's Pastor Goes 'On the Record' with Greta Van Susteren (FoxNews)
NEIL SCHORI, PASTOR STACY CONFIDED IN: "Well, I try not to push people into an area that they're uncomfortable, and I gave her [Stacy] — I gave her an out. I said, If you'd like to share it with me, I'm here to hear it, I said, but there's no pressure. You don't have to feel like you have to share anything you're not comfortable with. So if you are — if you are comfortable, please share it. And we talked about various other things, and then she blurted out the reason."
NEIL SCHORI: "I believed, unfortunately, that it was exactly what I thought, and I believed that it was related to the death of his wife. But I clarified, and I said, He did what? And she said, He killed Kathleen. And I was really blown away. I was reeling inside."
NEIL SCHORI: "I asked for more specific things. She gave me details that I really can't share. But I just got her talking about it and asked her what — this is a crazy amount of information. Again, I asked her, What exactly can I do with this? Why did you tell me? I asked her if she had ever told anyone else. She said at the time, she had never told another person."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:48:22 GMT -6
2007-11-18 suburbanchicagonews November 16, 2007 New Pastor Neil Schori at Naperville Christian Church ILL "Neil Schori, of Plainfield, will be installed as the new lead pastor of Naperville Christian Church during worship services at 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sunday [11/18/2007]. Most recently, Schori had been pastor of community care at Westbrook Christian Church in Bolingbrook. He has a master of arts degree in counseling ministries from Lincoln Christian College and Seminary in Lincoln and has participated in two counseling-related internships, including a Chaplain internship at BroMenn Regional Medical Center in the Bloomington-Normal area. He has worked in marketing and sales and in the health-care environment. Schori and his wife, Brandi, have three daughters."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:48:37 GMT -6
11/29/2007 (www.suntimes.com) "Stacy told clergyman Drew killed ex" "Sneed hears Stacy Peterson told a clergyman in August that her husband had claimed to have killed his former wife Kathleen Savio and made it look like an accident. A source close to the investigation tells Sneed the 23-year-old, who had been pregnant and living with Peterson when Savio was found dead in an empty bathtub in 2004, also told two other people close to her about her husband's statements regarding Savio's demise."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:49:03 GMT -6
November 29th, 2007 4:39 PM Eastern, "CHECK OUT THIS EMAIL FROM BOLINGBROOK!!' by Greta Van Susteren, "From: Watts, Stephen, Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2007 4:06 PM, To: Van Susteren, Greta; Tarrant, Angela; Howard, Cory, Subject: Mark and I just spoke to [name deleted], "He ministered Stacey and knows Drew. He confirmed that one of pastors spoke with stacy. During a session stacy confesed that she knew drew killed his third wife. Pastors have an obligation to come forward to law enforecemnt if they feel there is an immediate threat and even a past crime if that person could be recipiant of violence. We don’t know when the pastor spoke to police. They will not appear on camera. We have located who we believe is the actual pastor and we are on our way to him now." - "After Steph sent me the above email I called him and he said, “you won’t believe it…we just ran into and talked to the VERY clergyman Stacy spoke to…..” Steph talked to that clergyman and confirmed for us all the reports…."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:49:20 GMT -6
11/30/2007 (suburbanchicagonews.com) "PASTOR: STACY WAS FEARFUL" "Stacy Peterson told a clergy member two months before she disappeared that she feared her husband, a Westbrook Christian Church official said Thursday. The clergyman made a routine check to see why Stacy Peterson and her husband, Drew Peterson, were no longer attending church. The troubled young woman asked for an opportunity to meet for a longer, face-to-face talk with the unidentified man of the cloth, Pastor Rob Daniels of Westbrook Christian Church told The Herald News."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:49:37 GMT -6
"Asked whether Stacy Peterson was afraid her husband would kill her, Daniels would only say she feared "bodily harm." He would not say if Stacy Peterson said her husband confessed to killing his former wife. The church official made a "judgment call" not to alert authorities and did not consult with other church staff, Daniels said. The church's clergy are only legally mandated to alert authorities of allegations of child abuse or if someone threatens to harm themselves or others, he said. Daniels would not identify the clergy member who met with Stacy Peterson."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:49:52 GMT -6
12/01/2007 (www.suntimes.com) "Stacy told clergyman Drew killed ex" "On Thursday, an official at Westbrook Christian Church in Bolingbrook said Stacy Peterson had a late August meeting with church staff there. While Pastor Rob Daniels wouldn't disclose with whom she met or specifics of their discussion, he said "she feared for herself because of her husband."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:50:15 GMT -6
"He said he doesn't think Stacy voluntarily would have left her children, as Drew has contended. "Not a chance," he said. "Stacy's a woman of good character." Her weeks-long disappearance has him worrying over her safety -- and wondering about his decision not to seek help for her. "In a situation of this magnitude, certainly you always wonder if you made the right decision," he said. Drew Peterson has denied any involvement in Stacy's disappearance or Savio's death."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:51:01 GMT -6
NEIL SCHORI, PASTOR STACY CONFIDED IN: "Well, I try not to push people into an area that they're uncomfortable, and I gave her [Stacy] — I gave her an out. I said, If you'd like to share it with me, I'm here to hear it, I said, but there's no pressure. You don't have to feel like you have to share anything you're not comfortable with. So if you are — if you are comfortable, please share it. And we talked about various other things, and then she blurted out the reason."
NEIL SCHORI: "I believed, unfortunately, that it was exactly what I thought, and I believed that it was related to the death of his wife. But I clarified, and I said, He did what? And she said, He killed Kathleen. And I was really blown away. I was reeling inside."
NEIL SCHORI: "I asked for more specific things. She gave me details that I really can't share. But I just got her talking about it and asked her what — this is a crazy amount of information. Again, I asked her, What exactly can I do with this? Why did you tell me? I asked her if she had ever told anyone else. She said at the time [August 2007], she had never told another person."
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:52:32 GMT -6
Stacy Peterson's Pastor Goes 'On the Record'
Tuesday , December 11, 2007
FC1 ADVERTISEMENT
This is a rush transcript from "On the Record ," December 10, 2007. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated.
GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, HOST: Last week, we told you about a report involving Stacy Peterson's pastor, that Stacy told him Sergeant Peterson admitted to murdering wife number three, Kathleen Savio.
Is it true? Did she say that? Well, now you will hear from the pastor himself. We sat down with Pastor Neil Schori earlier.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
VAN SUSTEREN: When was the first time you ever met or heard the name Stacy Peterson?
NEIL SCHORI, PASTOR STACY CONFIDED IN: Probably about two years ago. She was just someone who came to the church. Got to know her that way.
VAN SUSTEREN: Was she active in your church?
SCHORI: At different points, she'd be somewhat active. She was sort of a hit-and-miss kind of person, but I got to know her to a certain extent that way.
VAN SUSTEREN: How about her husband?
SCHORI: He would come less frequently, but he was also an attender.
VAN SUSTEREN: During the first year that you knew her, did you ever, you know, meet privately with her? Was it simply that she would come to church on Sunday and listen to your sermon?
SCHORI: Well, I was not the lead pastor of the church, so I didn't do too many sermons. But I — in the role that I played as a counseling pastor, I met — I met Stacy probably a year — somewhere in the first year of being at the church. So initially, I got to know her at the church, and then she reached out.
VAN SUSTEREN: I don't know if this is the right question, but in the first times that you met with her, sort of run-of-the-mill — if there is a such thing as run-of-the-mill issues a young housewife, young mother, that type of thing?
SCHORI: Sure, just like anybody's issues with life. I mean, nothing huge, nothing extremely out of the ordinary, just somebody who was dealing with life as a young mom.
VAN SUSTEREN: What was your first impression of her?
SCHORI: I thought she was very sweet. I think most people who meet her, their initial impression is that she's a very, very kind person, someone who — you don't have to be around her very much to figure out that she really loves her children. She talks about them incessantly.
VAN SUSTEREN: And your first impression of Sergeant Peterson, when you met him?
SCHORI: He was — he was nice enough. He was a little more reserved.
VAN SUSTEREN: Let's say up until, like, July or August of this year, how would you characterize the marriage? Was it a strong one, a growing one, a weak one (INAUDIBLE)? How would you describe it?
SCHORI: There were certainly issues. Some were just regular issues. Some seemed a little more — a little deeper, I could say.
VAN SUSTEREN: I know it's impossible to predict the future, but at the time when you were meeting with them, did you think that these problems were insurmountable, or you thought that they were just sort of the bumps and scrapes of a marriage?
SCHORI: You know, I try not to look at any obstacles as insurmountable related to marriage. I always believe there's hope, if people are willing to make changes, regardless of who they are.
VAN SUSTEREN: Was it a marriage, though, that was just hanging out, or did you — or were they both — did they both seem determined to work on it?
SCHORI: Well, they seemed in some ways determined to work on it. Both at them at different points would say that. But I definitely saw — I definitely saw a reason for deep concern.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did there come a time after July that Stacy called you and met with you alone?
SCHORI: Yes, she did. Yes, in August.
VAN SUSTEREN: Do you remember receiving that call?
SCHORI: I do.
VAN SUSTEREN: Were you at your church?
SCHORI: I was.
VAN SUSTEREN: What did she tell you she wanted to meet with you for?
SCHORI: I hadn't spoken with her in, oh, probably two or three months and she hadn't really been around the church recently. And she called me. It was just a regular phone call. And she just said, Hey, could we get together? I just have some stuff I'd like to talk about. And that wasn't really unusual. It was just that it had been probably several months. And I said, Sure. I said, When can you do it? And she told me, and it was — I believe it was the next day. And I actually had availability, which is unusual for me to have availability right away, but I agreed.
VAN SUSTEREN: Where did you agree to meet?
SCHORI: We met at a coffee shop in Bolingbrook.
VAN SUSTEREN: How did the conversation start?
SCHORI: I walked up and I saw her and she said, Oh, it's great to see you. And we sat down and small talk, like you would with anybody that you hadn't seen in a while. And then we talked more about the issues that she had and why she wanted to meet with me that day.
VAN SUSTEREN: And what did she describe as the reason that she needed to meet with you?
SCHORI: Again, it was some of the same relationship issues that she had concerns about, but she kept leading me to believe that there was some other reason that she had for meeting that day.
VAN SUSTEREN: Were you able to get that reason from her, or did she want to talk about it? How did that happen?
VAN SUSTEREN: Well, I try not to push people into an area that they're uncomfortable, and I gave her — I gave her an out. I said, If you'd like to share it with me, I'm here to hear it, I said, but there's no pressure. You don't have to feel like you have to share anything you're not comfortable with. So if you are — if you are comfortable, please share it. And we talked about various other things, and then she blurted out the reason.
VAN SUSTEREN: Which was?
SCHORI: She said, He did it.
VAN SUSTEREN: Just like that.
SCHORI: Just like that.
VAN SUSTEREN: Do you know what the reference point was, as that point, that, He did it?
SCHORI: I had a feeling, but I needed clarification, so of course, I followed up.
VAN SUSTEREN: How did you happen to know that that — I mean, had you spoken about the "He did it" aspect before with her?
SCHORI: I had never spoken with her about that before. I had just heard casual conversations in the community and in my own church about speculation over an interesting death of Mr. Peterson's wife, his third wife.
VAN SUSTEREN: So when she said, He did it, what did you believe that to mean?
SCHORI: I believed, unfortunately, that it was exactly what I thought, and I believed that it was related to the death of his wife. But I clarified, and I said, He did what? And she said, He killed Kathleen. And I was really blown away. I was reeling inside.
VAN SUSTEREN: So how — what did do you?
SCHORI: I asked for more specific things. She gave me details that I really can't share. But I just got her talking about it and asked her what — this is a crazy amount of information. Again, I asked her, What exactly can I do with this? Why did you tell me? I asked her if she had ever told anyone else. She said at the time, she had never told another person.
VAN SUSTEREN: What was the reason for her all of a sudden do you think or the compulsion to suddenly tell you? What was — what was eating at her, or why did she want to tell you?
SCHORI: I've wondered that for two-and-a-half months. I hope that it's because she looked at me as a safe person that she could share some very important information with. It's really speculation, at this point.
VAN SUSTEREN: How do you know that it wasn't just speculation on her part, you know, that she had information that he had — did it?
SCHORI: She had specific information.
VAN SUSTEREN: Like?
SCHORI: She had specific information about his not being in the house.
VAN SUSTEREN: The night Kathleen died?
SCHORI: Uh-huh.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she say she'd ever confronted him about it?
SCHORI: They talked shortly after that about it.
VAN SUSTEREN: And did he admit it to her, or did she put two and two together?
SCHORI: It was more than just putting two and two together. It was not speculation on her part.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she see something?
SCHORI: No.
VAN SUSTEREN: Was there any — besides the fact that he wasn't home that night, did — were there any other clues or signs that he wasn't just — I mean, I don't why anyone would brag about it, but I mean, that he wasn't just lying about it or trying to scare her or something?
SCHORI: Well, she shared details with me that I can't — I'm not comfortable getting into, but it was very clear. It was very clear that this was not just speculation. She was not jumping to conclusions.
VAN SUSTEREN: Why did she stay with him after that?
SCHORI: That's a really good question. My guess would be out of fear.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she ever say she was afraid of him?
SCHORI: Yes.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she say she was going to leave him?
SCHORI: Never — she never told me she was going to, no.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she ever give an explanation or did Drew Peterson ever say to her why he did it?
SCHORI: Not that she told me.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she ever talk to the police?
SCHORI: She never shared this with the police.
VAN SUSTEREN: Police ever go to her and ask her?
SCHORI: She was interviewed by the police.
VAN SUSTEREN: She didn't tell them?
SCHORI: She didn't tell them that, no.
VAN SUSTEREN: What did she tell them?
SCHORI: I don't know that for sure. I just know that she did not tell them that.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she say why she didn't tell the police, you know, when they talked to her about Kathleen Savio's death, what she knew?
SCHORI: I believe she was simply afraid.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
VAN SUSTEREN: More from the pastor coming up. Does he think Stacy is alive?
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
VAN SUSTEREN: Here's is more with Stacy Peterson's pastor, Neil Schori.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
VAN SUSTEREN: So what did you do? I mean, it's a rather awkward situation. You're in a coffee shop and she tells you that her husband murdered wife number three.
SCHORI: Well, I tried to control my own anxiety that I felt just hearing this information. But then I just followed up with her and said, Well, this is a lot of information you just gave me. And she said, I just had to get it off my chest.
VAN SUSTEREN: What did she expect you to do with it, do you think?
SCHORI: I think she expected me to do exactly what I did with it, and not say anything at that time.
VAN SUSTEREN: Be a sounding board?
SCHORI: I believe so.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she have any intention of going to the police with information?
SCHORI: I don't think so. That's speculation on my part, but I don't think so.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she have any solid information he did it? Let me back up a second. He actually confessed to her to having killed Kathleen Savio?
SCHORI: Yes.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did she tell you what words he used?
SCHORI: I'm not sure that I can give that detail.
VAN SUSTEREN: Can you give us at least some little idea? We're trying to — I'm trying to figure out whether this is, you know, the fantasy of a woman who's distressed her marriage is falling apart, or whether it's the real deal. Do you know what I mean? It's, like — you know, it's hard to sort of sort through that. You know, when people get divorced or have unhappy marriages, you know, they say — as you know, they say all sorts of things about each other.
SCHORI: Right. Sure. Sure.
VAN SUSTEREN: But was there any sort of, you know, strong clue that made you think that, This is it, this is the real deal?
SCHORI: Well, the one thing that he did say to her was, You know where I was, as if she knew. And she said, What do you mean? And he said, You know where I was.
VAN SUSTEREN: And this was how soon after the murder?
SCHORI: This was the morning after.
VAN SUSTEREN: And that was all he said.
SCHORI: All that I feel that I can share, yes.
VAN SUSTEREN: Have you spoken to Sergeant Peterson since she vanished?
SCHORI: No, I have not.
VAN SUSTEREN: How about between the time she spoke to you in August and the time that she disappeared? Did you talk to him at all?
SCHORI: I did not talk with him. He reached out to me after that meeting with her that August morning.
VAN SUSTEREN: And how did he reach out?
SCHORI: He had suggested that since I had met with Stacy — he knew that, and he said that he'd like to get together because he hadn't seen me for a while.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did you get together?
SCHORI: No.
VAN SUSTEREN: Do you think he knew she told you that?
SCHORI: That's a really good question. That's a really good question. I don't know that I can even answer that.
VAN SUSTEREN: How soon after did he call you, after you met with her in the coffee shop and she said that he...
SCHORI: There was a message on my voice-mail at the church when I got back after meeting with her.
VAN SUSTEREN: That soon?
SCHORI: That soon.
VAN SUSTEREN: And then you responded to the voice-mail.
SCHORI: Uh-huh.
VAN SUSTEREN: Did you get him or did you get the voice-mail?
SCHORI: I checked my voice-mail, and then I called him back.
VAN SUSTEREN: And you reached him?
SCHORI: I did.
VAN SUSTEREN: And the conversation went how?
SCHORI: Pretty much just like the voice-mail. He just said, Hey, I'm just trying to get a hold of you. I thought maybe we could meet since you just met with Stacy. And I — I sort of backed out of doing that.
VAN SUSTEREN: Your heart must have been in your shoes when you got that voice-mail.
SCHORI: Oh, my gosh. Sure
VAN SUSTEREN: You know, right after.
SCHORI: Sure. My mind was everywhere.
VAN SUSTEREN: Do you think she's alive?
SCHORI: I sure hope and pray that she is.
VAN SUSTEREN: What do you think?
SCHORI: I don't believe so.
VAN SUSTEREN: What makes you, as you sit there now, believe Stacy, that she was telling you the truth that Sergeant Peterson had confessed to killing Kathleen Savio?
SCHORI: Right. Because the very specific details that Stacy shared with me that morning are being backed up by the investigation that's being done and is being reported in the news.
VAN SUSTEREN: So stuff you're reading about now is...
SCHORI: Is — completely backs up what she said.
VAN SUSTEREN: Is there anything else you want to — that I haven't asked you in this interview, that you want to add to this interview?
SCHORI: I would just like to say that if there is somebody out there that has information related to Stacy, and for whatever reason, they have not come forward yet, that now is the time to do it because this is a missing mother. There are four kids that need their mom. And it's always the right thing to do right.
VAN SUSTEREN: Tough, though.
SCHORI: Tough, very tough. But it doesn't take away from the fact that it's the right thing to do.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:53:20 GMT -6
Chicago, Ill. / In Illinois, authorities seem to be struggling to bring an indictment against Drew Peterson—once the most talked about crime story—while in the current "most talked about" crime story evidence mounts against Casey Anthony in the suspected homicide of her daughter Caylee. An interview by author Derek Armstrong with one of the possible witnesses against Drew Peterson, presumed to be a key state witness should charges ever be brought against Peterson, may offer a partial explanation for the slow progress in Illinois. In a new interview, Pastor Neil Schori tells the author of 'Drew Peterson Exposed' that he worries for the safety of his family because of what he knows. "If Drew did murder two wives, he's certainly not going to hesitate in doing something bad to anyone else," Pastor Neil Shori tells Armstrong in an exclusive taped interview. It’s his first major interview since speaking to Greta Van Susteren on Fox’s ‘On the Record’ program. Pastor Schori is a possible key witness against Drew Peterson under Illinois’ recently adopted Hearsay Statute. Neil Schori speaking candidly for nearly an hour, says "this is challenging for me and my family because this puts us at some risk... You know, we live 15 minutes away." He says he believes Drew Peterson killed Kathleen Savio: "Oh I, I believe he's guilty, absolutely," so much so he told of how he had to track down Sergeant Collins at the Illinois State Police because he "didn't get back to me right away, and I thought, good grief, I've got some stuff I really have to share, but they haven't called me back." When asked by Armstrong if he believed Peterson would be charged, Schori said, "Ah, there are some days I think so and some days I don't. It's been 13 months. It's hard to say. I would have thought it would have occurred by now." Rather ominously, Schori added later in the interview that he felt certain Drew Peterson would marry again "and be a risk to his future wife," if charges are not forthcoming. 'Drew Peterson Exposed' is distributed by Independent Publishers Group. About: Derek Armstrong broke several stories on Drew Peterson as investigative journalist, including his pending divorce plans and wrote the immensely popular book 'Drew Peterson Exposed,' where he managed to obtain polygraphs from Drew Peterson, and revealed new evidence. He has appeared on Dr. Phil, Nancy Grace, the Verdict and various other news shows and talk shows. Armstrong is the author of seven books, including Drew Peterson Exposed and MADicine, and chief crime correspondent for Crime Report USA. He also contributes to several Canadian newspapers and publications, and appears regularly on several TV shows. Contact: Derek Armstrong, author Drew Peterson Exposed Phone: 647-273-5331 Email: derekarmstrong@mac.com or exposed@kunati.com Weblinks: www.kunati.com/exposedwww.derekarmstrong.comPhone 647-273-5331
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Post by Lorie Taylor on Oct 1, 2009 22:54:44 GMT -6
Key Hearsay Witness Neil Schori Against Drew Peterson Afraid of Suspect
12/12/2008 2:40:00 PM
by Derek Armstrong
After months of silence, Pastor Neil Schori says because of what he knows, he fears the former police sergeant accused in the disappearance of his wife may be a threat to his family.
Author Derek Armstrong
In Illinois, authorities seem to be struggling to bring an indictment against Drew Peterson—once the most talked about crime story—while the in the current "most talked about" crime story evidence mounts against Casey Anthony in the suspected homicide of her daughter Caylee.
A recent interview with one of the possible witnesses against Drew Peterson, presumed to be a key state witness should charges ever be brought against Peterson, may offer a partial explanation for the slow progress in Illinois. Pastor Neil Schori told this reporter that he worries for the safety of his family because of what he knows.
"If Drew did murder two wives, he's certainly not going to hesitate in doing something bad to anyone else," Pastor Neil Shori tells this reporter in an exclusive interview.
It’s his first interview since speaking to Greta Van Susteren on Fox’s ‘On the Record’ program.
Pastor Schori is a possible key witness against Drew Peterson under Illinois’ recently adopted Hearsay Statute.
Neil Schori speaking candidly for nearly an hour, because "this is challenging for me and my family because this puts us at some risk... You know, we live 15 minutes away."
He says he believes Drew Peterson killed Kathleen Savio: "Oh I, I believe he's guilty, absolutely," so much so he told of how he had to track down Sergeant Collins at the Illinois State Police because he "didn't get back to me right away, and I thought, Good grief, I've got some stuff I really have to share, but they haven't called me back."
When asked if he believed Peterson would be charged, Schori said, "Ah, there are some days I think so and some days I don't. It's been thirteen months. It's hard to say. I would have thought it would have occurred by now." Rather ominously, Schori added, later in the interview, that he felt certain Drew Peterson would marry again "and be a risk to his future wife," if charges are not forthcoming.
About: Derek Armstrong broke several stories on Drew Peterson as investigative journalist, including his pending divorce plans and wrote the popular book Drew Peterson Exposed, where he managed to obtain polygraphs from Drew Peterson, and revealed new evidence.
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Post by xufiiob on May 22, 2019 4:51:24 GMT -6
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Post by oreqehxibe on May 22, 2019 6:36:07 GMT -6
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