Synopses & Reviews
When Stacy Peterson vanished without a trace, her husband, retired police sergeant Drew Peterson, steadfastly asserted his innocence and maintained that his wife, thirty years his junior, had run off with her lover. Months passed; exhaustive searches and clues turned up nothing; more questions than answers were raised about their marriage, about Stacy's vocal concerns for her safety, and about Drew Peterson's own bizarre behavior in the limelight as the number-one suspect in his wife's disappearance. Then came yet another shocking development, this time concerning his third wife Kathleen Savio. Three and one half years earlier, her suspicious death had been ruled an accidental drowning, but after a new autopsy it was now ruled as a homicide. A subject of intense media coverage and speculation, the case against Drew Peterson is still unraveling, but one haunting question remains- where on earth is Stacy?
Synopsis
The shocking true story that's become a national obsession???????????? Drew Peterson and the mysterious murder and disappearance of his wives.
Synopsis
In March of 2004, Kathleen Savio, the third wife of Police Sergeant Drew Peterson, was found dead in her bathtub. Three years later, in October 2007, twenty-three-year-old Stacy Peterson vanished from the Chicago suburb of Bolingbrook, leaving behind Peterson and their children. Drew Peterson, thirty years Stacy's senior, steadfastly asserted his innocence and maintained that his fourth wife had simply fled their tumultuous marriage and run off with another man. In light of Stacy's curious disappearance, however, Kathleen's body was exhumed, a second autopsy was conducted, and her death ruled a homicide.
Drawing upon exclusive interviews with Stacy's friends and family and even Drew himself, Chicago-area reporter Joseph Hosey presents the most researched account of the Stacy Peterson case. As the charges against Peterson mounted, one haunting question remains: Where on earth is Stacy?
About the Author
Joseph Hosey has worked as a reporter for the Herald News since 1999, covering the crime and courts beat for the Chicago area newspaper.