Peterson may have sensed wiretaps

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. – After hours of wiretapped calls between Scott Peterson and his mistress, the former fertilizer salesman appears to become aware he is being taped, according to recordings played for jurors Tuesday at his murder trial.

The jury spent a fifth day listening to calls between Peterson and Amber Frey that were made after Peterson’s wife, Laci, disappeared in December 2002.

In the recordings, Peterson often sounded apologetic for lying to Frey about being married, but he also was evasive. Frey made the tapes at the request of police.

In a call Feb. 7, 2003, Peterson tells Frey he will be spending the night in Sacramento and says he will call her the next day from a pay phone. Frey then asks Peterson why he is going to Sacramento.

“I can tell you but not on these phones,” he says. It was unclear whether Peterson knew Frey was taping him.

Authorities hope to show jurors the affair was Peterson’s motive for killing his wife and fetus.

Prosecutors allege Peterson killed his wife in their Modesto home on or around Dec. 24, 2002, then drove to San Francisco Bay and dumped her weighted body from a small boat he had purchased weeks earlier. The decomposed remains of Laci Peterson and the couple’s fetus washed ashore in April 2003, not far from where Peterson said he launched a solo fishing trip the day she vanished.

His attorneys claim he was framed after the real killer learned of his widely publicized alibi. They acknowledge his affair with Frey but said that being a “cad” doesn’t make him a killer.

During a Feb. 7 call, Peterson is heard sobbing throughout the conversation, saying, “You know I’m not a monster, Amber.”

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