Dr. Devore's Curious Calculations
Dr. Brian Peterson, the forensic pathologist who performed
autopsies for Contra Costa County, testified at Scott Peterson’s preliminary
hearing that he thought Conner Peterson was a 9 month/full term fetus, based on
a crown rump measurement of 32 centimeters. However, he knew that this
measurement was just an estimate, and for a more accurate assessment of the age
of the fetus at the time of death he consulted Dr. Alison Galloway, a forensic
anthropologist.
Dr. Galloway concluded that Conner was 35-36 weeks old at the time he died. With
a standard deviation of 2 weeks plus or minus, she said the earliest he died was
33 weeks, the latest 38 weeks. To reach her conclusions Dr. Galloway made 11
measurements: length of the bones from the upper leg (femur), the lower leg
(tibia), the upper arm (humerus), the parietal cord (height, perimeter height,
cord width, perimeter width), right frontal cord (height, perimeter height, cord
width, perimeter width); and she verified the age range with well accepted
formulas from three different textbooks.
At the time of Laci’s last prenatal visit to the Hera Medical Group on
December 23, 2002, Conner’s age was 32 weeks 1 day. (Dr. Tow-Der,
rounding the number off, noted 32 weeks on Laci’s medical chart). At the time of
the second ultrasound on September 24, Laci’s due date had been revised from
February 10 to February 16. Several measurements made by Dr. Yip at that time
(abdominal circumference, head circumference, biparietal diameter and femur
length) indicated that Conner was 6 days younger than originally estimated.
The calculations of Dr. Galloway, who testified for the prosecution, indicated
that Conner had died on December 29 (fetus age 33 weeks) at the very
earliest.
This was not what the prosecution wanted to hear; so they went looking
for another expert to support their theory that Scott Peterson had killed his
wife between 8:30 p.m. on December 23 and 10:08 a.m. on December 24.
And they found Dr. Greggory DeVore, who was willing to see things their way, and
who was willing to manipulate numbers and information to come up with the
calculations the prosecution required.
Dr. DeVore was hired by the prosecution in February 2004. On February 8, he went
to the Contra Costa County Coroner’s office where he was given Conner’s femur
bone. He placed the bone on a cup in a water bath (like a fish tank) and
measured it 3 times with his portable ultrasound machine. This was the only test
he did. On the basis of this, he produced a report on February 19 which stated
unequivocally that Conner had died on December 25. The prosecution did not like
this estimate either.
So, on the day he testified, Dr. DeVore changed his story. He said that December
25 was a mistake, that he had been adding up the numbers on his hands.
In testimony, Dr. DeVore insisted that December 23 was the date of Conner’s
death. Although he said he had created a spread sheet to verify this, the only
thing he provided in court to support his theory was a free hand graph. His
miraculous calculation, based on measuring one bone 3 times in a tank of water,
was exactly the number the prosecution required. To arrive at this number, Dr.
DeVore completely dismissed much of the information from Laci’s doctors
including the revised due date, and discounted the opinions of the forensic
pathologist, the forensic anthropologist and various ultrasound and x-ray
experts. He relied on the measurement of only one bone—a scientifically unsound
method, and chose the only formula which could match the date he wanted.
Dr. Charles March, testifying for the defense, considered all the information
available to him: doctor’s records and information, autopsy records, forensic
analysis, interviews with family and friends and he agreed with the calculations
of Dr. Galloway and Dr. Yip. He reached the conclusion that the earliest
date Conner could have died was December 29. One of the things he
considered was the date of Laci’s first positive pregnancy test, June 9, 2002.
This date was confirmed by family members and friends in investigative reports
and in an interview with Katie Couric on the year anniversary, June 9, 2003. The
date of Laci’s first positive pregnancy test was 6 days later than might have
been expected, and this was verified by her second ultrasound and the decision
of Laci’s doctors to change her due date from Feb 10 to Feb 16.
Only Dr. Devore, by discrediting all the other information provided to him, and
by using a very questionable technique and “junk science” was able to give the
prosecution exactly what they wanted. He was a very important part of a
prosecution strategy that sent an innocent man to death row.
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To see a video of Dr. DeVore talking with Greta Van
Susteren “On the Record,” December 17, 2004, go to the following link. The other
videos on this link show the strong media attention given to Dr. DeVore’s
testimony and the very superficial analysis done by most of the reporters.
http://www.fetal.com/Inthenews/peterson.html