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Lead Peterson attorney leaves defense team

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(MCT) — After more than a month of behind-the-scenes struggles and public skirmishes among members of Drew Peterson's defense team, longtime lead attorney Joel Brodsky withdrew from the case Tuesday after Peterson threatened to fire him, sources said.

Brodsky asked a Will County judge to withdraw after Peterson told Brodsky at a meeting just before Tuesday's court hearing that Brodsky could either leave or be forced out, sources said. Peterson, a former Bolingbrook police sergeant, was convicted last month of drowning his third wife, Kathleen Savio, in her bathtub in 2004.

But Brodsky, who had represented Peterson since shortly after Peterson's fourth wife, Stacy, vanished in 2007, insisted after the hearing that he wasn't pushed out.

"On the contrary, Drew said absolutely nobody in the world knows the facts and the record in this case better than I," Brodsky said. "What we have here is a situation where unfounded allegations that have been made are interfering with the movement of this case and the focus of this case."

The reference was to a motion filed this month seeking a new trial for Peterson based on Brodsky's alleged ineffective assistance of counsel. The motion alleged that Brodsky repeatedly lied to Peterson, forced him to engage in damaging pretrial publicity and threatened to reveal unspecified information if Peterson fired him.

And at Peterson's trial, Brodsky, whose first murder case was Peterson's high-profile prosecution, called a witness who several jurors said convinced them that Peterson was guilty of murder. Will County's top prosecutor called the testimony "a gift from God," while another Peterson defense lawyer dubbed it "one of the worst mistakes in the history of jurisprudence."

"All the allegations up to now, public allegations, I should say, have been focused on me," Brodsky said outside court Tuesday. "And I guess as lead counsel, I mean, the captain of the ship has to take responsibility."

Brodsky seemed to hold out hope of possibly returning to the case later. "Maybe when this thing is all over, who knows?" he said.

In court Tuesday, Brodsky told Judge Edward Burmila that he would like to "temporarily withdraw" from the case. When Burmila informed him "there is no such thing," Brodsky said he would like to withdraw as Peterson's attorney.

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