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Drew Peterson faces up to 60 years if judge rejects new trial

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Drew Peterson, 59, was convicted by a jury last fall of first-degree murder in the 2004 bathtub drowning of his third wife, Kathleen Savio. (Herald File Photo)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — Drew Peterson could be sentenced to up to 60 years in prison Thursday if a judge rejects defense team arguments that his former lead attorney’s inept trial performance violated his constitutional rights to a fair trial.

Judge Edward Burmila is expected to rule Thursday whether the former Bolingbrook, Ill., police sergeant will get a new trial, a rarely granted motion.

Peterson, 59, was convicted by a jury last fall of first-degree murder in the 2004 bathtub drowning of his third wife, Kathleen Savio.

If a new trial is not granted, Burmila will begin a sentencing hearing at which prosecutors have said they plan to argue Peterson also killed his fourth wife, Stacy, who went missing in 2007, in asking for the maximum sentence.

Among the oddities Wednesday during the unusual hearing on post-trial motions that has stretched across two days was former Peterson lead attorney Joel Brodsky chatting in a courthouse hallway with Stacy’s sister Cassandra Cales.

Both declined to detail their conversation. “We were just discussing how to make sure that her sister Stacy isn’t forgotten after Drew goes away,” Brodsky said.

Much of Wednesday’s hearing focused on Brodsky’s trial decision to call Wheaton, Ill., divorce attorney Harry Smith, who represented Savio in her bitter divorce fight with Peterson and also fielded a call from Stacy about her divorce options shortly before she vanished.

Smith testified at trial that Stacy had asked him if the fact that Peterson killed his third wife could be used as leverage in a divorce.

Several jurors said after trial that the testimony convinced them of Peterson’s guilt. There was no physical evidence tying Peterson to Savio’s death, which was initially treated as an accident.

Retired Cook County Judge Daniel Locallo, called as a witness Wednesday by Peterson’s attorneys, blasted Brodsky for calling Smith, saying the testimony for the first time at trial connected Peterson to Savio’s death.

The retired judge said that, in his opinion, Brodsky’s decisions constituted ineffective assistance of counsel, which can be grounds for a new trial.

“It was an awful decision,” defense attorney Steve Greenberg later argued in court. “It ruined the case — we brought out the worst possible evidence, and the best evidence for the state.”

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