For Laci: A Mother's Story of Love, Loss, and Justice
For Laci: A Mother's Story of Love, Loss, and Justice book cover

For Laci: A Mother's Story of Love, Loss, and Justice

Paperback – December 5, 2006

Price
$15.68
Format
Paperback
Pages
368
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307338297
Dimensions
5.2 x 0.8 x 8 inches
Weight
9.8 ounces

Description

SHARON ROCHA is the mother of Laci Peterson. After the murder of her daughter and unborn grandson, she has campaigned for victim's rights, and helped launch Laci and Conner's Law, which makes it a crime to harm a fetus during an attack on a pregnant woman. The law, specifically the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, was signed into law by the President in April 2004. She lives in California. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One It was spring 2005, and I heard a sound at home that had been absent for a long time—laughter. Two of Laci’s longtime girlfriends, Stacey Boyers and Lori Ellsworth, were at my dining room table. Both were in their late twenties, the same age Laci would have been. They were dressed casually, they looked nice, and they radiated a youthful glow. I marveled at how much life they had in them. I pictured them as little girls at that table doing homework, snacking on cookies, and giggling at which boys liked which girls. Now they were reminiscing about Laci. I gave Lori a cold beer, put a glass of Chardonnay in front of Stacey, and took one myself. Soon they were telling Laci stories that made them laugh, especially the latest one. Stacey started to describe what they’d done at the cemetery but abruptly cut herself off. Seeming alarmed, she looked at Lori and, while trying not to laugh, asked, “Should I tell her what we said today?” “Oh my God,” Lori said. “You can’t.” I looked around the table. There were four chairs and three of us. If Laci were in that fourth chair, she’d be the one most eager to hear what was making them laugh. I said exactly what Laci would’ve said to Stacey: “Go ahead. Tell me.” Stacey—whom I’ve known since she was eight—didn’t require much coaxing, and neither did Lori, once they got started. “Lori and I went to visit Laci today,” Stacey said. “We were standing there, talking to her, like we always do, catching her up with all the gossip. “Then we were quiet for a minute and I said to Lori, ‘I know what’s going on with her. I can hear Laci now, knocking on her neighbors’ caskets, saying, Hello! Anybody in there? Who’s there? I need to talk to somebody.’” As she said this, Lori was turning red from embarrassment. She was probably thinking, Oh my gosh, how’s Sharon going to take this? Here’s what I did: I laughed. I couldn’t help it. It had been so long since I heard the sound of laughter at home. At one time, it had been common. Laci had a terrific sense of humor. She laughed a lot. Listening to Lori and Stacey, I was reminded of all the times the girls had sat around the table, talking and laughing. “You know she’s down there talking nonstop,” Lori said, laughing. “She’s down there going, Hey, excuse me! Pardon me! We haven’t met. I’m Laci . . . “I want to tell you about my little boy,” Stacey said in a Laci-like voice. “I want to tell you what I’m cooking today . . .” Lori pretended to be Laci’s neighbors. “Who put her here?” she said in a deep voice. “Can somebody please move her! She doesn’t stop talking.” They were right. That was Laci. And I missed it. I missed her so much. Without her, a part of me was gone forever, too. I grew up in Escalon, a small agricultural town of about 2,000 people adjacent to Modesto in central California. I remember Escalon as a picture-postcard of rural small-town life: cattle ranches, farms, dairies, and orchards. The Sierras rose in the distance. I was the second of four children. My father, Cliff Anderson, was a foreman on a peach and almond ranch, and my mother, Elta, was a full-time homemaker. In high school, I was an A-student, a cheerleader, and Homecoming princess. I don’t know where I got the nerve to be a cheerleader. Unlike Laci, I was always shy, self-conscious, and easily intimidated. During my freshman year, I started dating Dennis Rocha, the son of a dairyman whose Portuguese family had deep roots in Escalon. Dennis was already attending Modesto Junior College when a mutual friend introduced us at a dance in Turlock. We became serious very quickly. After I graduated from high school in 1969, Dennis and I married in a traditional ceremony at St. Patrick’s Church attended by four hundred people, most of them Dennis’s relatives, or so it seemed. We moved into a new three-bedroom home on the north end of his family’s 365-acre ranch. I started Modesto Junior College but left by the end of the year, feeling pressure to be a wife, not a student. My first child, Brent, arrived in 1971. As much as he became the center of my world, I sensed that I had married and left school too young. I couldn’t articulate it then, but I felt I might have cheated myself from life experiences. So much was going on in the world, so much was happening up the highway in the hippie-populated San Francisco, and I was curious about life beyond the small California town I knew way too well. I was just nineteen, a child myself, and I had barely started to live my own life. I wondered what opportunities I might be missing. But I kept those thoughts to myself. Besides, my life wasn’t terrible. Nearly four years later, I got pregnant again, this time with Laci. I wish I could remember more about carrying her for those nine months, but I’m afraid the pregnancy was uneventful other than the time I got sick eating a bowl of banana-nut ice cream, which, in reality, I didn’t even like. I also craved hot fudge sundaes and See’s candy, and ate my fair share. “No wonder I’m chubby,” Laci said when she was twelve years old and I told her about the significant amounts of chocolate I’d consumed while pregnant with her. “I didn’t stand a chance because of all the chocolate you ate while you carried me.” True to form, Laci arrived right on time, on her due date of May 4, 1975, and she was in a hurry. It felt as if I had just checked into Doctors Medical Center when I complained to the nurse, “I think the baby’s coming.” “The doctor’s not here,” the nurse snapped. “That baby can’t come yet.” I said, “Oh yes it can,” and we went back and forth like that for what seemed to me a cruel number of hours. In reality, I was at the hospital only two hours before I gave birth. When the doctor said I had a baby girl, I was ecstatic. Then, as I’ve always joked, I saw her. Laci was wrinkly, with a mess of dark hair, and my first impression was that she looked like my grandmother on my father’s side, not exactly the personification of beauty. But as time passed, Laci got much cuter. She was all smiles and spunk. And no one ever thought of my grandma when they saw her. I named Laci after a pretty girl I had met when I was in high school. I’d done the same with Brent, his namesake being one of Dennis’s college buddies who I thought was very handsome. Having felt so good through my pregnancy, I sensed Laci was going to be an easy baby, and I was right. It took just two weeks until she slept through the night, and she almost always woke up in the best mood. On most mornings, I found her sitting in her green spindle crib with a smile on her face, staring at the yellow-and-orange elephant quilt on the wall. She amused herself and smiled all the time. I hate to boast, but she was so cute. I still look at those pictures and want to squeeze her. Just after Laci turned one, I split from Dennis—proof that I spoke from experience when I later declared to Scott that divorce is always an option, not murder! At the time we split, I thought the reasons were complicated, but I now know that I was simply facing what I felt in my gut. I’d married too young. Except for my children, nearly everything in my life was left over from high school, and it didn’t feel right. I was still in my early twenties, and I craved more. I’ve read that Dennis is the one who left, but I’m the one who moved out, and it wasn’t easy or pleasant. I wrote him a letter, explaining my thoughts and feelings as best I could, and then we talked about it. He wasn’t happy about getting a divorce, and as often happens when feelings are raw and unclear, we had a hard time for a while. I took Brent and Laci and moved in with a friend in Escalon, then we rented a house in Modesto. Around Christmastime, Dennis and I got back together. The holidays were hard on both of us. But the reconciliation lasted only a few weeks, and this time when we split, it was permanent (though today we have a good relationship). In early 1977, I moved to San Jose, thinking that was the change I needed, and got a job at an insurance company dealing with workmen’s comp. But San Jose turned out to be too big a city for me. The nightly news was filled with reports of crime and violence, and I thought, Who needs this when I can have the quiet, comfort, and relative safety of a small town? Within six months, I moved back to Modesto and rented a small two-bedroom duplex. The woman next door, Susan, had a son the same age as Laci, and we became friends. I also met her sister, Roxie, who had kids the same ages as mine. I appreciated being back home and woke up mornings feeling as if the sun was shining on me again. I got an office job in the shipping-receiving warehouse for Standard Brands, which, after mergers and acquisitions, became Nabisco and then RJR. A few months later, my cousin Gwen called me at work and said she wanted me to meet a guy Even though it was a Friday night in November and I didn’t have plans I said no. I wasn’t in the mood for any kind of romantic stuff. “Sharon, his name is Ron Grantski, and he’s a nice guy,” she said.

Features & Highlights

  • Laci Rocha Peterson, 8 months pregnant, was last seen by her sister, Amy, in the late afternoon of December 23, 2002. She spoke to her mother, Sharon Rocha, at 8:30 p.m. that night. This would be the last time anyone from her immediate family ever spoke to her.A search began which lasted an agonizing four months. Sadly, Laci Peterson and her son Conner were found dead on the shores of San Francisco Bay on April 18, 2003.Her husband, Scott, was eventually arrested and charged with the murder of Laci and Connor. After a sensational, media-saturated trial, Peterson was found guilty of capital murder and was sentenced to death on March 16, 2005.This book deals with the story in three separate sections: first, Sharon describes the ordinary, loving life her daughter led, including fond memories of her childhood and adolescence. Second, it covers her marriage, disappearance, the community's moving search for her, and her and Connor's eventual recovery from San Francisco Bay. Third, it tells the story of the trial in detail not before revealed. Sharon will also talk about victim's rights, a subject on which she now campaigns regularly.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(776)
★★★★
25%
(324)
★★★
15%
(194)
★★
7%
(91)
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(-91)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Behind Closed Doors...

[[ASIN:0307338290 For Laci: A Mother's Story of Love, Loss, and Justice]] is a heart-wrenching tale of a mother's most painful times after her daughter and grandson are murdered -- by the one person none of them would have suspected, her husband.

We read about Laci's childhood, her wonderfully vibrant personality, and how she met the love of her life -- Scott Peterson. Behind closed doors, what went on in this family that would turn the beautiful fairytale story into a tragic nightmare?

There is little in the book to reveal the clues to that tale -- others conclude that the truth lay somewhere in the psyche of a sociopath, a charming young man whose goal in life was to satisfy his own needs.

This story seems near to my heart, since I once lived in the community where all of this took place, and even attended the community college there (Modesto, CA).

Another book that lends another aspect to the mysterious events is the story told by Amber Frey, Scott Peterson's mistress, in [[ASIN:0060834137 Witness: For the Prosecution of Scott Peterson]].

Even after several years, this story of what can go wrong in a picture-book life holds fascination for many. Do we read the titillating tales because we want to stave off misfortune in our own lives?

Whatever our reasons, these questions linger. And the pain of the loss for people like Laci's mother will never be assuaged.
6 people found this helpful
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A frighteningly ordinary story, in so many ways

Laci Rocha Peterson wanted to be a mother. For that, she died. We already know the outcome of this story before we pick up the book that tells it, from the viewpoint of Laci's mother. So why bother to read it? Because it's riveting. Because it has so much to say, some of it deliberately and some inadvertently, about human behavior at its best as well as at its worst.

The book's first chapters paint a portrait of Laci, from her birth through her happy childhood and occasionally stormy adolescence. Sharon Rocha doesn't try to present her daughter as perfect, which of course she was not. When Scott Peterson enters her story, Laci is a young woman who has learned some important lessons about life and love; but she hasn't learned how to see through a sociopath, and author Rocha makes it clear (without trying to hammer home a point that requires no hammering) that no one saw through Scott until it was too late for Laci. He said what he knew people wanted to hear him say; and when that included agreeing to having a baby, his wife had no way of realizing that his agreement would ultimately become her death sentence. She only knew that he agreed with some reluctance, but she felt sure that would melt away once he saw his child. She didn't really know Scott Peterson. No one did, not even the parents who remained blind even as the court room drama that ended in his conviction played out before them.

This story is a frighteningly ordinary one, because - as the author points out in her acknowledgements - murder is the leading cause of death for pregnant women in the U.S., and the murderer in the overwhelming majority of cases is the unborn child's father. What can be done about that? Sharon Rocha offers no easy answers. What she does offer is Laci's story, and that of her own and her family's survival through an ordeal that will never truly end.

--Reviewed by Nina M. Osier, author of "Love, Jimmy: A Maine Veteran's Longest Battle"
4 people found this helpful
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THE ONLY BOOK YOU WILL EVER NEED TO READ ABOUT LACI

this is by far the very best book written about the depths of loss only a Mother could feel.Such great insight into one of the saddest moments of our time..no wonder this beautiful girl caught this nations attention..just reading her Mothers words were enough to make you fully understand the reasons why we all felt the way we did and still do. My heart still aches for this woman after so many years .
3 people found this helpful
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Completely Heartbreaking

I have read this book twice because it was so good. It was raw, honest, emotional and a wonderful tribute to Laci Peterson. I cannot even imagine the totality of what this family has gone through - this story is completely heartbreaking and almost unbelievable. I found myself getting very angry at Scott for being such a souless, evil and selfish murderer. He didn't want his baby with Laci, didn't want to be a father, but he was chasing around Amber Frey, who had a young child. I was also angry with Lee and Jackie Peterson and their inability to discern the truth about their son. The way they treated Laci and blamed her family was absolutely appalling. Were these people humans? I really don't think so after reading this book. It's very difficult to comprehend how such a wonderful and beautiful woman like Laci be a victim of a horrible crime. What a waste of two beautiful lives. I would recommend this book 100% to anyone. It was one of the best books I've read.
3 people found this helpful
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Personal loss and heartbreaking truth

As many people did, I followed Laci Peterson's story as it happened. It was the epitome of the human-interest story - a beautiful, young, pregnant woman disappears into thin air as her desperate family searches and begs for her return. By writing this personal account of Laci and Conner's story, Sharon Rocha again proved to the world the incredible strength she has and invited the world into the "circle of love" that surrounds her by way of her family and friends. This book was intensely personal and to hear exactly what Laci's mother and family were going through and the conversations that were had was heart-wrenching. It's hard to imagine what grief is like on this level - to lose your precious daughter and grandson before even knowing him is pain that many of us (thankfully) will never know, and to find that their loss was at the hands of the man that should have protected them above all is too enormous to bear. Sharon Rocha conveyed her story with the grace and dignity in which she dealt with the tragic events as they unfolded and I thank her for being brave enough to share it with all of us.
3 people found this helpful
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Forever in our Hearts.

I remember following the Laci Peterson missing person's case very closely, I distinctly remember hearing in my car that they had found two bodies washed upon the shore, and I knew that the search was over. I cried some serious tears that day because I had heard from Laci's own family how much of a wonderful person she was, and how much she wanted that baby and a monster took all that away from her, it didn't seem fair or logical. I remember saying out loud "why didn't you just divorce her Scott?" And now that I read this book, I know that Sharon said the same thing. Her words were "divorce is an option, murder is not" Having had problems in my own marriage, I seriously cannot understand or fathom Scotts thinking; maybe we aren't supposed to because he is beyond all normal mental reasoning. Sharon, in this book, has written a beautiful and bittersweet recollection of her daughter's life and death and legacy, she never got to meet her grandson Conner but a grandmothers love knows now earthly or heavenly bounds. The theme throughout, is one of complete disbelief that this was happening to her family and why it was happening, I don't think anyone will ever get the answer to that especially from Scott Peterson who to this day still claims he is innocent. For anyone who ever wanted to get beyond the headlines, beyond the tabloids, and really know who Laci was this is the ultimate guidebook into her extraordinary life, who else knows you best besides your mom? The lesson in all of it is to live your life to the fullest, never be afraid to laugh, and of course to "always keep smiling"
3 people found this helpful
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Powerful and full of emotion!!!

I really wasn't interested in buying this book, as I do not like to read. However, I am glad bought it. As I write this, I realize that the anniversary of Laci's murder is tomorrow, it will be four years. My Christmas won't be the same after reading this. This book was extremely hard to put down. I found it honest and full of emotion. Sharon did an excellent job of writing this book. Not only did I get a sense of who Laci was, but it got me in touch with who I was and my emotions. I found myself crying for Sharon, laughing at somethings, and MAD at others. The extent to which Scott and his mother would go to to lie was digusting, and how they treated Laci's family was ridiculous. I found myself having trouble falling asleep, thinking about what Laci lived and died with, and the anguish her mother and family went through and probably will go through for the rest of their lives. I only hope that I never have to experience what Laci's mother and family has.
3 people found this helpful
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This is a heart wrenching account of a mother's love for her daughter and the anguish she suffered from ...

This is a heart wrenching account of a mother's love for her daughter and the anguish she suffered from her death at the hands of a husband that was supposed to protect her. Laci comes alive through her mother's writing and the reader gets to know who Laci really was and her hopes and dreams for the future. This novel is lovingly written and is truly "For Laci." After reading this book, everyone will fall in love with Laci and wonder what could have been if she and her baby boy had survived.
2 people found this helpful
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heartbreaking

I have read, I think, every book out there on Scott Peterson and this one and Catherine Crier's book "A Deadly Game" are my two favorites. This book takes you to where Sharon Rocha went on Dec 24, 2002 at 5:17 pm when Scott Peterson called her and told her Laci is missing. It takes you to the park in the freezing cold where she looked for Laci and yelled her name. This book is so personal and gets into so many details that I always wondered how things actually went. Scott and Laci's early years, Laci's desire to get pregnant, Scott's less than enthusiastic response, the weeks leading up to her disappearance. She talks about a moment after Laci disappeared when Scott walked up to her and told her that someone asked him how he was doing that day and he responded that he really was doing fine. There was a lot of doubt about if Scott actually killed Laci due to all of the circumstantial evidence but after reading this book, I feel especially confident.

There were many times during this book that I cried and I literally could not put it down. I thought about it when I wasn't reading it. The hell that Sharon Rocha went through and how hard she fought to get justice for Laci and Connor.

I really do recommend this book, even if you aren't all that interested in the Scott Peterson case. It's a good mother/daughter story, about the love that a mother has for her daughter and how easily your whole world can be ripped away from you.
2 people found this helpful
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Very Touching!!!

While reading this book, I couldn't help but think about Laci at times during the day. Wondering how for some unknown reason, would the universe, karma, God whatever, let someone with so much love and kindness (you can just tell by her smile) be murdered in cold blood? Did she suffer right before her last breath? is she suffering now? and her baby? These were some of the questions that kept popping up in my head, but somehow i felt a sense of relief once i finished the book.

Very Good read. It must of been really hard for the mom to relive these memories for the book. I commend her in her Braveness and Determination to find out what really happened to Laci. (Glad he'll fry in hell!!)
2 people found this helpful