Categories
Technology

Prototype GeForce GTX 2080 graphics card spotted, the only known GTX with ray tracing support

GTX 2080, a proof RTX branding was the last minute change?

Reddit ascendance22 posted photos of the unreleased GeForce GTX 2080 graphics card, and no, that’s not a typo.

GeForce GTX 2080, Source: ascendance22

At NVIDIA GeForce 20 series launch in August 2018 NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang made a joke of announcing a GTX 1180 graphics. That was contrary to the rumors of a new GeForce RTX branding making a debut. Such a GTX model was obviously never launched, but it seems that the original plans might have been to use GTX branding after all.

Redditor found an engineering sample of GTX 2080 graphics card, or so it seems. The card features the same reference cooler design, but the absent RTX branding was replaced with GTX. There is also no 2080 logo on the card’s front and backplate.

GeForce GTX 2080 prototype, Source: eBay

It looks like this card was purchased from eBay for around 360 USD. This prototype above looks identical to the card posted on Reddit. Interestingly the seller has been using these cards for… cryptomining. The sticker on the back confirms it’s a PG180 board, the same board the retail RTX 2080 graphics card uses.

GeForce GTX 2080 prototype, Source: eBay

Such NVIDIA prototypes are very rare, especially for the gaming series and NVIDIA reference design (Founders Edition). The card supposedly offers identical performance to the retail unit so for gamers it’s just a GPU, for enthusiast that’s a collector’s item for sure. And yes, it supports raytracing and DLSS, the only GTX card to do so.

GeForce RTX 2080 Founders Edition, Source: NVIDIA

Source: Reddit



Categories
Entertainment

Marilyn Manson steps out in rare outing with wife Lindsay Usich

Marilyn Manson has been spotted during a rare outing in Hollywood with his much younger wife.

The 53-year-old heavy metal singer, whose real name is Brian Warner, stepped out with his long-term partner Lindsay Usich, 37, for dinner in the Californian city.

It’s understood the pair began dating in 2012, before tying the knot in 2020.

Manson, who is reportedly two years sober, cut a vastly different figure for the couple’s date night, where he was photographed sans his signature gothic make-up.

He wore an all-black casual outfit, while Usich wore an emerald green dress with a black jacket.

Manson has rarely been spotted publicly amid multiple sexual abuse allegations leveled against him over the past year, all of which he has denied.

It comes after Manson’s damning texts to Johnny Depp were exposed in documents seen by Daily Beast, which contained pages of evidence excluded from Depp’s trial against ex-wife Amber Heard.

In a 2016 text, Manson allegedly wrote of his wife, “I got an amber 2.0” and also “Lindsay just puled an amber on me… please delete.”

Depp responds, “I been reading A LOT of material on that and sociopathic behavior… it is f***ing real my brother!! My ex-c**t is goddamn TEXTBOOK!!!” according to the document.

Then Manson, in an apparent reference to an incident where the police were called to Depp and Heard’s shared Los Angeles apartment in 2016, wrote, “I got a serious police amber type scenarios with L’s family.

“I’m f***ing stressed. I don’t know if you are back but I need asylum somewhere because I think the cops might be headed my way,” the filing states.

Manson’s former partner, US actress Evan Rachel Wood, has led claims against the goth rocker, including that he forced her to have sex with him while filming one of his music videos.

Wood named Manson as her alleged abuser for the first time in February 2021. They began dating in 2006, when she was 18 and he was 37.

The couple dated for four years, with Wood bringing to light allegations of sexual and emotional abuse years later, though it was only recently that she named Manson as her alleged abuser.

“He started grooming me when I was a teenager and horrifically abused me for years,” Wood wrote on Instagram in February last year.

“I was brainwashed and manipulated into submission. I am done living in fear of retaliation, slander or blackmail.

“I am here to expose this dangerous man and call out the many industries that have enabled him, before he ruins any more lives.

“I stand with the many victims who will no longer be silent.”

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Categories
Australia

Scam or No Scam? A game for all ages

I have invented a new game. It’s called “Scam or No Scam”. The rules are simple, there are no winners and no losers (unless you count the scammers). It’s a game which turns annoyance into amusement.

At the moment, there are two regular players, plus an interchangeable cast of faceless extras, but I see potential for this to be much bigger, perhaps as an educational tool, or even a television game show.

The game consists of Player 1 sending a screenshot of an email or text message to Player 2 and asking them to declare whether it’s a “scam” or “no scam”.

Scam or No Scam?

Scam or No Scam?Credit:istock

Of course, they are always scams, and must only ever be screenshots, because we don’t want to pass on any nasty viruses. The game allows players to share their frustrations about scammers, be creative with responses, and have a laugh.

Take for example last night’s offering. I received the following WhatsApp message: “Hi, I’m Seonhee. Nice to meet you. Australia is a beautiful country and I want to find my soul mate here. I am 29 and single (don’t talk to me about sex or I will get angry). Add my WhatsApp … we can know each other better.”

I sent it to my friend and asked, “Scam or no scam?” The reply: “Not scam. I think Seonhee is the one for you. Walk away from that husband of yours and enjoy your new soulmate.”

Don’t worry husband. I’m not running off with Seonhee. Sounds like there might be some anger issues there. Smells catfishy.

It’s been seven years since my last public rant about scammers. In that time, the scams have grown, and so has my irritation. Despite being cautious about sharing my details, I get contacted by a scammer in some form (email, phone call, text), at least once a week.

While I’m occasionally impressed with their creativity, I’m more often offended at the lack of attention to detail displayed by these scammers, like the pretty young woman who sent a photo of “herself” with a message offering companionship but forgot that her WhatsApp profile picture appears at the top of the screen, showing a middle-aged man.

Categories
US

Former police officer gets 7-plus years in prison in Jan. 6 case

Robertson gets credit for the 13 months he has already spent in custody. Robertson has been jailed since Cooper ruled last year that he violated the terms of his pretrial release by possessing firearms.

The judge said he was troubled by Robertson’s conduct since his arrest — not only his stockpiling of guns but also his words advocating for violence. After Jan. 6, Robertson told a friend that he was prepared to fight and die in a civil war and he clung to baseless conspiracy theories that the 2020 election was stolen from then-President Donald Trump, the judge noted.

Sentencing guidelines calculated by Cooper recommended a prison term ranging from seven years and three months to nine years.

“It’s a long time because it reflects the seriousness of the offenses that you were convicted of,” the judge said.

In April, a jury convicted Robertson of attacking the Capitol to obstruct Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential victory. Jurors found Robertson guilty of all six counts in his indictment, including charges that he interfered with police officers at the Capitol and that he entered a restricted area with a dangerous weapon, a large wooden stick.

Robertson’s lawyers said the Army veteran was using the stick to help him walk because he has a limp from getting shot in the right thigh while working as a private contractor for the Defense Department in Afghanistan in 2011.

The judge said he agreed with jurors that Robertson went to the Capitol to interfere with the joint session of Congress on Jan. 6. Robertson was an “active and willing participant,” not “some bystander” who got swept up in the crowd, Cooper said.

Robertson traveled to Washington on that morning with another off-duty Rocky Mount police officer, Jacob Fracker, and a third man, a neighbor who wasn’t charged in the case.

Fracker was scheduled to be tried alongside Robertson before he pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge in March and agreed to cooperate with federal authorities. Cooper is scheduled to sentence Fracker next Tuesday.

Prosecutors have asked Cooper to spare Fracker from a prison term and sentence him to six months of probation along with a period of home detention or “community confinement.” They said Fracker’s “fulsome” cooperation and trial testimony was crucial in securing convictions against Robertson.

Robertson’s lawyer, Mark Rollins, sought a prison sentence below two years and three months. He questioned the fairness of the wide gap in sentences that prosecutors recommended for Robertson and Fracker given their similar conduct.

Robertson served his country and community with distinction, his lawyer told the judge.

“His life is already in shambles,” Rollins said.

Robertson and Fracker were among several current or former law enforcement officers who joined in the riot. Prosecutors say Robertson used his law enforcement and military training to block police officers who were trying to hold off the advancing mob.

Assistant US Attorney Elizabeth Aloi said Robertson was prepared for violence when he went to the Capitol and did a “victory lap” inside the building, where he posed for a selfie with Fracker.

“The defendant is, by all accounts, proud of his conduct on Jan. 6,” she said.

Jurors saw some of Robertson’s posts on social media before and after the riot. In a Facebook post on Nov. 7, 2020, Robertson said “being disenfranchised by fraud is my hard line.”

“I’ve spent most of my adult life fighting a counter insurgency. (I’m) about to become part of one, and a very effective one,” he wrote.

In a letter addressed to the judge, Robertson said he took full responsibility for his actions on Jan. 6 and “any poor decisions I made.” He blamed the vitriolic content of his social media posts on a mix of stress, alcohol abuse and “submersion in deep ‘rabbit holes’ of election conspiracy theory.”

“I sat around at night drinking too much and reacting to articles and sites given to me by Facebook” algorithms, he wrote.

The town fired Robertson and Fracker after the riot. Rocky Mount is about 25 miles south of Roanoke, Va., and has about 5,000 residents.

Roughly 850 people have been charged with federal crimes for their conduct on Jan. 6. More than 350 of them have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeanor offenses, and more than 230 have been sentenced so far.

Robertson’s jury trial was the second for a Capitol riot case; Reffitt’s was the first. Jurors have unanimously convicted seven Capitol rioters of all charges in their respective indictments.

Categories
Business

Aldi Australia introduces smaller trolleys in stores

Shoppers thrilled after Aldi introduces a VERY in-demand new feature in stores: ‘We’ve been waiting for this moment for years’

  • Aldi Australia has introduced smaller sized trolleys in stores in a national rollout
  • A photo showing the size was shared online, sending customers into a spin
  • The new size will provide shoppers with ‘greater convenience’

Customers are praising Aldi after small trolleys were spotted in Australian stores.

A photo posted to the Aldi Mums Facebook group shows the new trolleys in a bay and is believed to be the first of a nationwide rollout.

Shoppers complained online saying the large trolleys, which are 1.1m high, are ‘enormous’ and were unsuitable for pregnant women, new mums carrying babies and the elderly.

In June the supermarket confirmed to Daily Mail Australia the smaller trolleys will provide shoppers with ‘greater convenience’.

A photo posted to the Aldi Mums Facebook group shows the new trolleys in a bay alongside and is believed to be the first of a nationwide rollout (pictured: the small trolleys)

A photo posted to the Aldi Mums Facebook group shows the new trolleys in a bay alongside and is believed to be the first of a nationwide rollout (pictured: the small trolleys)

‘We recognize that customers are looking for greater convenience when they visit our stores, as it’s almost impossible not to pick up the excellent value products on offer,’ an Aldi spokesperson said.

‘That’s why we’re introducing smaller trolleys across all our locations, so our customers can more efficiently pick up products while doing smaller grocery shops.’

The image of the small trolleys received more than 2,400 ‘likes’ and shoppers seemed obsessed with the new offer.

‘Sooo much easier for when I’m wearing baby in the carrier!!!’ one mum wrote, another added: ‘Yes I just used one. I was surprised to see them. A great addition.’

‘Thank god, I’m sick of falling into the trolley trying to get my groceries out,’ a third joked.

A short woman said: ‘About time, for me 144cm of shortness the trolleys are sooooo big, almost climbing in every time. well done Aldi for the newer half cart smaller trolleys.’

It follows after Aldi shoppers were left pleasantly surprised by the retailer’s decision to rollout shopping baskets across all their Australian stores.

It follows after Aldi shoppers were left pleasantly surprised by the retailer's decision to rollout shopping baskets across all their Australian stores

It follows after Aldi shoppers were left pleasantly surprised by the retailer’s decision to rollout shopping baskets across all their Australian stores

Aldi Australia have revealed plans to include shopping baskets - as standard - in every store

Aldi Australia have revealed plans to include shopping baskets – as standard – in every store

The German-owned retailer posted to Facebook in April to reveal the decision which many customers believe has been ‘a long time coming’.

‘Goodbye octopus arms,’ they wrote in the post.

‘We’re rolling out baskets across all our stores, to help you with your weekly shop and dash in top-ups.’

The baskets, which were first trialed in select stores in July, will be available nation-wide in 2022 – according to a spokesperson for the German-owned store.

Customers said the announcement was ‘about time’.

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Categories
Technology

Sony Paying Devs To Stay Off Xbox Game Pass Says Microsoft – channelnews

Microsoft has claimed that their major gaming rival Sony, has been paying developers for ‘blocking rights’, to keep games off their gaming subscription service Xbox Game Pass.

The accusation came to light in documents filed by Microsoft to Brazil’s competition watchdog, who were investigating the tech company’s acquisition of Activision-Blizzard.

According to Microsoft, Sony has been going out of their way to prevent the growth of Games Pass by paying developers to stay away from the service, as they look to bolster their own subscription offering.

“Microsoft’s ability to continue expanding Game Pass has been hampered by Sony’s desire to inhibit such growth,” says the August 9th Microsoft filing, submitted to the Administrative Council for Economic Defence.

“Sony pays for ‘blocking rights’ to prevent developers from adding content to Game Pass and other competing subscription services.”

This would not be out of character for Sony, who tends to be the kid in the sandpit who’s not so keen on sharing their toys. When cross-platform gaming launched for Rocket League and MinecraftSony refused to buy in, whilst PC, Xbox and Nintendo players got to enjoy playing against each other on different platforms.

Sony only budged under immense pressure from Epic Games, who wanted to enable cross play for Fortnite, which was the biggest game on PlayStation at the time. As part of the agreement, Sony received compensation for cross-play, and is the only platform to do so. Recently released documents suggest that Sony

Microsoft is hopeful that the claim will prove that their purchase of Activision Blizzard would not hinder competition or create a gaming monopoly.

“The inclusion of Activision Blizzard content in Game Pass does not impair the ability of other players to compete in the digital game distribution market,” says the company. In fact, they believe that bringing major titles such as Call of Duty to Game Pass will increase competition by providing users with access to games at a lower cost.

Call of Duty is the big one in the acquisition, and it’s a title that Sony says is “a gaming category of its own,” and that competing with it as an exclusive Xbox offering would be difficult. Whether they would allow the franchise to become available on the recently revamped PlayStation Plus subscription service however, allowing prices to be competitive, is currently unknown.

Microsoft however has previously said that Call of Duty will still be available on PlayStation, whilst also pointing out the massive success of other shooter franchises such as Apex Legends, Battlefield and PUBG.

While the Microsoft Activision deal is being monitored worldwide by watchdogs in Europe and the US, most competition authorities keep correspondence private. Brazil’s CADE offers documentation to the public.

Categories
Entertainment

Karl Stefanovic parties in Europe in 48th birthday clip posted on Instagram

Jasmine Stefanovic has honored husband Karl Stefanovic’s 48th birthday with a clip of the fun-loving Today co-host letting off steam in Europe, vape in hand.

In the clip shared on Instagram, Stefanovic is seen being whipped in the face with air from a special effects gun until his cap falls off, arms spread wide as others laugh around him.

“Happy Birthday to the light of all our lives. We adore you and your soft beautiful soul,” 38-year-old shoe designer Jasmine captioned the post, which is set to Fisher’s party track lose it.

“You keep us laughing everyday. Thank you for brightening our world.”

The footage is from the couple’s current travels in Europe, set in a glamorous venue complete with several Louis Roederer Cristal champagne ice buckets.

Not quite matching the aesthetic, Karl is seen clutching a green vape in the video, which followers were quick to point out.

“It’s the apple flavored vape for me,” one wrote.

The Channel 9 star’s mum weighed-in that the post “says it all” about her cheeky son — whose most infamous antics include showing up still-drunk after the Logies in 2009.

“Great picture. “says it all.” Karl loves life. Every day since a baby he has woken up with a smile and that has never stopped. Happy birthday darling. Thank you for been (sic) you. Love you mum,” Jenny Stefanovic wrote.

Industry colleagues chimed in to offer their well wishes, too, with Channel 9’s Belinda Russell commenting: “Happy birthday King Karlos!!”

“Happy Birthday King. Love ya bro,” Ryan “Fitzy” Fitzgerald added.

Last week, the Stefanovic clan, including two-year-old daughter Harper, were seen living it up on billionaire James Packer’s $283 million superyacht in the French Riviera.

Former Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke, 41, also joined in on the fun, and was spotted with his rumored girlfriend, Jasmine’s younger sister Jade Yarbrough, 30.

Stefanovic is currently enjoying some time off-air, with co-host Allison Langdon being joined on the Channel 9 breakfast show by Nine reporter Charles Croucher.

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Categories
Sports

Saints drafting in 2010s assessed

AFLW champion Daisy Pearce has given her assessment of St Kilda’s list and how they drafted through the early-to-mid 2010s.

Pearce has compared the first-round picks the Saints acquired during that time to the players Melbourne selected.

The Demons selected the likes of Christian Petracca, Clayton Oliver, Angus Brayshaw and Christian Salem – who have all become established stars of the competition that played key roles in the club’s drought-breaking 2021 premiership.

As for St Kilda, they didn’t quite nail their first-round selections in that same period.

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“I’m just trying to work out, where are they (the Saints) at with their list?” the Demons AFLW captain told SEN’s Whateley.

“It’s well known that they traded in 2018, 2019 and 2020 and brought players in, but for me, do they have enough young top end draft talent left on their list?

“It’s an interesting comparison with Melbourne because they’re two teams that until last year had had similar droughts, had been down the bottom on the ladder and would’ve had similar opportunities at the draft.

“When you run through the drafts of 2013, 2014, 2015 that the age group of players that should be making up the core of their top end talent right now, a lot of the St Kilda picks just aren’t there.

“I’m not saying this, or I didn’t run the exercise as a matter of trying to attribute blame on anyone because they’ve done really well with some picks with Callum Wilkie, Rowan Marshall and Jack Sinclair being all rookies and even the steal they got with their skipper Jack Steele.

“They’ve had some wins in terms of their list management, but the facts are a lot of their first-round picks just aren’t there.

“In 2013 they got Jack Billings, Luke Dunstan and Blake Acres. Billings through injury at the moment and a bit of form at the start of the year just isn’t playing, and of course Dunstan and Acres are playing at other clubs.

“Paddy McCartin in 2014, playing for Sydney, Jade Gresham pick 18 in 2015, he’s had a torrid run with injury.

“This is what I mean, they’re all different reasons as to why they’re not there, but the facts are they just aren’t out there.

“You look at Melbourne in the same drafts – Christian Salem in 2013, Christian Petracca and Angus Brayshaw in 2014, Clayton Oliver and Sam Weideman in 2015 – there’s the core of their side in Oliver, Petracca, Brayshaw, the players that should be driving this team at the moment and it’s just not on the park at St Kilda.

The Saints will most likely need to win their final two home and away games against Brisbane and Sydney to make the finals.

Pearce was asked if this current St Kilda side is good enough to win a premiership.

“Given that they did go at the trade (period) it did heighten that sense that it had to be now… this is their window with how aggressive they were at trade in that three-year period – 2018 to 2020,” she said.

“It feels like no. I feel like they’ve got aging top end talent in (Paddy) Ryder, who isn’t playing which hasn’t help their cause, (Brad) Hill and those kinds of player, and then the underbelly and those that should be coming through still feels like a while off.

“There does feel like there’s a gap at the moment that they’re going to have to bridge if it’s going to be now. I can’t see it, it feels like not to me.

Pearce continued: “When you look at their list and the great white hope of talent coming up who’s going to carry them, it feels like it’s Max King, doesn’t it?

“He’s their big win when I was talking about their drafting in the last nine years, Max King is the one that you go ‘yes, that’s a win’.

“He’s here, he’s committed, he’s signed a long-term deal and he’s got the talent.

“But that’s not enough.”

After years of trading, the Saints went to the draft in 2021 and selected Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera with their first pick before securing Academy prospects Mitchito Owens and Marcus Windhager.





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Categories
Australia

‘Hi Mum’: Scammers targeting parents by pretending to be children who need help

Scammers are pretending to be children in need of financial help as part of a new messaging scam targeting parents, authorities have warned.

At least 25 victims of the scam, which originated in Europe, have been detected in Victoria this year.

The victims typically receive a WhatsApp or text message from an unknown number impersonating their child.

According to police, messages often say something along the lines of “Hi mum, I’ve changed provider/lost/broken my phone – I’m temporarily using this number for now.”

The offenders eventually request money from the victim, usually using some kind of emergency as their justification for needing the funds.

Most of the offenders are based overseas and are not known to the victims.

a whatsapp message that says "Hi mum, my other phone crashed.  but this is my temporary number"
An example of the scam messages.(Twitter: Scamwatch)

Detective Sergeant John Cheyne from the Cybercrime Squad said such scams pulled on the victim’s heartstrings.

“A child telling you they’ve lost or broken their phone and are in need of financial support is understandably a situation where parents would react without a second thought,” he said in a statement.

“If ever you receive a message from an unknown number asking for money, it’s always worth asking for some kind of verification.

“If they can’t prove who they are or aren’t willing to, don’t transfer the money.”

a message reads "i have a little problem i need to pay a bill but i cannot log into my online banking."
The conversations usually progress for a while before the offender requests money.(Twitter: Scamwatch)

A recent report by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission found scammers stole $1.8 billion from Australians in 2021 — more than double 2020’s total.

Factoring in the estimated number of unreported scams, that figure exceeds $2 billion.

“Often, matters of this nature are under-reported and that can be for a range of reasons, including fear or embarrassment, and sometimes feeling unsure if an offense has occurred,” Sergeant Cheyne said.

“We encourage anyone who has been subjected to a scam such as this to speak to police.”

Anyone who has been a victim of the scam should call their bank immediately and report the incident via ReportCyber.

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Categories
US

Scott Peterson’s attorneys argue for new trial in murders of wife Laci Peterson and unborn son

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Scott Peterson appeared in a California court on Thursday for prosecutors and attorneys to argue their respective cases over whether the convicted killer deserves a new trial in the 2002 murders of his wife and unborn son. After more than five and a half hours, the day’s proceedings closed with the judge asking both sides to submit memorandums, if they like, by mid-September. The jurist has up to 90 days to release her decision from her.

Peterson, now 49, wore a blue coronavirus face mask, handcuffs and dark orange, jail-issued clothing for the Thursday morning hearing in connection to the potential for a retrial in the 20-year-old case that sent shockwaves through the nation: the slayings of his wife, Laci, and their unborn child, Conner.

The hearing stemmed from defense attorneys’ argument that juror Richelle Nice was biased. They argued Nice lied to get on the jury that convicted Peterson in 2004 and put him on death row for the murders of Laci, 27, and the unborn child they planned to name Conner.

I will be deeply surprised if the court overturns the sentence of Scott Peterson

—Ted Williams, renowned attorney and former homicide detective

the California Supreme Court overturned Peterson’s death sentence in 2020 and tasked Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo with deciding if he received a fair trial.

LACI PETERSON DISAPPEARED 19 YEARS AGO: THE TRAGIC CASE THAT SENT FAMILY, PUBLIC ON CRUSADE FOR JUSTICE

Massullo argued that Peterson’s attorneys at the time could have asked follow-up questions to clarify some of Nice’s responses. She noted that there were several inconsistencies in the prospective juror questionnaire in the original trial.

During his arguments to the court on Thursday, Peterson attorney Cliff Gardner said Nice contradicted herself in multiple statements, and later changed her answers to certain questions regarding her personal experiences and feelings. I have argued she was inconsistent and uncooperative.

‘IMPORTANT INCONSISTENCIES’

Scott Peterson in a May 11, 2018, photo from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

Scott Peterson in a May 11, 2018, photo from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
(California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation via AP, File)

Gardner said Nice refused in 2015 to speak to the defense or the prosecution — and only testified in 2022 because she was granted immunity.

I have pointed to “some important inconsistencies in Ms. Nice’s versions of events, evolution of her versions of events from 2020 to 2020.

“That suggests that she hasn’t been as consistent, like in a witness that we’re going to find credible,” Gardner added.

Richelle Nice adjusts her hair as members of the jury speak with the media in the Old San Mateo County Courthouse in Redwood City, California, on Dec. 13, 2004.

Richelle Nice adjusts her hair as members of the jury speak with the media in the Old San Mateo County Courthouse in Redwood City, California, on Dec. 13, 2004.
(AP Photo/Lou Dematteis, File)

He added: “She refused to testify unless she was given immunity from prosecution. This is as far from a cooperating witness, I think, as you can get.”

Gardner also said Nice responded “no” to a question asking whether she could base her decision entirely on the evidence produced in court and not from outside or pre-existing opinions or attitudes. Peterson’s attorney at the time, who is no longer involved with the case, did not follow up on this answer.

A young child stops to look at a makeshift memorial and a missing person's banner offering a $500,000 reward for the safe return of Laci Peterson at East La Loma Park in Modesto, California, on Jan. 4, 2003.

A young child stops to look at a makeshift memorial and a missing person’s banner offering a $500,000 reward for the safe return of Laci Peterson at East La Loma Park in Modesto, California, on Jan. 4, 2003.
(Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

CONVICTED MURDERER SCOTT PETERSON’S CALIFORNIA HEARING OVER POSSIBLE RETRIAL DELAYED DUE TO COVID EXPOSURE

Nice then took steps to contact Peterson after convicting him, Gardner said.

“She gave Conner a nickname, called him ‘Little Man,'” he told the court.She took the extraordinary step after conviction and after having put Mr. Peterson on death row, [of] beginning correspondence with a series of letters. And the court has seen the letters and the letters. Each of them has various focuses, but one of the focuses of every letter is his “Little man.'”

‘REALLY BAD AT FILLING OUT FORMS’

After a trial that attracted nationwide attention, California fertilizer salesman Scott Peterson, 32, was found guilty on Nov. 12, 2004, in the Christmas Eve 2002 murder of his pregnant wife Laci.

After a trial that attracted nationwide attention, California fertilizer salesman Scott Peterson, 32, was found guilty on Nov. 12, 2004, in the Christmas Eve 2002 murder of his pregnant wife Laci.
(REUTERS/Lou Dematteis LD/MR)

David Harris with the Stanislaus County District Attorney’s Office told the court that Nice, when asked why she considered herself a “fair person,” responded: “I know what it’s like to be judged.”

SCOTT PETERSON TO FACE NEW LIFE SENTENCE IN WIFE LACI PETERSON’S KILLING

The prosecution says Nice was a single mom who had never been on a jury before this trial and thought it would be a part of her civic duty.

The 23-page questionnaire had 163 questions, and “she did the best that she could.”

Scott Peterson reported his pregnant wife, Laci, missing on Christmas Eve 2002 in Modesto, California.  Police didn't eye Peterson as the prime suspect at first, until a string of extramarital affairs were discovered.

Scott Peterson reported his pregnant wife, Laci, missing on Christmas Eve 2002 in Modesto, California. Police didn’t eye Peterson as the prime suspect at first, until a string of extramarital affairs were discovered.
(AFP)

Harris says there is no doubt that Nice made mistakes, but that doesn’t make her a liar.

“She’s inconsistent on her answers,” he told the court. “But being wrong does not necessarily make it false or make her a liar. It just might be that she’s really bad at filling out forms.”

Harris later added: “Nice showed sometimes that she could be a little bit confused about things.”

The prosecutor also argued that Nice was not lying when she responded “no” to the original trial’s juror questionnaire about being involved in any lawsuits. A layperson, he said, might misuse or misunderstand legal terminology.

Juror Richelle Nice, center, hugs attorney Gloria Allred after speaking at a news conference after the formal sentencing of Scott Peterson in Redwood City, California, on March 16, 2005.

Juror Richelle Nice, center, hugs attorney Gloria Allred after speaking at a news conference after the formal sentencing of Scott Peterson in Redwood City, California, on March 16, 2005.
(AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

“How many times have we heard jurors sit in the box and say, ‘my house was robbed’?” he said, providing an example for his argument from it. “A house can’t be legally robbed, so they’re wrong. But they’re telling you what they believe is the circumstances in that particular case. It was a burglary. It was not a robbery. So they’re wrong about what the crime is. That does not make them a liar.”

Peterson’s attorneys disputed Harris’ claims by presenting a transcript of Nice acknowledging that what she had filed was a lawsuit.

Harris further pointed to the evidence police had garnered against Peterson during the course of his investigation into Laci’s and Conner’s deaths.

“From the simple fact that Laci and Conner, whose bodies washed ashore 90 miles from their home, but within sight of where Peterson admitted he went fishing on the day that they disappeared; to the research Peterson did on bay currents in the weeks preceding her disappearance; and the fishing boat he bought, but mentioned [to] not one; to Peterson’s inability to explain what he was fishing for in the middle of the day; to his repeated subsequent, serendipitous trips to the marina in the weeks after her disappearance of her; to the many steps he took in the weeks after she went missing – selling her car de ella, exploring leaving the house, turning the nursery into a storage room – that indicated that he already knew Laci and Conner were never coming back, “Harris said.

Nice was an alternate juror who joined the jury deliberations after two original jurors were removed. The panel ultimately found Peterson guilty in 2004 of the first-degree murder in the death of his wife and the second-degree murder of their unborn son. He was sentenced to death in 2005.

Peterson’s attorneys contend, among other things, that Nice sought to be on the jury because she wanted notoriety and for financial reasons. They have also argued that she lied about her lack of bias to get on the jury, and she lied again in a sworn declaration in 2020.

Authorities search the Berkeley Marina, where Laci Peterson's husband Scott said he was fishing at when she went missing.

Authorities search the Berkeley Marina, where Laci Peterson’s husband Scott said he was fishing at when she went missing.
(AP)

Peterson’s attorneys have argued that Nice’s nickname for Conner, “little man,” was among several indications that she was biased against their client.

SCOTT PETERSON’S FORMER DEFENSE COUNSEL TOUTS NEW EVIDENCE: ‘I REALLY BELIEVE IN SCOTT’S INNOCENCE’

And a former fellow juror testified in March that Nice walked into the jury room during deliberations in 2004 and blurted out “that he should basically pay for killing ‘little man.'”

Nice testified earlier that she held no bias against Peterson until after she heard the evidence that he dumped his wife’s body into San Francisco Bay on Christmas Eve 2002.

Nice failed to disclose during jury selection that she sought a restraining order while pregnant in 2000, saying she “really fears for her unborn child” because of threats from her boyfriend’s ex-girlfriend.

She said in her sworn statement 20 years later that she didn’t “feel ‘victimized’ the way the law might define that term.”

‘NOT GOING TO BE EASY’

Renowned attorney and former homicide detective Ted Williams, who has been following the ongoing proceedings, told Fox News Digital during Thursday’s lunch break that the defense team has “a high bar to get Scott Peterson’s sentence overturned.”

“I believe here that even if you had a juror who did not properly answer on the questionnaire, that in and of itself is not enough to get a sentence overturned,” said Williams, who is also a Fox News contributor. “Unless they can show … that she, by virtue of what she had to say, was able to influence all the jurors other than just [by] participating as a juror, that also will not get this verdict overturned.”

Williams said he was “deeply concerned” and had personal experience as an attorney in trying to have a jury verdict tossed.

“They have got to show that what this juror did prejudiced the case against Scott Peterson so that he was found guilty predicated and based upon anything she specifically did,” he went on. “That’s not going to be easy.”

The evidence against Peterson, Williams said, was “overwhelming.”

Scott Peterson is lucky because everything that I know about this case leads me to believe that Scott Peterson should be on death row rather than serving the rest of his life in a cell,” he added.

Williams said he believed each side was putting on “a very good case.” He called Gardner “vociferous” in making his points about him, and said he was “dealing with the law as best he can.”

He added: “I will be deeply surprised if the court overturns the sentence of Scott Peterson and gives him a new trial.”

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Fox News’ Laura Prabucki and The Associated Press contributed to this report.