L.A. Innocence Project is looking into case of convicted murderer Scott Peterson

FILE - Scott Peterson, center, with defense attorneys Mark Geragos, left, and Pat Harris listens to judge Alfred A. Delucchi in a Redwood City, Calif., courtroom, Thursday, July 29, 2004. On Monday, August 24, 2020, the California Supreme Court overturned the 2005 death sentence for Peterson in the slaying of his pregnant wife. The court says prosecutors may try again for the same sentence if they wish in the high-profile case. It upheld his 2004 conviction of murdering Laci Peterson, who was eight months pregnant with their unborn son. (Al Golub/The Modesto Bee,Pool)
Scott Peterson, center, sits with defense attorneys in a Redwood City courtroom on July 29, 2004. (Al Golub / Associated Press)

The Los Angeles Innocence Project is now representing Scott Peterson, who was convicted almost two decades ago of murdering his wife and unborn child in a highly publicized trial that transfixed the nation.

“We are very excited that the incredibly talented attorneys at the L.A. Innocence Project are lending their considerable expertise to helping prove that Scott Peterson is innocent," Peterson's attorney, Pat Harris, said Thursday in a statement to The Times.

Harris said his firm would not be granting interviews "at this time."

The Los Angeles Innocence Project at Cal State L.A. works to free individuals believed to have been wrongly convicted and incarcerated, with an emphasis on using forensic and scientific data.

In a statement, the organization confirmed its representation of Peterson — saying it "is investigating his claim of actual innocence" — but declined additional comment.

Neither the Innocence Project nor Peterson's attorney immediately responded when asked to elaborate further on the case.

Read more: Man wrongly convicted of Inglewood murder freed after 38 years by DNA evidence

Attorneys with the Innocence Project were recently instrumental in securing the release of Maurice Hastings, who was wrongly convicted of murder in 1988, and had been in prison for nearly 40 years.

The project's involvement is the latest development in the Peterson case, which caused a media firestorm in the early 2000s.

Laci Peterson, 27, vanished from the couple's Modesto home on Christmas Eve in 2002. She was pregnant at the time.

Her body washed up on the shores of San Francisco Bay the following spring.

Prosecutors said Scott Peterson killed his wife and dumped her body into the bay afterward. He was convicted in 2004 and initially sentenced to death.

Read more: California's top court overturns Scott Peterson's death sentence

But in 2020, the California Supreme Court overturned the death sentence for Peterson because prospective jurors who opposed capital punishment but were willing to impose it were removed from consideration.

Peterson was resentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in 2021. He was moved off death row the following year.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.