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Accused cop: Wife asked for divorce regularly

An Illinois police officer who resigned after being named a suspect in the disappearance of his fourth wife said Wednesday that she had asked him for a divorce — but he thought it was due to hormones.
Police Officers Wife
An undated photo provided by her family shows Stacy Peterson, of Bolingbrook, Ill., and her husband, Drew Peterson, with their children. AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

An Illinois police officer who resigned after being named a suspect in the disappearance of his fourth wife said Wednesday that she had asked him for a divorce — but he thought it was due to hormones.

Drew Peterson told NBC’s “Today” that his wife fell into a deep depression after her sister died of cancer, and had been taking medication. They often had fights after that, he said.

“I’m not trying to be funny, but Stacy would ask me for divorce after her sister died on a regular basis,” Peterson said. “It was based on her menstrual cycle.”

Stacy Peterson, 23, was last seen Oct. 28. Authorities say the case is a potential homicide investigation and have identified her 53-year-old husband as a suspect.

Drew Peterson was a sergeant in the Chicago suburb of Bolingbrook until this week, when the department said he submitted a resignation letter, effective immediately.

Peterson believes his wife has left him for another man, and said he has no plans to look for her because he thinks she left willfully.

“Why would I look for somebody who I don’t believe is missing? She’s just gone. She’s where she wants to be,” Peterson told NBC.

Third wife's body exhumed
The interview aired a day after the body of Peterson’s third wife, Kathleen Savio, was exhumed in Illinois as authorities look for clues about how she died.

Savio was found dead in her bathtub in 2004, her hair soaked in blood from a head wound, just before the couple’s divorce settlement was finalized. The death was ruled an accidental drowning, but investigators now say evidence suggests that someone killed Savio and tried to make it look like an accident.

Peterson downplayed any similarities between the two cases, but said his relationships with both women were troubled. Both suffered from emotional problems, he said, but were beautiful and exciting when he first met them. He denied he had anything to do with the two cases.

“I can look right in your eye and say I had nothing to do with either of those incidents,” he said.

Peterson acknowledged that there were mysterious circumstances surrounding Savio’s death, but said he didn’t know what, if anything, the exhumation would accomplish.

“It’s a shame her rest in peace has to be disturbed for something like this,” he told NBC.

Stacy Peterson’s family has said she feared her husband, was making plans to divorce him and would not have willingly left her two young children. Savio’s relatives have long suspected she didn’t drown accidentally.

Peterson, who had been suspended without pay before resigning, said he agreed to the interview because he believed both women’s families and the media were targeting him.

“I think my silence has basically painted me guilty in the media,” he said.

Peterson has told his two youngest children — aged two and four — that “basically, mom has gone on a vacation.” The two teenage sons he fathered with Savio also live with him.

He also pleaded with his wife to return: “Come home,” he said. “Tell people where you are.”