A California head prosecutor won’t look for another capital punishment for Scott Peterson, not exactly a year after the state Supreme Court turned around his death penalty sentence for the 2002 slaughtering of his better half Laci Peterson and their unborn child, Conner.

This news comes a month after the 48-year-old showed up in Court for a meeting. An appointed authority allowed his legal advisors 60 days to give a revelation solicitation to attempt to get a retrial waiver  for the capital punishment stage. Not long from now, a better court judge is normal than rule on whether Scott will get another preliminary on the charges following the Supreme Court’s inversion of his capital punishment the previous summer because of issues with jury choice. He has been waiting for capital punishment since 2005 and keeps up his guiltlessness.

“The People have met and talked about with the casualties’ family what another punishment preliminary would include, according to their privileges under Marsy’s Law,” read court records from the Stanislaus County DA’s Office documented on Friday, May 28, and acquired by E! News. “While the group of Laci and Conner accept there is no uncertainty that respondent is blameworthy of these violations and that his lead warrants capital punishment and litigant is meriting the discipline of death, the family has chosen this interaction is too excruciating to even think about suffering indeed.”

The archives proceeded, “The choice to acknowledge the sentence for the respondent of Life Without the Possibility of Parole followed conversations with the group of the people in question, Laci and Conner; they know that, if the punishment stage isn’t retried, the litigant will be condemned to Life Without the Possibility of Parole. Consequently, notice is given that the District Attorney’s Office won’t re-attempt the punishment stage for litigant Scott Lee Peterson. Likewise, the People consciously demand that this Court put it down on the calendar for litigant’s condemning.”

In 2004, a jury saw Scott as liable for first-degree murder for the demise of Lacy, who was 27 years of age and eight months pregnant at that point, and second-degree murder for the passing of their unborn child, Conner. Examiners said he murdered them at their home in Modesto, Calif. and afterwards unloaded their bodies in the San Francisco Bay. Elegant was accounted for missing on Christmas Eve 2002. Her body cleaned up aground months after the fact. Following his homicide conviction, Scott was condemned to death in quite possibly the most high-profile murder preliminaries in U.S. history.