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2/28/22



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A juror at Scott Peterson’s 2004 trial broke down in court Monday while being grilled over whether she profited off the infamous slay case and purposely lied on a questionnaire to get on the panel.
Richelle Nice — dubbed “Strawberry Shortcake” for her flaming red hair at trial — is under fire from the convicted killer’s lawyers, who are demanding a retrial on the grounds of alleged juror misconduct.
They claim Nice, who later co-authored a book about the case — and now has brunette locks with blond highlights — was biased against Peterson and lied to get on the jury.
On her second day on the stand in a San Mateo, Calif., courtroom, Nice was overcome with emotion when Peterson’s lawyer Pat Harris asked her about a letter she wrote the convict while he was on death row.
Harris said that in that letter, Nice said she was upset that “others got rich” after the trial. It’s not clear who the “others” were.
When Nice was then asked about her alleged profiteering, she defiantly shot back, “I didn’t get rich!” before Judge Anne-Christine Massullo stopped the line of questioning. 
Nice then started to cry on the stand while Harris, Massullo and prosecutors met privately in the judge’s chambers.
Nice was among the 12 jurors who found Peterson guilty of killing his pregnant wife, Laci.
Nice and six other jurors went on to co-author the book, “We, the Jury: Deciding the Scott Peterson Case,” which was released in 2007.
She has admitted she did not disclose on the Peterson jury questionnaire that she obtained a restraining order in 2001 against her then-boyfriend and a woman he’d been involved with.
On Friday, Harris had asked Nice how she responded to the question that asked, “Have you ever been a victim of a crime?”
On Monday, Nice maintained she didn’t lie on the jury questionnaire when she didn’t include her own domestic-violence incidents.
“When I filled out that questionnaire, honestly and truly, nothing of this ever crossed my mind,” Nice said. “I’ll say it again — I didn’t write it on the questionnaire because it never crossed my mind. I didn’t do it intentionally.”
Harris also asked her about a TV interview with Dr. Mehmet Oz in which she said, “The balls on that guy,” in reaction to Peterson walking into the courtroom.
Nice responded to Harris, “I don’t remember.”
During cross-examination by prosecutor David Harris, Nice said she did not participate in writing the book but was only interviewed by two writers.
When asked if she had any bias against Peterson when she was selected as a juror in his case, Nice replied, “Nope.”
The prosecutor asked, “Did you decide the case based on just the evidence that was in the courtroom and not some preconceived notion that you brought with you?”

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The naughty negatives, which belonged to Lieutenant William Noel Morgan, were never printed but his family, who stumbled across them seven decades later, got them turned into digital images and were stunned
HIDDEN in a biscuit tin, the naughty negatives lay undisturbed for more than seven decades.
They belonged to Lieutenant William Noel Morgan, who never had them printed and kept them a closely guarded secret.
His family only learned of their existence a few years ago when his granddaughter, Fran Gluck, stumbled across the tin and opened it.
Many were innocent pictures of army life and her grandfather with his lost love — the young French girlfriend his family discouraged him from marrying.
But dozens of others show British officers inside a French brothel during World War One.
In one, Lt Morgan leans against a mantelpiece while on the phone, in front of racy drawings on the walls.
In another, similar drawings are pinned up around a battered old piano played by a young officer.
They are said to be the only pictures ever to come to light that were taken inside a brothel reserved for British officers during the conflict.
These are the women history never speaks of — and yet for many fallen heroes they were the last people to show them love and comfort before they died during the Great War.
One corporal recalls the queue outside a brothel as being like football fans waiting to see a cup tie.
Others hoped to pick up a sexually transmitted infection (STI) with the ensuing month spent in hospital delaying the horrors of the front line.
Mindful of social divides there were even “blue lamp” brothels for officers and “red lamp” ones for lower ranks.
Now a short film, War’s Whores, sheds light on the forgotten women who — with the Army’s secret approval — provided an unconventional morale boost to soldiers on the Western Front .
When war broke out in 1914, Lord Kitchener, the Secretary of State for War, issued a leaflet to troops warning them to “keep constantly on your guard against any excesses . . . you may find temptations both in wine and women. You must entirely resist both”.
Yet his words, and the warnings of graphic posters and other literature, fell on deaf ears.
Private Frank Richards, who was called up a day after war broke out, said Kitchener’s guidance “may as well have not been issued for all the notice we took”.
Historian Dr Clare Makepeace told The Sun: “The British Army tended to accept local sexual customs of where they were stationed, so that’s why the British kept the brothels ‘in bounds’ for troops until 1918 .”
Young men, far from home and their loved ones and thrust into the living hell of war, were often desperate for human contact.
Thousands of women are believed to have been sex workers during the conflict. Some in legalised brothels, known as maisons tolérées, in towns across northern France.
Dr Makepeace said: “Regulated brothels have been around in France since the mid-19th century but during the war they flourished in number.
“For some, the brothels were an escape from the carnage of the trenches. Some wanted to lose their virginity before it was too late. It’s a heartbreaking illustration of how the war ripped these men from life when they were so young.” In his autobiography Goodbye To All That, poet and novelist Captain Robert Graves wrote: “There were no restraints in France; these boys had money to spend and knew that they stood a good chance of being killed within a few weeks anyhow. They did not want to die virgins.”
Yet the subject of “war whores” is so taboo that only a handful of men have spoken about their brothel visits.
Dr Makepeace, an Honorary Research Fellow at Birkbeck, University of London, spent years trawling through personal accounts of soldiers and officers from World War One.
Her work inspired the short film War’s Whores, by poet Hollie McNish. It was commissioned by London’s Roundhouse as part of its digital art project Cause And Effect, to mark the centenary of the end of World War One .
Dr Makepeace came across Corporal Jack Wood’s diary, which describes the “great crowd of fellows” outside one brothel that was “about 30 yards in length” and says they were “waiting just like a crowd waiting for a football Cup tie in Blighty”.
He wrote of the scene inside: “There were seven young women, I should say by appearance from 28 to 40, made up in the finest of flimsy silk dresses and then showing the daintiest of lingerie, I suppose for attraction.
“From the passage came an entrance to a flight of stairs. Here stood Madame taking a franc for admission.
“I afterwards found out you paid the lady of choice any sum you cared from a franc upwards.”
Such queues were not unusual. Before one major offensive, 300 men lined up outside one brothel. Other prostitutes would linger outside, plying their trade on the streets, as well as in cafés and bars .
One report says that around 171,000 British troops visited brothels in a single street in Le Havre in a year.
Even in war, there were strict class divides — Cpl Wood and Lt Morgan would never have visited the same brothel. There were the more upmarket “blue lamps” for officers and the cruder “red lamps” frequented by the lower ranks.
Dr Makepeace explained: “It was acceptable for British officers to visit brothels but they weren’t allowed to flaunt it.
This gives some insight into why Lt Morgan, who served with the 175th Company of the Royal Engineers, part of a tunnelling unit that burrowed beneath No Man’s Land to blow up German trenches, was keen to keep the negatives hidden.
Dr Makepeace also discovered just how far the class divide stretched.
Despite refusing to fraternise in the “red lamps”, British officers were happy to take over the Germans’ high-class brothels towards the end of the war.
She said: “It surprised me British officers were more prepared to share the same prostitutes as the German officers but they weren’t prepared to share them with their own, lower-ranking men.
“Class was dividing men more than nationality, even at a time of war.”
Brothel workers had to have regular medical inspections, but even so STIs were rife. In 1916 one in five of all hospital admissions of British and British Crown troops in France and Belgium were for treatment for an STI. Around 150,000 British troops were admitted with venereal disease while stationed in France.
Some brothels employed elderly women to check men on entering in a bid to curb the spread of STIs. But for some, catching a disease was the whole purpose of their visit.
Dr Makepeace said: “There is evidence that some infected prostitutes earned more than uninfected prostitutes because men wanted to catch STIs so they could have an escape from the trenches, which is quite an upsetting indicator of the lengths they would go to.
“This subject can be read in terms of how awful life was in the First World War for these men but these women were also doing incredibly unenviable work and suffered horrible conditions.”
Many of the female sex workers were illiterate and she has so far been unable to find anything written from their perspective.
She said: “The closest I’ve got are the photos found in a biscuit tin.
“These photos are vital because they give us an insight and a more rounded picture of what life was really like on the Western Front.”
Talking about the images his wife’s grandfather, known by his initials “WN”, kept hidden for so long, Jo Gluck concluded: “Maybe WN decided they were better not seen — partly because of the images in the brothel but also because they contained pictures of the young woman he was discouraged from marrying.
“I see no reason why they should not be published now. They show another side of the war, which should also be remembered.”
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A prostitute waits for customers along a road of the Bois de Boulogne in Paris, August 28, 2013.

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A prostitute waits for customers along a road of the Bois de Boulogne in Paris, August 28, 2013.

REUTERS/Christian Hartmann
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