Ever since Kathleen Peterson was found at the bottom of a staircase in 2001, her mysterious death has been the subject of much media attention. In 2018, Academy Award-winning French filmmaker Jean-Xavier de Lestrade released The Staircase, a 13-episode Netflix documentary investigating the real causes of Peterson's passing. Now, HBO Max has turned the story into a scripted drama, also called The Staircase and starring Toni Colette as Kathleen Peterson. Colin Firth plays her husband, Michael Peterson, the man who was accused of her murder.
Lestrade's access to Michael Peterson means the HBO Max adaptation has a wealth of source material to draw upon. The documentary director told Metro that he began filming Peterson in February 2002 and didn't wrap until 2018. But what's the real story behind The Staircase?
Here's what you need to know about Kathleen Peterson's death, Michael Peterson's trial, and what's happened in the two decades since the case first hit the news.
Who was Kathleen Peterson?
Toni Collette's emotional portrayal is bound to create even more interest in the real Kathleen Peterson. Born Kathleen Hunt on February 21, 1953, she graduated first in her class from J.P. McCaskey High School and—reports Indy Week—"became the first female student accepted into Duke’s engineering school." A successful career as an executive at the communications firm Nortel followed.
It was in 1986 that Kathleen first met novelist Michael Peterson. According to Esquire, the couple moved in together three years later. Kathleen married Michael in 1997, and the couple proceeded to merge their two families.
Michael and Kathleen Peterson.
Kathleen has one biological daughter, Caitlin Atwater, from her first marriage. Meanwhile, Michael has two sons—Todd and Clayton Peterson—from his first marriage. Michael also adopted Margaret and Martha Ratliff, the daughters of his late friend, Elizabeth Ratliff, whose death would later come to play a part in his trial.
By all accounts, Michael and Kathleen were believed to have a happy marriage and blended family. As one of their friends told CBS News in 2003, "They had all the appearances and trappings of happiness. Totally compatible with one another."
What happened to Kathleen Peterson?
Just after 2:30 a.m. on December 9, 2001, Michael Peterson called 911 to report that he'd found his wife unconscious at the bottom of the stairs in their home, according to The News & Observer. Michael placed two 911 calls, and emergency services attended the scene soon after. During his initial 911 call, Michael said that Kathleen was still breathing, per official court documents. However, when he called back minutes later, he claimed that she was no longer breathing. Kathleen was 48 at the time of her death.
Per ABC News, Michael reported watching America's Sweethearts earlier that evening with his wife, then drinking some wine and sitting by the pool. When Kathleen went inside to bed, he reportedly stayed outside to smoke his pipe. When he finally went indoors, "he said he found his wife, crumpled and bloody and barely breathing at the bottom of the stairs," per ABC News. As viewers of both the documentary and HBO Max's adaptation will quickly learn, the crime scene looked extremely shocking.
Per ABC News, "From the beginning Peterson maintained that Kathleen had simply slipped on the stairs in a tragic accident after drinking wine and taking valium." However, NBC News reported that a medical examiner ruled that Kathleen's blood alcohol level was very low at the time of her death, so much so that she'd have been able to pass a breathalyzer test.
Colin Firth as Michael Peterson and Toni Collette as Kathleen Peterson in HBO Max’s The Staircase.
Members of law enforcement were reportedly suspicious of the scene at the Peterson residence in Durham, North Carolina, with NBC News reporting, "there was so much blood—everywhere—on the victim, splattered up the stairwell—that they couldn’t rule out foul play." In fact, it was reportedly the volume of blood found near the body and the lacerations on the back of Kathleen's head that made Michael an early suspect in his wife's death, via Court TV News.
Kathleen's autopsy later concluded that the manner of her death was homicide, due to "multiple blunt force impacts to [the] back of the head." As reported by CNN Law Center, medical examiner Dr. Kenneth Snell had initially marked Kathleen's death as an "accident" caused by falling down the stairs. However, as Snell told jurors, "the seven wounds he observed while watching other forensic pathologists perform the autopsy were a major reason he changed his initial finding of 'accident' to homicide from a beating."
Michael Peterson was indicted on a charge of first-degree murder on December 20, 2001, via WRAL.com. The defendant had hired criminal defense attorney David Rudolf two days prior, following extensive searches and seizures taking place at his home.
What really happened in the Peterson household in the early hours of December 9 will likely always remain a mystery. However, HBO Max's The Staircase gives viewers the opportunity to reexamine the circumstances surrounding Kathleen's death, while also delving into Michael's trial.
What happened at Michael Peterson's trial?
By the time Michael went to trial, Lestrade was already filming what would become his epic 13-episode documentary series. "When we started shooting in February 2002 and when David Rudolf gave us access and the judge gave us access in the court room and we started to shoot and shoot and shoot then we realized how big it could be," the director told Metro in 2018.
Colin Firth as Michael Peterson in The Staircase.
Jury selection began in May 2003, and the State vs. Michael Peterson trial started on July 1, 2003, via The News & Observer. While the prosecution argued that Michael most likely murdered Kathleen with a fireplace blow poke that was deemed missing from their Durham home at the time of her death, Michael's defense attorney argued that Kathleen died from a fall down the stairs.
The prosecution put forth several possible motives for Kathleen's murder. As reported by Lawrence Journal-World, "Prosecutors introduced evidence of [Michael] Peterson’s bisexuality and attempts to hire a male prostitute," suggesting that an argument could have broken out between husband and wife over the revelation.
A male escort even testified in court that he'd engaged in an email exchange with Michael mere months before Kathleen's death, with the pair planning to meet in person, via CNN. However, that meeting never transpired, and it's unclear if Kathleen knew about her husband's sexuality or not. Upon seizing Michael's computer, investigators found as many as 2000 images of naked men, along with email exchanges between Michael and a male escort, via NBC News. As noted by the publication, it was suggested that, while waiting for a work email on the night of her death, Kathleen could have discovered Michael's secret correspondence and the illicit imagery.
Another motive suggested by the prosecution hinged on the Peterson family's tenuous financial situation. While Michael was a novelist and newspaper columnist of varying success, Kathleen was an executive at communications firm Nortel, earning around $150,000 per year, via NBC News. But in spite of Kathleen's lucrative salary, the Peterson family had reportedly gotten itself into dire straits, with the matriarch fearing redundancy at her workplace.
Per Lawrence Journal-World, the Petersons had accrued "credit card debt of $143,000" at the time of Kathleen's death. And as CNN reported, Kathleen apparently had a $1.8 million life insurance policy, and prosecutors argued that Michael might have killed his wife for financial gain.
Colin Firth as Michael Peterson in The Staircase.
Another important element of Michael's case focused on blood spatter found at the scene. Forensic expert Dr. Henry Lee testified that the blood found at the scene was indicative of a fall. However, SBI expert Duane Deaver claimed "based on the blood spatter on her husband's shorts and shoes, the wearer was standing directly over Kathleen Peterson when she was killed," via The News & Observer. Deaver further made a convincing argument that the missing blow poke could have been a possible murder weapon. (The infamous blow poke was mysteriously found in the Peterson's garage during the trial, without any evidence of blood on it).
But perhaps the most shocking element of the trial revolved around the mother of Michael Peterson's two adopted children.
Who was Elizabeth Ratliff, and how did her 1985 death become part of Michael Peterson's trial?
Before Michael met Kathleen in 1986, he was living in Germany with his first wife, Patricia Sue, and their two sons. The Petersons were close friends with Elizabeth Ratliff, who had two young daughters, Martha and Margaret.
In November 1985, Ratliff was found dead at the bottom of the staircase in her home. According to WRAL.com, the initial report suggested that she'd "died of a stroke," but that she was also found to have "several deep cuts to her scalp."
Once the strange coincidence of the unusual death was discovered, Elizabeth's body was exhumed as part of Michael's trial, and an autopsy concluded that she had died as the result of a "homicidal assault," and not a stroke, per The News & Observer. Per the publication, some reports have suggested that Michael Peterson was the last person to see Elizabeth alive, but Michael's lawyer pointed out inconsistencies with this theory. Regardless of the truth, the similarities between Kathleen and Ratliff's deaths didn't help Michael's case.
What happened to Michael Peterson?
On October 10, 2003, Michael Peterson was sentenced to life without parole for Kathleen's murder, via The New York Times. Soon after entering prison, Michael was injured in a fight, something HBO Max's adaptation explores in depth.
While Ratliff's daughters stood by their adopted father throughout his trial and imprisonment, Kathleen's daughter, Caitlin Atwater sided with the prosecution. As well as being awarded her mother's life insurance payout, Atwater won a $25 million wrongful death suit against Michael Peterson.
In December 2011, after spending eight years in prison for Kathleen's murder, Michael was granted a new trial. As reported by CNN, a judge ruled that the jury had been misled by former SBI agent Duane Deaver's bloodstain evidence; Deaver was also fired in 2011.
Then 68-years-old, Michael was released from prison pending a new trial, and after posting a $300,000 bond, via The News & Observer. Michael was required to remain under house arrest with a strict curfew, while wearing an ankle monitor.
Where is Michael now?
In February 2017, to avoid going to trial again, Michael Peterson entered an Alford plea, which "acknowledged that prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him of voluntary manslaughter and accepted the guilty verdict for the felony without admitting guilt," via The News & Observer.
Michael was sentenced to 64 to 86 months in prison; having already spent 89 months in prison, he was deemed a free man. At a news conference, Michael said, "Accepting this Alford plea has been the hardest thing I've ever done," via ABC11, as he had hoped to clear his name.
Michael Peterson and David Rudolf in court in 2017.
Michael continues to live in Durham, North Carolina, having moved into a two-bedroom condo, via The Independent. Michael sold the house he shared with Kathleen in 2004, and a subsequent owner re-sold the property for $1.6 million in 2020.
Over the years, multiple theories regarding the cause of Kathleen's death persisted. For instance, one theory suggested that the lacerations on the victim's head were caused by an owl, as "a microscopic feather was found in Kathleen Peterson's hand with some of her hair," via The News & Observer. Another theorist suggested that Kathleen could have been "fatally banged up by a banister-mounted chair lift." However, with Michael's Alford plea, the case has legally been put to rest.
WATCH THE STAIRCASE ON HBO MAX
Amy Mackelden
Contributing Writer
Amy Mackelden is a freelance writer, editor, and disability activist. Her bylines include Harper's BAZAAR, Nicki Swift, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, ELLE, The Independent, Bustle, Healthline, and HelloGiggles. She co-edited The Emma Press Anthology of Illness, and previously spent all of her money on Kylie Cosmetics.