
SoCal man who killed wife and tossed her severed legs in trash gets 15 years to life in prison
On Friday, one of the region's most disturbing cold cases concluded when 72-year-old Jack Potter was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison for the murder of his wife, Laurie Potter.
Potter pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and admitted to smothering his 54-year-old wife to death in February, prosecutors said.
For almost 20 years, prosecutors say, Potter was living large and profiting off of Laurie's death while pretending she was still alive. He fraudulently opened credit cards in her name and used family court to sell their home in Temecula and pocket the profits, prosecutors said.
He met a new girlfriend at a strip club and gifted her a Hummer SUV and a ski boat, leased her an apartment and gave her a credit card with a $30,000 limit, prosecutors said. The girlfriend eerily shared his wife's name.
Potter expressed remorse during Friday's hearing, apologizing and saying he loved his wife.
'I let my emotions get the better of me that one time,' he said. 'I don't know why. It just happened and I'm sorry.'
A maintenance worker at the Country Hills Apartment complex in Rancho San Diego had discovered Laurie's legs in October 2003, but law enforcement was unable to identify her and the case went unsolved.
That was until 2020 when new DNA investigative techniques led to a breakthrough in the haunting cold case. Detectives ran the crime scene DNA through a national database and matched it to a distant relative.
Detectives then progressively asked closer relatives to share their DNA until — 20 people and six months later — they reached Laurie's adult son. His sample allowed them to identify Laurie and a subsequent investigation yielded evidence connecting her husband to the crime, according to a 2021 news release from the San Diego County Sheriff's Office.
When Potter was arrested in 2021, Laurie's family, though unaware of her whereabouts, thought she was still alive, according to the Sheriff's Office.
She was never reported missing and without genetic testing — the same technology used to identity the Golden State Killer and crack scores of cold cases — this murder would have probably gone unsolved, the Sheriff's Office said in the news release.
Laurie's son, John Carlson, said during Potter's sentencing hearing that he'd lost touch with his mother, but had tried to contact her and renew their relationship.
Carlson said Potter told him his mother 'just wanted to be alone, which unfortunately I believed. And this really hurts to this day.'
Laurie's case marked the first time the San Diego County Sheriff's Office attempted to identify a murder victim using investigative genealogy.
'This case is a stark reminder that the pursuit of justice never stops,' San Diego County Dist. Atty. Summer Stephan said in a statement Friday. 'And neither does the grief of those who lose someone to violence. Today, we honor Laurie's memory and stand with her family in their long-awaited moment of justice.'
City News Service contributed to this report.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Illegal migrant truck driver in deadly Florida crash failed English, road sign test — despite getting licenses from 2 sanctuary states
The Indian immigrant truck driver accused of killing three people in a crash when he made an illegal U-turn across a Florida highway badly flunked English fluency and road sign tests following the smash-up, the US Department of Transportation revealed. Harjinder Singh answered just two of 12 questions correctly when being tested for English language proficiency by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration after the April 12 crash. And when asked to read highway signs and their meanings, Singh could only identify one out of four signs shown to him, the US Department of Transportation announced Tuesday. Advertisement 3 Harjinder Singh answered just two of 12 questions correctly when being tested for English language proficiency by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration after the April 12 crash. Despite these failures, Singh – who is believed to have entered the US illegally in 2018 — had been granted commercial driver's licenses in California and Washington state. 3 Emergency responders arrive to the scene of the crash. St. Lucie County Sheriff's Office Advertisement 'This crash was a preventable tragedy directly caused by reckless decisions and compounded by despicable failures,' Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a statement. 3 Singh is seen behind the wheel driving the semi-truck that causes the deadly crash. gurubatth5/TikTok 'Non-enforcement and radical immigration policies have turned the trucking industry into a lawless frontier, resulting in unqualified foreign drivers improperly acquiring licenses to operate 40-ton vehicles.' Advertisement Singh is accused of sparking the deadly accident after he attempted an illegal U-turn through a highway cut-through marked 'Official Use Only,' with his massive tractor trailer blocking the four-lane highway. A minivan was left without a chance to brake or turn, and hurtled at full speed into the trailer. All three people in the van were killed, while footage from inside Singh's cab showed him apparently unmoved by the carnage unfolding outside.
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Silver Alert issued for missing 69-year-old man in Pierce County, deputies say
A 69-year-old man has been missing from his home since early Tuesday morning, according to the Pierce County Sheriff's Office. David Quintana left his home at around 2 a.m. He called his family around 7 a.m. saying he was confused and did not know where he was, the Sheriff's Office wrote on X. The post said that Quintana's phone shows he may be in the Fife area. Quintana is 5-foot-10 with gray/brown hair and has brown eyes, according to the Silver Alert. Quintana was wearing a white shirt, grey shorts and slippers. The alert said Quintana was driving a navy blue 2024 Mazda CX-90 with Washington license plate that says CMS0738. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
St. Pete man charged after harvesting goliath grouper
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (WFLA) — A St. Petersburg man was charged after illegally harvesting a goliath grouper, according to an arrest affidavit from the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office. Malcom Woods, 63, 'willfully harvested and kept' a goliath grouper he caught in the waters off the Sunshine Skyway Bridge on Sunday. Have you seen me? FWC asking for help documenting rare, shimmering snake Goliath groupers were overfished throughout the 20th century and suffered large population losses as a result. Harvesting the fish was prohibited in 1990, but the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission began allowing limited recreational harvesting in 2022. Harvesting is only allowed from March 1 to May 31, and anglers have to hope to get one of the 200 permits available each year. Woman bitten by alligator while hiking in Florida Even if you do get a permit, which are only awarded through a random lottery, you're limited to only one fish, which has to be between 24 and 36 inches. In Woods' case, he was fishing in the off-season, did not have a permit and caught a fish that was too small to be harvested. He was charged with two misdemeanors: possession of a goliath grouper and possession of a goliath grouper during closed season. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword