[Updated at 5:19 p.m. ET] You can read full coverage of the guilty verdict in the Drew Peterson trial here.
[Updated at 4:57 p.m. ET] Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow told reporters that the journey to a guilty verdict has been a long one and he is confident it will stand against an appeal.
"This is a very sobering moment. I want to thank the jury," he said. "Their verdict is a transcendental one and makes a statement against violence against women."
Glasgow said that Peterson's actions represented a growing problem in the country.
"The defendant in this case was a coward and a bully," he said.
Glasgow said they have to catch their breath and then they will review evidence "aggressively" in the disappearance of Stacy Peterson.
HLN: 'I want to find Stacy Peterson's body," Nancy Grace says
He told reporters that Peterson's attitude as someone who was untouchable because of his badge and his gun led him to believe nobody would ever take him on.
"We took him on and we won," he said. "This defendant brutally killed Kathleen Savio."
[Updated at 4:53 p.m. ET] Will County Sheriff's Office Deputy Chief Ken Kaupas came out of the courthouse to read a statement from the jury.
The jurors thanked the court, the judge, the bailiffs and the sheriff's office and said they took their responsibility seriously.
"We have reached a decision we believe is just," the jurors said according to the statement.
[Updated at 4:35 p.m. ET] Drew Peterson's lawyer said they faced an uphill battle going into the trial and they will begin appealing the case soon.
“It was a stacked deck,” attorney Joel Brodsky said, referring to hearsay evidence that he didn’t believe should have been allowed in.
"You know what they say, a conviction is the first step in a successful appeal," Brodsky said.
Brodsky said he still believed that Peterson was completely innocent of the charges.
"This case was based almost entirely on hearsay," he said, adding that there was never a case with more issues for appeal than Peterson's. "There’s a reason why for hundreds of years its been excluded."
Brodsky added that the atmosphere around the courthouse, continuous cheers, showed that there was a large amount of bias before the trial even began.
"When somebody is unpopular and going through a divorce… and people coming out of the woodwork … what are you going to do," he said.
Brodsky said that earlier he had spoken with Drew Peterson who said that whatever the verdict was, he was glad with how his lawyers did.
"He thanked us for our service," Brodsky said. "Drew is absolutely fine."
[Updated at 4:24 p.m. ET] Stacy Peterson's sister told reporters that she was numb after Drew Peterson was found guilty of murdering Kathleen Savio.
"It hasn't really hit me yet," Cassandra Cales said.
She said that as Peterson heard the words guilty, the only thing she could think was "Game over, Drew."
Cales said that searches for her sister, who has been missing since 2007, are still going strong. She hoped this guilty verdict might be the first step towards justice for Stacy.
"Drew’s put away, maybe someone will come forward who knows something about my sister, that they feel safe to talk now," she said.
Cales said that she always feels her sister's spirit around her and she felt it today in the courtroom.
"I love you and I miss you and I'm never going to give up on finding you," Cales said, when she was asked what she would say to her sister if she could.
[Updated at 4:14 p.m. ET] Kathleen Savio's nephew hailed the verdict as a culmination of eight long years for his family
"Today we finally got what we wanted," Michael Lisak told reporters.
Lisak said he was worried up until the very moment the verdict was announced. He hopes the verdict will help bring hope to other women.
"Today is a day for battered women. My aunt's voice was heard through the grave," Lisak said. "She did not stop after she was murdered. For all you battered women out there, don’t stop, someone will listen."
[Updated at 4:07 p.m. ET] Pamela Bosco, a spokesperson for the family of Drew Peterson's missing wife Stacy, said that hearing the guilty verdict was something she had waited a long time for.
"This man always thought he’d get away with it. I don’t think he ever faced reality," she said. "Today he’s facing reality. He’ll never see the outside of a prison wall."
Bosco said she thought that Peterson's actions during the verdict - blank stares towards the jury - showed how shocked he was. Bosco said she always believed Peterson would be found guilty in Kathleen Savio's murder, but hearing those words were another thing.
She said she expects Peterson to be indicted for the disappearance of Stacy Peterson soon.
"No matter what he still has to pay the price for Stacy," she said.
[Updated at 3:58 p.m. ET] Kathleen Savio's half-brother called the guilty verdict a "bittersweet moment" for his family.
"I’ll never have my sister again," Nicholas Savio said in front of the courthouse. "At least I know she got justice."
Nicholas Savio said that while he was upset that Kathleen Savio is no longer around, "we hope she can rest in peace."
HLN: Peterson's lawyer can go to hell, Savio's mom says
He then vowed that there was more work to be done to bring justice for Drew Peterson's missing wife.
"Stacy, you are now next for justice," Nicholas Savio shouted.
[Updated at 3:46 p.m. ET] An Illinois jury on Thursday found former Chicago-area police sergeant Drew Peterson guilty of murder in the 2004 death of his ex-wife.
"Finally somebody heard Kathleen's cry," her mother, Marcia Savio, told reporters after the verdict.
[Posted at 3:36 p.m. ET] The jury in the murder trial of Drew Peterson, a former Chicago-area police sergeant accused of killing his ex-wife, has reached a verdict after deliberating for nearly 14 hours total.
A jury of seven men and five women have focused on whether Peterson, 58, was responsible for the death of Kathleen Savio, his third wife, who was found dead in her dry, clean bathtub March 1, 2004.
Peterson pleaded not guilty and the defense contended Savio fell accidentally, hit her head and drowned.
He faces up to 60 years in prison.
The headline-grabbing case did not arise until after Peterson's fourth wife, Stacy, disappeared in October 2007. It was during the search for Stacy Peterson, who has not been found, that investigators said they would look again at Savio's death, which was initially ruled a drowning.
Savio's death was ruled a homicide in February 2008, and Peterson was later arrested and indicted on two charges of first-degree murder. But during Judge Edward Burmila's instructions to the jury, he told them there was now one count.
Peterson was married to Savio in 2001 when he had an affair with then-17-year-old Stacy Cales, who later became his fourth wife. Savio and Peterson filed for divorce in October 2001 and their relationship remained contentious for the next several years.
Bolingbrook, Illinois, police records indicate officers were called to Savio's home 18 times to intervene in domestic fights from 2002 to 2004. Peterson had Savio arrested twice for domestic violence, though she was found not guilty in both cases.
Key moments in the Peterson trial
On February 27, 2004, Peterson picked up his two sons from Savio's home and spent the next two days with them. Prosecutors said he entered her home again early on February 29 and killed her.
At the time of her death, which authorities initially treated as an accident, a court was mulling how the couple's marital assets would be divided, and Savio was set to receive part of Peterson's pension and other support.
Smug – no more.
It just occurred to me that this is a cop going to the penitentiary and he has spent his life putting people there. Every inmate in that unit that is in there for life is going to try and kill him. They have nothing to lose.
I feel he killed others - he was so cold-hearted and confident about it. The cops wouldn't look at a cop in missing persons reports.One thing is for sure, he's been bashing his head on why he didn't have her cremated. She came back from the grave and got him. Yes, he would have had others.....
Thank God it wasn't the OJ jury!
He's probably still smiling...cause he is so damn arrogant but maybe not as much lol!
I don't think they'll ever find Stacy because he, as a cop, found a way to dispose of her. Wasn't there a plane mentioned early in the investigation? I always felt he scattered herbody parts far out to sea. But she got her revenge! It was her words that sent him to prison for life!
why should public pay for this pigs food and shelter. Hang him!!!
Good, now Ms. Savio's family has justice. Now, if they could just find wife #4's body.....
Well yet another POS convicted of "killing" but will LIVE his life on taxpayer support. What a country.
you are not forced to stay
Oh please let me see his face when they read the verdict. Tell me they had a camera in that courtroom.
A serail killer. Ladies, be careful about who you bring into your bed.
Also be careful whose husband you sleep with next time might be you who gets disposed of.
good ! justice is served! Now if they find out what happened to his 4th wife he can get charged for that too! He is a sick man!
I live next door to the town where he was just convicted and we couldn't be more pleased.
Justice is when these killers get what they doled out.
If hearsay evidence is all it takes to convict no one is safe in a court room.
I think the dead woman who "drowned" in dry tub may have had something to do with it.
They said a clean bathtub, not dry. I agree no one is safe in a courtroom, especially when the jurors dont understand tje evidence.
THEY GOT'EM BUT HE'LL BE GETTING OUT SOON THAT'S THE WAY THE SYSTEM WORKS
ha Ha HA!
He thought that since he was a cop (former), he could get away with it. He damn near did.