Log in

View Full Version : Anthony not guilty of murder



ELITEofWARMANGINGERYBREADMEN88
07-05-2011, 19:33
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2011/07/05/2011-07-05_casey_anthony_verdict_watch_jury_deliberates_in_trial_of_mom_accused_of_killing_.html?r=topnews


What a damn crime that she wasn't found guilty. :stare:

gaelic cowboy
07-05-2011, 19:38
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2011/07/05/2011-07-05_casey_anthony_verdict_watch_jury_deliberates_in_trial_of_mom_accused_of_killing_.html?r=topnews


What a damn crime that she wasn't found guilty. :stare:

apparently no crime was committed :shrug: hence the verdict

ELITEofWARMANGINGERYBREADMEN88
07-05-2011, 19:57
No.... When you got money, you get off. Can you say O.J?

Centurion1
07-05-2011, 20:24
anthony doesn't have money :rolleyes:

but yes this is worse than oj

HoreTore
07-05-2011, 20:40
I have never heard of this.

Populus Romanus
07-05-2011, 20:51
Warman you stole my thread idea. Anyways, this is horrible verdict, one of the worst I have ever heard of (except for OJ). :furious3:

Lemur
07-05-2011, 21:03
Haven't been following this case at all. Somebody have a good link to a summary of events?

a completely inoffensive name
07-05-2011, 21:30
This isn't worse than OJ until she writes a book called "If I had killed my daughter."

Adrian II
07-05-2011, 22:26
I didn't do it.

AII

Centurion1
07-05-2011, 22:27
This isn't worse than OJ until she writes a book called "If I had killed my daughter."

true and while you obviously cannot place a price on life the killing of ones own baby daughter does seem a bit more horrendous.

also the OJ case had far greater evidence than this case which was mostly circumstantial.

Samurai Waki
07-06-2011, 00:45
I'd like to know what made the jury decide she was innocent-- I wouldn't come to any conclusions before that happens.

Tellos Athenaios
07-06-2011, 01:39
Yeah, without any primary evidence to speak of against her (specifically) circumstantial evidence alone is not good enough for a conviction. Then again, I've only seen this single article and it didn't bother with specific evidence in her favour (circumstantial or otherwise). Just a few accusations towards her father made by the defense team and not really substantiated as far as I could see.

Reenk Roink
07-06-2011, 03:26
https://i167.photobucket.com/albums/u148/cherrybloom203/CASEY_ANTHONY_NOT_GUILTY.png

But yeah, for all of you people SO SURE about her guilt, man the media influence is scary... :wall:

Hosakawa Tito
07-06-2011, 04:44
Very odd case, and dysfunctional lying family. I didn't really follow it, but did just finish watching a tv show, "48 Hours", (http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7362976n)about this crime. This is just part 1 and not the whole thing. That video isn't available online yet.

Centurion1
07-06-2011, 05:02
i just think the woman needs to get something and tbh we even if she didnt do it..... what kind of mother has a missing child for a month and goes out partying and clubbing, desn't report it and gets a tattoo of beautiful life on herself?

Samurai Waki
07-06-2011, 05:22
i just think the woman needs to get something and tbh we even if she didnt do it..... what kind of mother has a missing child for a month and goes out partying and clubbing, desn't report it and gets a tattoo of beautiful life on herself?

An emotionally crippled, hopelessly damaged human being-- She's guilty of being a borderline psychopath, but you can't convict people on that basis alone.

Tellos Athenaios
07-06-2011, 05:46
She's guilty of being a borderline psychopath, but you can't convict people on that basis alone.

... yeah, pretty much. Wouldn't be many business types or politicians left if we started convicting based on that trait alone.

Centurion1
07-06-2011, 05:48
you can on not telling anyone her child was missing for 30 odd days.

sounds like child abuse to me.

Samurai Waki
07-06-2011, 05:59
Prosecution has to pick it's battles. Murder One was the more serious charge, and likely the one investigators will continue to focus on; they could have of course tacked on a potential child abuse charge, but what would the point be? The child was already dead.

Major Robert Dump
07-06-2011, 06:07
Overcharged. Capital Murder? Why not manslaughter? Child Abuse? But Capital Murder.

Overzealous prosecutors who think they cannot fail

Tellos Athenaios
07-06-2011, 06:12
you can on not telling anyone her child was missing for 30 odd days.

sounds like child abuse to me.

For an analogy if I am to file a complaint with the moderators alleging that Warman is in fact a sock puppet of yours and it turns out they find my accusations without merit, should the moderators hit you with infraction points for some random TOS violation because you probably committed those somewhere they do not yet know of?

Might as well ditch the judge and jury and bring in some Kangaroos instead.

Centurion1
07-06-2011, 06:12
Prosecution has to pick it's battles. Murder One was the more serious charge, and likely the one investigators will continue to focus on; they could have of course tacked on a potential child abuse charge, but what would the point be? The child was already dead.

....... she was also charged with aggravated child abuse.

Centurion1
07-06-2011, 06:14
For an analogy if I am to file a complaint with the moderators alleging that Warman is in fact a sock puppet of yours and it turns out they find my accusations without merit, should the moderators hit you with infraction points for some random TOS violation because you probably committed those somewhere they do not yet know of?

Might as well ditch the judge and jury and bring in some Kangaroos instead.

If your child is missing and you do not know where she is and she is four she is likely being abused or suffering trauma in some way. If you persist in not reporting her as a missing person then you are allowing that abuse or trauma to continue and you are therefore an abuser.

Populus Romanus
07-06-2011, 06:15
She was tried with murder 1 because that is what she committed. To go for anything less would be a injustice for the victim. As it happens, though, she was acqueitted, so now Caley Anthony has no justice.

Samurai Waki
07-06-2011, 06:15
Pretty much; This case got enough national attention, and the media demonized Ms. Anthony so thoroughly that prosecution failed to conduct a proper and thorough investigation-- and that bit 'em in the :daisy:. Although something tells me this isn't over yet.

Centurion1
07-06-2011, 06:20
it was a three year investigation, no?

Tellos Athenaios
07-06-2011, 06:20
If your child is missing and you do not know where she is and she is four she is likely being abused or suffering trauma in some way. If you persist in not reporting her as a missing person then you are allowing that abuse or trauma to continue and you are therefore an abuser.

Yes you are. Was Anthony charged with child abuse? Nope, not as far as the article makes it seem to be the case anyway. It's not the job of a jury to match the crime and punishment. It's the job of the jury to assess guilt of the specific charges levied within reasonable doubt. And they found that the charges were not sufficiently backed by evidence to proclaim guilt beyond reasonable doubt, which implies she is still to be considered innocent until proven otherwise.

EDIT: This is what appeals are for, and you can probably chalk this up to the prosecution getting ahead of itself.

Samurai Waki
07-06-2011, 06:30
it was a three year investigation, no?

Time means for naught if you don't have anything to back up your case-- You can profile a murderer, speculate as to how the victim was killed, and what their motivation is-- but if you have nothing in the way of evidence to prove it, you simply don't have a case that can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. A good example would be Gary Ridgeway aka The Green River Killer, law enforcement speculated for years that he was the one behind it, but they just couldn't get anything to stick-- finally after about five years they got a break in the case, a co-worker had collected a piece of his chewing gum-- and dropped it by the police department for evidence, they got his DNA and matched it with other DNA they had found on his victims, and they suddenly had the evidence they needed to convict him for Capital Murder.

Prosecution got overzealous, simple as that.

EDIT: Keep in mind she could actually be innocent.

Cute Wolf
07-06-2011, 13:53
meh, she just have a bad luck when duct taping her noisy child, because she must get some parties, just pretend she does some very late term abortion, that's why we should legalize abortion... (half sarcasm)

Hosakawa Tito
07-06-2011, 14:27
Overcharged. Capital Murder? Why not manslaughter? Child Abuse? But Capital Murder.

Overzealous prosecutors who think they cannot fail

I believe they based the Capital murder charge on premeditation. The alleged accusation that Casey Anthony did a web search on the family computer about chloroform etc... several months before the crime. Her mother claimed to have done that, but the date and time of the web search placed Mom at work. They couldn't prove without a doubt that Casey did that search. Casey and her parents appear to be pathological liars. 4 people know who did it, the victim, Casey, Mom & Dad. The little girl's suffering is over, the others suffering has just begun. Looks like that is all the justice little Kaylee will get.


Remember that defense lawyer. If you ever get in a serious jam, hire him.

Seamus Fermanagh
07-06-2011, 14:34
The standard is, and should be, "beyond a reasonable doubt."

The prosecution proved, conclusively, that she had lied to law enforcement during the investigation and that she was a sub-standard mother, chronic lier, and quite possibly a bit of a slut.

The evidence from the child's corpse makes it pretty clear that a homicide (and probably a murder) occurred and that there was certainly an effort by some person(s) to hide the evidence of that homicide. However, the state of the remains made it impossible to conclusively demonstrate the exact cause of death or who had attempted to hide the evidence. In short, there was room for reasonable doubt.

Regarding the child abuse counts, the jury apparently made a judgement that there was no pattern to indicate abuse (and there truly were no signs of her hitting the child or other "abusive" behaviors prior to her disappearance) and that the same lack of linkage noted above was also a lack of linkage to this horrific instance of abuse.


Note for political junkies: The verdict in this case is highly instructive as to why the Guantanemo detainees are a) still in Gitmo, and b) not in a civilian court.

HoreTore
07-06-2011, 14:36
What possible relevance does the mothers level of sluttyness have on this case, Seamus?

Major Robert Dump
07-06-2011, 14:42
She was tried with murder 1 because that is what she committed. To go for anything less would be a injustice for the victim. As it happens, though, she was acqueitted, so now Caley Anthony has no justice.

A prosecutor has to decide between partial justice and no justice. Murder 1 was a longshot the entire time. Murder 2 would have been just fine and had a far more chance of success, in fact, with murder 2 they may have even been able to get a plea. Her defense attorneys knew this, and knew that it would be damn near impossible to prove. I mean, there are no witnesses and it took damn near a year to find the body as I recall, and don't forget this state is in a different country.

Seamus Fermanagh
07-06-2011, 14:54
What possible relevance does the mothers level of sluttyness have on this case, Seamus?

Nothing. That's my point, they weren't proving anything relevant to the charges.

Crazed Rabbit
07-06-2011, 16:13
How could they charge her with both Murder and Manslaughter?

CR

Centurion1
07-06-2011, 18:58
Yes you are. Was Anthony charged with child abuse? Nope, not as far as the article makes it seem to be the case anyway. It's not the job of a jury to match the crime and punishment. It's the job of the jury to assess guilt of the specific charges levied within reasonable doubt. And they found that the charges were not sufficiently backed by evidence to proclaim guilt beyond reasonable doubt, which implies she is still to be considered innocent until proven otherwise.

EDIT: This is what appeals are for, and you can probably chalk this up to the prosecution getting ahead of itself.

I will say again Tellos do your research more thoroughly this is getting annyoing. :P She was charged with aggravated child abuse which she was acquitted of.


Count One, First Degree Murder: If Casey Anthony is convicted of first degree murder, regardless of whether it is on a theory of Pre-meditated Murder or Felony Murder she will receive at a minimum a life sentence. A life sentence in Florida is a true life sentence, which means there is no parole or early release. A defendant convicted of first degree murder only leaves prison after his or her death. The only alternative to a life sentence is death by execution.
Lesser Included of Count One, Second Degree Murder: (depraved mind murder, not premeditated) The maximum penalty for Second Degree Murder is a life sentence. The minimum sentence is based on the Criminal Punishment Code. The estimated minimum sentence for this charge and other charges which might result in conviction along with this count would be 24 years, 6 months.

Count Two, Aggravated Child Abuse: The maximum penalty for aggravated child is 15 years in prison. The estimated minimum sentence for this charge and other charges which might result in conviction along with this count would be 12 years, 1 month.

Count Three, Aggravated Manslaughter of a Child: If Casey Anthony is convicted of causing the death of Caylee by culpable negligence the maximum sentence is 30 years in prison. The estimated minimum sentence for this charge and other charges which might result in conviction along with this count would be 16 years and 6 months.

UPDATE: Casey Anthony was found not guilty of the first three counts. She was found guilty of the following:

Counts Four Through Seven, Giving False Information to a Law Enforcement Officer in Reference to a Missing Person: The charge in these four counts carries a maximum of one year in county jail for each count. As a result if convicted of all four of these counts, Casey Anthony could receive a sentence of four years if the sentence for each count is run consecutively.

HoreTore
07-06-2011, 22:12
Nothing. That's my point, they weren't proving anything relevant to the charges.

They actually spent time on that in court? In other words, they tried to appeal to the talibani morals of the jury. In that case, I am very happy that it failed hard and she was found not guilty.

The prosecutor ought to be slapped. Hard.

Don Corleone
07-06-2011, 22:50
It doesn't sound like you or anybody else in the EU is particularly familiar with this case, so let me share with you some of what we all got in a non-stop barrage in the media over the past 3 years....

-A 2 year old goes missing around mid-June, 2008. The child, Caylee lives with her mother, Casey, who lives with her mother Cindy (and her father, forget his name).
-After a month of "Idunno" answers from Casey on where the child has gotten to, the grandmother (Cindy) calls local police.
-Police question the mother (Casey). Her story is that the child is with a babysitter who took off about a month ago. She doesn't want police involvement.
-Police find and impound Casey's car. When they open the trunk, a rotting smell of human decompisition wafts out (defense later stipulates this was due to garbage, not decomposition).
-Over the next couple of months, Casey changes her story about a dozen different times. All scenarios still lead her back to not wanting police involvement.
-The police finally arrest her and charge her.
-The 'slut thing'... about 6 months after being incarcerated, photos emerge of the mother, now labelled "Tot-Mom" by the media, whooping it up at party after party with her friends in the all-critical one-month between the disappearance and first police contact.

I happen to agree that the prosecution proved nothing, except perhaps for my staunchly held belief in the sheer incompetence of government. Much as with O.J., the right verdict was returned, as the government failed to meet its burden of proof. I honestly believe that Casey Anthony did indeed kill her kid and danced it up afterwards, but it doesn't matter. What was proven was simply that Ms. Anthony is a depraved human being with no soul, which last time I checked, is not a crime. If she throws a "I did it and got away with it" party and invites Charlie Sheen to serve as the M.C., that's technically no crime.

ELITEofWARMANGINGERYBREADMEN88
07-06-2011, 22:51
It doesn't sound like you or anybody else in the EU is particularly familiar with this case, so let me share with you some of what we all got in a non-stop barrage in the media over the past 3 years....

-A 2 year old goes missing around mid-June, 2008. The child, Caylee lives with her mother, Casey, who lives with her mother Cindy (and her father, forget his name).
-After a month of "Idunno" answers from Casey on where the child has gotten to, the grandmother (Cindy) call local police.
-Police question the mother (Casey). Her story is that the child is with a babysitter who took off about a month ago. She doesn't want police involvement.
-Police find and impound Casey's car. When they open the trunk, a rotting smell of human decompisition wafts out (defense later stipulates this was due to garbage, not decomposition).
-Over the next couple of months, Casey changes her story about a dozen different times. All scenarios still lead her back to not wanting police involvement.
-The police finally arrest her and charge her.
-The 'slut thing'... about 6 months after being incarcerated, photos emerge of the mother, now labelled "Tot-Mom" by the media, whooping it up at party after party with her friends in the all-critical one-month between the disappearance and first police contact.

I happen to agree that the prosecution proved nothing, except perhaps for my staunchly held belief in the sheer incompetence of government. Much as with O.J., the right verdict was returned. I honestly believe that Casey Anthony killed her kid and danced it up afterwards, but it doesn't matter. What was proven was simply that Ms. Anthony is a depraved human being with no soul, which last time I checked, is not a crime. If she throws a "I did it and got away with it" party and invites Charlie Sheen to serve as the M.C., that's technically no crime.



But she still got away with it, plain and simple.

Tellos Athenaios
07-06-2011, 23:00
Note for political junkies: The verdict in this case is highly instructive as to why the Guantanemo detainees are a) still in Gitmo, and b) not in a civilian court.
IOW: the very fact that Gitmo detainees are still there is highly instructive as to how little of a case there is against them ?

We might see another jury which does its job properly and we can't have a working jury system now can we? What's next, actually having to provide evidence before you seize and imprison someone? ~;)

Tellos Athenaios
07-06-2011, 23:07
I will say again Tellos do your research more thoroughly this is getting annyoing. :P She was charged with aggravated child abuse which she was acquitted of. I commented on that article, as I made clear from my first post in here. Still as Seamus pointed out there wasn't even enough evidence beyond reasonable doubt that it “was her wot done it” for any of those other charges.

Again, instead of screaming “where's the justice for Caylee” public outcry might be better directed into shaming the prosecution into doing their job properly. I for one am glad to see evidence and law still count for something in the US court system.

Strike For The South
07-07-2011, 00:03
https://img11.imageshack.us/img11/2638/87453740.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/11/87453740.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

Centurion1
07-07-2011, 00:56
https://img11.imageshack.us/img11/2638/87453740.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/11/87453740.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

thats just crude

Strike For The South
07-07-2011, 01:03
thats just crude

https://img825.imageshack.us/img825/327/idontalwayskillmykidsbu.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/825/idontalwayskillmykidsbu.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

Crazed Rabbit
07-07-2011, 01:44
What a damn crime that she wasn't found guilty. :stare:

:rolleyes:

A depressing look at the trail-as-entertainment culture;
http://www.popehat.com/2011/06/25/the-casey-anthony-trial-are-you-not-entertained/


What I’m saying may sound like a you-kids-get-off-my-lawn old-man rant, but it’s not merely a rant about entertainment culture — it’s also the impact of that culture on the criminal justice system that protects citizens from their government. The trial-as-circus ethos has any number of regrettable effects:

1. Promotion of ignorance: The circus culture encourages the media to offer sound-bite-based, exciting, controversial, and “interesting” explanations for complex issues. Those explanations are rarely complete, accurate, or fair. The media therefore promotes ignorance about the criminal justice system — the mechanism by which some of our most important rights are determined.

2. Promotion of Unquestioned Government Power: The circus culture naturally seeks swift, exciting, simple resolution — like the bad guy being caught, conclusively proved guilty, and punished in the 42 minutes of a TV drama. The media coverage encourages that attitude — and therefore encourages citizens to be impatient of anything that’s not cinematic and angry at anything that seems to interfere with a 42-minute resolution. But “swift and cinematic” favors unquestioning acceptance of government claims, not careful testing of the sufficiency of government evidence, and certainly not respect for rights or the rule of law. The trial-as-circus culture promoted by the media for its own financial benefit is all about promoting the age-old “tough on crime” mindset that constitutional and statutory rights are merely devices by which sleazy defense lawyers evade justice.

3. Promotion of Misconduct: The trial-as-circus atmosphere, with its attendant big money, brings the nuts, the con artists, and the crooks out of the woodwork. Crazy people show up claiming to be witnesses. Minor witnesses exaggerate or change what they saw in pursuit of their fifteen minutes and a book deal. Lawyers abandon their ethical duties in pursuit of a quick buck.

One of the state’s most formidable powers is its ability to imprison or even kill a citizen by accusing that citizen of a crime. Sometimes the state gets it right, and imprisons people who did what they are accused of doing. Other times the state relies on bad evidence or panic about kids, and gets it wrong. How do we know which is which? We have to respect the rule of law and rely upon competent professionals — including vigorous and capable defense attorneys — to apply it. By promoting trial-as-circus, the media and the madding crowd are undermining the rule of law. They’re doing it for money and attention (in the case of the media) and entertainment (in the case of the crowd). They ought to be ashamed of themselves.

About the verdict - we may never know what really happened. But reasonable doubt figured large in the verdict, I'd reckon.

And the verdict makes Nancy Grace, the former-prosecutor-turned-TV-show-host, and her legions of rabid moron fans seething at the mouth for convictions, really angry, which is nice. She's of the opinion that anyone charged with a crime is guilty, and juries are just some pesky obstacle to punishment for those charged with crimes.

CR

a completely inoffensive name
07-07-2011, 01:53
:rolleyes:

A depressing look at the trail-as-entertainment culture;
http://www.popehat.com/2011/06/25/the-casey-anthony-trial-are-you-not-entertained/



About the verdict - we may never know what really happened. But reasonable doubt figured large in the verdict, I'd reckon.

And the verdict makes Nancy Grace, the former-prosecutor-turned-TV-show-host, and her legions of rabid moron fans seething at the mouth for convictions, really angry, which is nice. She's of the opinion that anyone charged with a crime is guilty, and juries are just some pesky obstacle to punishment for those charged with crimes.

CR

You are my hero CR. Anytime I showed any sort of "meh" attitude toward the case or said that the jury must have had a good reason to let her go and that we don't know the whole story, I got bombarded with "WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT IT IS A LOCK SOLID CASE SHE MURDERED HER PRECIOUS BABY THE NEWS SAID SO THIS IS A DISGRACE WHAT ARE YOU, SYMPATHETIC TO BABY MURDERS BSDKUJFG IL NGFBUSDFBGAZ VYJHDZFGUAS

So yeah, I agree with you, 100%, CR.

Centurion1
07-07-2011, 01:53
I loath Nancy Grace

Strike For The South
07-07-2011, 01:56
https://img607.imageshack.us/img607/1045/hideyo.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/607/hideyo.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

Samurai Waki
07-07-2011, 02:14
The problem I have with these pictures, is that it encourages a lynch mob mentality-- Then some poor dumb bastard is going to take the law into his own hands because he feels justice has not been done, and it undermines the entire system.

Hosakawa Tito
07-07-2011, 02:37
If any of the jurors ever decides to 'splain their verdict I wouldn't be surprised if they felt that they didn't believe she was innocent, but that there wasn't the "beyond a reasonable doubt" of the evidence as presented by the prosecution. Capital punishment is irreversible and that sets the bar as high as it should get for proof of guilt.


She may have beaten the Florida court, but the court of public opinion is another matter. She's been living with her parents most of her life. I doubt that can continue. She has no means to support herself that I've heard of, and she appears to be a pariah within her community, if not most of the country. What will she do, where will she go?


Another thing. In all this publicity the father of Caylee was never identified or even brought up. Very odd for the media circus and feeding frenzy that this case has generated.

Centurion1
07-07-2011, 02:50
https://img607.imageshack.us/img607/1045/hideyo.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/607/hideyo.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

Okay that one was pretty funny

HoreTore
07-07-2011, 10:41
I loath Nancy Grace

Is that the one parodied on Boston Legal?

Centurion1
07-07-2011, 10:57
Is that the one parodied on Boston Legal?

actually yes.

HoreTore
07-07-2011, 11:08
actually yes.

Ah. Well, I do love the parody :laugh4:

Vladimir
07-07-2011, 20:44
https://img607.imageshack.us/img607/1045/hideyo.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/607/hideyo.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

I have a hard time caring about this case, but your pictures are excellent!

Strike For The South
07-07-2011, 20:55
https://img708.imageshack.us/img708/5479/neini.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/708/neini.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

Strike For The South
07-07-2011, 20:59
https://img834.imageshack.us/img834/8128/nancys.png (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/834/nancys.png/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

https://img685.imageshack.us/img685/4980/caseyanthony5.jpg (https://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/685/caseyanthony5.jpg/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (https://imageshack.us)

drone
07-07-2011, 21:06
You are my hero CR. Anytime I showed any sort of "meh" attitude toward the case or said that the jury must have had a good reason to let her go and that we don't know the whole story, I got bombarded with "WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT IT IS A LOCK SOLID CASE SHE MURDERED HER PRECIOUS BABY THE NEWS SAID SO THIS IS A DISGRACE WHAT ARE YOU, SYMPATHETIC TO BABY MURDERS BSDKUJFG IL NGFBUSDFBGAZ VYJHDZFGUAS

So yeah, I agree with you, 100%, CR.
Indeed. No one cared about this case until Nancy Grace picked up on it, which meant for me it was a waste of the emotional effort to follow. If she's unhappy, I'm happy.

Don Corleone
07-07-2011, 21:11
#56.... WINNER.

This whole case again reminds me why I hate media sensationalism of criminal trials. It's like dropping a coin into a pond. Having one person walking around carefully looking and examining may lead to the discovery of the coin. Having the whole town come down and stomp around... probably never going to find it...

It stinks to high heaven, but I don't think anybody can say with any certainty at this point what actually happened to that child, except for the killer and any accomplices (assuming they exist). I don't like Casey Anthony's behavior after the Caylee disappered, but it'd be foolish to parley that into a murder conviction.

In a way, I'm glad this turned out the way it did. As CR said, the State already has it pretty easy at throwing its citizens around. We need to hang onto what few levers we have left. Burden of proof protects us all.

Reenk Roink
07-08-2011, 04:41
https://i.imgur.com/ESWoe.jpg

Strike For The South
07-08-2011, 04:51
AHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

10 internets to you sir

Well played

lars573
07-10-2011, 16:47
Really the only thing I can think when I look at this is. I'd hit it.

Seamus Fermanagh
07-11-2011, 07:27
...and on that note, we shall call adjourn this thread.