Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Casey Not Guilty – No Justice Today


Well, justice wasn’t served after all. The jury had reasonable doubt, despite the mounds of circumstantial evidence and motive the prosecution brought out.

Casey lied about having a job and a nanny for two years. As soon as Caylee became old enough to talk, Casey looked up "how to make chloroform" and "neck-breaking" on her computer. When Casey decided to kill Caylee, Casey gave Caylee chloroform, put three pieces of duct tape on her nose and mouth, wrapped her in the Winnie-the-Pooh blanket, put her in a trash bag, and then put her in the trunk of her car. Then, Casey went to Blockbuster with Tony, her boyfriend. When the car began to smell, Casey backed it into her garage, put Caylee into a laundry bag, borrowed a shovel from her neighbor, laid Caylee on the ground where she contemplated burying her, decided against it, and threw her into the swamp. Casey then changed her MySpace password to Timer55, knowing that was how long she could keep up the lies to her mother as to Caylee's whereabouts -- in 55 days, Caylee would have turned 3. Casey then partied and lived with her boyfriend, all the while lying to everyone on earth about where she and Caylee were. Casey, as Linda Drane Burdick said, was the only person who had a better life with Caylee gone. Casey had access to everything associated with Caylee's death: the duct tape, the blanket, the laundry bag, the clothes and the car. 

Did the jury make the correct decision? I think not. Well, maybe some justice will occur and Casey will get her tubes tied.

Casey Anthony Trial Ends


Wow. Having a blog that includes parenting tips never prepared me to learn what likely happened to little Caylee Anthony at the hands of her mother, Casey. Today, on what should have been a celebration of our nation’s independence, the Casey Anthony case wrapped up, and the jury is deciding Casey’s fate. 

Many people who did not follow the trial, as I did, believe that Casey might have accidentally killed Caylee, but those who did follow the trial know that what Casey did was premeditated murder. 

Linda Drane Burdick concluded closing arguments in what she hoped would be a last minute field goal. It was. Burdick asked the jury to decide who benefited from little Caylee’s death. Burdick showed that it wasn’t Cindy, Caylee’s grandmother, by playing a panic-stricken 911 call that Cindy made imploring police to find her granddaughter. It wasn’t George, Caylee’s grandfather, who tried to kill himself to be with Caylee. No. The only person who benefitted by Caylee’s death, Burdick demonstrated via photographs: One was of Casey partying and dancing days after her daughter being “missing,” and the other was of the tattoo Casey received days after killing Caylee – la bella vita, the beautiful life.

In case you are wondering whether this was a premeditated murder, think about this. Casey searched on her computer about how to make chloroform three months prior to the killing. After she killed Caylee, her MySpace password was Timer55, which meant that Casey only had 55 days to tell her mother lies about Caylee’s whereabouts until her mother would insist on seeing Caylee. In 55 days after the murder, Caylee would have turned 3 years old, and Cindy would have expected to see her for the birthday. Casey was caught on day 31 and never had a chance to get into her long-term lie.

If justice is served, the jury will come back with a guilty verdict of murder in the first degree.