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Home Archives for Casey Anthony

Will She or Won’t She?

Posted on June 30, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Casey Anthony glared out of the corners of her eyes while  taking copious notes during her father’s emotional testimony yesterday, as the murder trial wore on.

Why would Ms. Anthony have the need for such detailed notes? I can think of three possibilities. One is that she wants to look busy and engaged for the jury. I doubt this is the case; otherwise, she would have been doing it throughout the trial. Another is that she wants to have a stronger voice in managing her defense. Perhaps so, as signs of friction between her and lead counsel Jose Baez seem to exist. The third, and most intriguing possibility is that she is preparing to testify to rebut her father’s testimony. This would be a powerful, albeit desperate, ploy by the defense that stands more chances of backfiring in their faces than anything else. Yet nobody has ruled it out.

Even if Ms. Anthony could make some points during a direct examination, she could be torn to shreds with the cross-examination talents of the prosecution team. It would be a great, big, humongous mistake for her to testify in her own defense. She doesn’t have to — the U.S. Constitution protects her right not to — and she shouldn’t. Nevertheless, the defense has shown regular flashes of self damaging behavior, to the incredulity of the assembled media circus performers at times, and it would not surprise me if they made this blunder.

If she does, she’ll be using what the monotonously droning, repetitious WFTV legal analyst, Bill Shaeffer, called “her soft voice.” (Shaeffer is annoying me, as you can tell. Not only is he of the “why use a sentence when a paragraph will do” ilk, but also his neologisms are vastly inferior to mine. “Hyperbolizing” just ain’t no word, Bill!)

Did George’s emotionality win points for the defense or the prosecution? I’ll be mealy mouthed and ambiguous in responding to that question. Baez probably cast some doubts upon Anthony’s credibility with his witheringly sleazy direct examination. However, George came across as sincere, a real person compared to Baez’s plasticity. I think that the end result will be a few points for the prosecution, which is why the defense might just be desperate enough at this juncture to recommend to Casey that she testify.

Other witnesses yesterday included meter reader Roy Kronk’s estranged son, who testified that Kronk had called him saying that he was going to be rich and that he should watch his dad, whom he hadn’t seen since he was eight years old, on TV. In the previous day’s testimony, Kronk had said that the phone call in question never occurred. I still believe Kronk. Nevertheless, this testimony could have planted some doubt in the jurors’ minds about him. The final witness of the day was a flaky grief expert from FSU. Her rambling answers confounded counsel on both sides, as they tried to reel her in, while she probably put half the jury to sleep. In the end, her testimony meant little, as she established only that grief can take on many different forms that differ from person to person. If I were awarding points, I’d probably give this one to the defense by a slim margin.

(If I were a fly on the wall listening to a conversation between the loquacious grief expert and the bombastically repetitive WFTV legal analyst, I would be sending out for a can of Raid.)

As adjournment neared, Judge Perry once again asked Baez when he thought he would be wrapping up the defense’s case. Baez responded that he saw no reason why the defense could not rest its case Thursday (today). Hallelujah! Given that the prosecution has scheduled some rebuttal witnesses, Perry told everyone not to plan any outside activities for Sunday or Monday (Independence Day), because although he could foresee handing the case over to the jury on Saturday, if anything went wrong with that schedule, he wanted to give the jury the option of working straight through the weekend.

There is still an open issue regarding the mistrial motion filed by Ann Finnell regarding the case in South Florida for which a Federal judge decided that Florida’s death penalty law is unconstitutional. If the judge grants the motion, we’ll have to do this whole damn thing all over again. With well over $300,000 having been spent thus far by the State of Florida, do you really think that Judge Perry is going to accept this motion?

Today, as the defense presumably will wrap up its case, there is a possibility of some Fourth of July fireworks if the mysterious Krystal Holloway, also known as River Cruz, testifies. The only reason for her to testify would be in essense to call George Anthony a liar and state that they did indeed have a sexual relationship as well as to represent that George had knowledge of the nature and time of the death of his grand-daughter. This would impugn George before the jury and possibly introduce some reasonable doubt. They probably have been sympathetic to George up to this point. I doubt that a wacko who renames herself River Cruz will have the needed credibility to change anything.

The big question looms, though. Will she or won’t she? We’ll find out today.

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Filed Under: Casey Anthony Tagged With: Casey Anthony, Casey Anthony trial

State of Florida v. Anthony OCD

Posted on June 17, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

In its first day of flailing about, lead defense counsel Jose Baez bored the jury with a lot of technical mumbo-jumbo about DNA, by way of his expert witnesses. His intent was to cast doubt on the state’s circumstantial case against Ms. Anthony by citing the absence of DNA and traces of blood in the Anthony’s Pontiac Sunfire and on various articles of clothing. The prosecution had little need to cross-examine witnesses, except to establish that the lack of blood and DNA did not preclude that a crime had not occurred as per the prosecution’s case.

There were a couple of moments that brought the jury back from their daydreams. Baez’s opening arguments had portended his reliance on the notion that Ms. Anthony had been sexually abused by her father, George, and her brother, Lee, which caused her to live in denial and become a psychopathic liar. During today’s testimony, Baez explored the possibility that Lee had been the actual father of Caylee Anthony. However, the DNA evidence examined by the expert witnesses called by the defense failed to corroborate that allegation.

Many legal experts and regular folks were expecting that Baez would deliver some fireworks today. His opening statement was so dramatically surprising with its drowning and cover-up story that it seemed obvious that he would begin the defense’s case by calling witnesses to support it and the sexual abuse scenario. He disappointed many who had jockeyed for position to get a seat in the courtroom. The boring DNA presentation was not the entertainment they were seeking.

If Baez continues his bumbling, he’ll lose the jury completely.

What about the OCD?

People are certainly addicted to these high-profile trials, but some of the non-addicted ones are still in the running for the Casey/ISAG incompetence award. One guy posted a self-righteous, “Oh, is that trial still going on? I refuse to watch it” comment in a Facebook thread about the trial. When the proprietress of the thread, a paralegal herself, said that it was actually quite interesting, the pious prick reiterated his position: he refused to watch it. So, I asked, “Why the hell did you bother to comment on it?” Guess he wanted to spread the word that he didn’t have the derangement syndrome like the rest of us, but posting there was a self-indictment if anything.

In Central Florida, essentially, a seven county area surrounding Orlando, it is almost impossible to escape the tentacles of the the “Casey Trial”. This brings back memories of the famous O.J. trial in Los Angeles. The audience is concentrated more locally, but both trials have provided a form of entertainment that mesmerizes people from all the social strata. All of the major local TV stations cover the trial live, with a remote-operated pool camera providing the video. Also, the TV stations are publishing a live video stream on their web sites, as is the local newsrag. CNN’s HLN channel is also providing live coverage. Media pseudo-wonks such as Geraldo Rivera, Nancy Grace, and Greta Van Susteren are camped out here, anxious to advance their theories so they can brag about how correct they were. The audience is steadily increasing, but here in Central Florida, it was here from the start. It drones on TVs, radios, and Internet connected computers virtually everywhere one goes.

A friend, knowing that I would be away most of the day tomorrow, reminded me to record the trial coverage for the day so I wouldn’t miss anything. I told her that I would be watching it on my Android phone, so there was no need to record it. She told me that she had an Android phone, too, and wanted to know how to do it. It is easy. Just open up one of the TV station’s websites in the built-in browser, and navigate to the live coverage. You’re in! My friend checked it out, found that it worked, and became excited over the prospect of not having to be separated from the action. “There goes your productivity!” I said.

Cheap entertainment for troubled times.

My informal polling of friends, associates, and strangers has concluded. Most people want to see Casey go down for the crime they’ve already convicted her of having committed. It is very hard to believe that a mother could have treated a child in such a manner, but they’re ready to conclude that Ms. Anthony is a lying psychopath, and they want to see her punished for it. However, even if the verdict goes their way, it might be a long time before they can he served their vindictive dish. Being a capital murder case, the appeals can go on and on.

One big question as Baez continues to bumble through his witnesses is whether Ms. Anthony will testify. This, of course, would be a dangerous ploy. Having admitted that she is “such a great liar”, she is likely to add perjury to her other major offenses, but the real danger is that she reveals the inconsistencies in the defense’s case under cross-examination. For that reason, it is doubtful that Baez will call her to the witness stand, unless he is truly desperate.

Because the State of Florida’s case is entirely circumstantial, it might fail to get a conviction for the original charge of first degree murder. A second degree or manslaughter conviction is a possibility. Those who would like to see Ms. Anthony get the lethal needle or rot away the rest of her life in a state penitentiary without parole will be sorely disappointed if she is convicted of a lesser charge. And if she is acquitted — oy! There could be riots. People are always looking for an excuse to riot these days to vent their frustration. Right, Vancouver?

Bottom line — it might be cheap and dirty entertainment, but around here, one can walk up to a stranger on the street and instantly have something to talk about. That’s remarkable in itself.

José, can you see?

I see Ms. Anthony sitting there in court and wonder if she sees the same Baez as we do. She hired him, putting her life in his hands. Is she not growing a bit concerned about his blundering naivete? Baez has been at the bar for a mere five years and has had only three years experience at criminal defense. The one murder case he defended wound up with a conviction. Baez brought together a team — a somewhat lesser team than the O.J. “dream team” — but he has not managed it well, as I’ve stated in previous posts. He obviously wants the limelight mainly to himself. That’s going to screw up the defense.

Cheney Mason sits there largely unused. The defense would have benefited by more of this experienced criminal defense attorney’s haughty cross-examination and less of Baez’s passionless questioning. Now, it seems that there are rumors of friction between Mason and Baez, especially over Baez’s insistence in laying out his case in great detail in his opening arguments, a blunder in Mason’s opinion. Mason’s frustration with Baez’s tactics can be seen in the following transcript excerpt from a sidebar conference dealing with allowing the jury to hear testimony from the prosecution about the fact that animals had chewed on bones of the decedent.

Defense attorney Cheney Mason: “Talking about animal chewing is not probative of any issue in this case … It’s scandalous or shocking and emotional, but it doesn’t prove anything. There’s no question that the child is dead, that these are her bones. But to start talking about animal chewing, I think is inflammatory and we object to it.”

Assistant State Attorney Jeff Ashton: “It is my understanding that the defense’s position is that these bones were moved, placed into this location at some later date. The fact that the bones were scattered by animals and chewed on is probative of the length of time that they had been present.”

Judge Perry: “Well, but for your argument and suggestion that somebody kept the bones and moved them about, I would sustain your objection. But in view of the fact that that’s your theory, that Mr. [Roy] Kronk took the bones and took them somewhere and kept them, it has relevancy in that standpoint.”

Soon after, the parties discussed what defense attorney Jose Baez said regarding Kronk during his opening statement. Mason reminds the others that Baez said “the bones were dragged and moved.”

Later he adds, “Does it prove that defense counsel made an opening statement decision that may have not been prudent? Perhaps.”

Perry said, “Before Mr. Baez made his statement, I told you I would…sustain the objection,” Perry said. “But when you talk about somebody moved and kept bones for the purpose of getting a reward, I mean … it’s a whole line of questioning that you’ve just opened a can of worms up on.”

Then Mason asked whether the Baez opening statement opened the door to all of this.

Perry responded by saying Baez had questioned a crime scene investigator and a deputy about this long after his opening statement.

At this point Baez says, “The gnawing of bones does not – does not give any indication as to how long remains would be there.”

But Perry ultimately said, “animal activity has to do something with the timeline in this case … it’s an issue that the defense raised.”

Blunder. Perry overruled the defense’s objection to showing the jury the evidence, which had to be disturbing.

Will there be changes on the dysfunctional dream team? At this late juncture, one has to doubt it, but for you and me this is only conversation fodder; for Ms. Anthony, it is her life.

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Filed Under: Casey Anthony Tagged With: Casey Anthony, Casey Anthony trial

Hooked

Posted on May 25, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

America is once again in the throes of a high-profile criminal trial with its attendant media circus. This one is taking place right in the Turkey’s backyard: Orlando, Florida. We here in Central Florida have been trying the case unofficially since the news of the missing child first broke almost three years ago. However, now we will have an OJ-esque month of testimony to review to either corroborate or refute the theories we developed in our informal deliberations, and a jury decision to decide the case once and for all (pending appeals, of course).

I admit that I am hooked. I will try to keep my verbal gobbling about the trial to a minimum out of respect for the people around me who are sick and tired of the mediafest already. However, I will occasionally bombard readers of this meager blog with my opinions concerning the event. Your Turkey figures that you know how to navigate elsewhere when you’ve had enough!

For those of you outside the area, a two year-old child, Caylee Anthony, “disappeared” almost three years ago. The mother, Casey Anthony, a 22 year-old single woman at the time, waited thirty days from the time the child vanished to report her missing. This immediately cast suspicions upon the mother, who contrived a story about a mythical babysitter being the last person to have seen young Caylee. Around this time, Casey was also convicted of forgery, having stolen a friend’s checkbook and cashed one of her checks. Casey has been in jail ever since; she was formally indicted for the premeditated murder of her daughter while in the slammer.

One problem early in the progression of events is that no body had been found; however, eventually, decomposed remains positively identified as the missing child turned up in a wooded area down the street from the Anthony home, where Casey lived with her mother, Cindy, and her father, George. The discovery was made by a meter reader who ostensibly had entered the woods to urinate. Some of the circumstances of the discovery have been questioned repeatedly. At one point, defense counsel charged that the body had been planted there by the meter reader.

One of the reasons that this is such a high profile trial is that the range of punishments available to the court for this first degree murder charge includes the death penalty, which is bound to attract activists on both sides of the capital punishment debate. Another, which I mentioned before, is the large number of people who have already tried and convicted Casey in their minds, who now seek vindication by a formal verdict consistent with that of their mental kangaroo court. I did an informal, non-scientific Facebook poll asking if Casey did it. There were four possible responses: Yes (about 60%), No (0%), I’ll let the jury decide (30%), and I don’t give a rat’s ass (10%). The significant thing to note from my little study is that nobody feels passionately that Casey is innocent.

The jury was selected in Clearwater, on the Gulf Coast, in the hopes that prospective jurors would be less biased from the daily infusions of information and misinformation about the case against Casey. The pool of jurors was eventually pared down and the trial began in the Orange County Courthouse in Orlando yesterday.

The prosecution’s opening statements consisted of a timeline of events between the disappearance of Caylee and the present. It was well laid out but delivered in a flat, non-charismatic manner. The facts as represented by the prosecution are consistent with the opinions of many of the kibitzers who have decided the case from the peanut gallery, so there were no great surprises there.

The surprises came after lunch with lead defense counsel José Baez laying out his version of the story. He impugned the prosecution’s conclusions by stating an entirely new theory. Caylee was never missing. Instead, she drowned in an unattended above-ground pool in the Anthonys’ back yard. Meanwhile, Casey had been a victim of sexual abuse by both her father, George, and her older brother. This created a climate of denial and lying for poor Casey, whose own lying could now be quite well understood. Baez was graphically specific about one of the sex acts George allegedly repeatedly performed on Casey, burning into the jurors’ minds an indelible image of Casey giving oral sex to her father as a teenager as she readied herself for school in the morning. No one heretofore had mentioned anything about an abusive family relationship, so Baez was either grandstanding with an invented dysfunctional family story concocted with the intent of  instilling reasonable doubt in the jurors, or he and his team are brilliant researchers. My personal suspicion is the former.

After Baez concluded his surprising opening, the prosecution called its first witness, George Anthony. Utilizing its plodding, methodical style, the prosecution team bored us by walking through George’s life, from his 20s until now, and then asking about the details of Caylee’s disappearance and related events. Ho hum. Are we going to have to put up with these anal retentive questioning sessions for the rest of the trial? And why do lawyers insist on starting every new question with “Now…”? I’ve noticed this during my stints on jury duty. You never see that on TV lawyer shows, where actors know how to deliver lines. “Now, back in 2008, you and your wife, Cindy, separated at some point?” But I digress.

Baez’s cross-examination (also replete with questions starting with “Now…”) was surprisingly dull, if not incompetent. He did not even pursue the whole area of sexual abuse. This leads me to believe that it might be a crock out of left field, which he hoped would generate doubt in jurors’ minds. Baez’s questioning was interrupted by prosecution objections far too many times, most of which were sustained by Judge Belvin Perry. Several lengthy sidebars caused the jury to yawn and fidget. They were clearly getting bored as this crap wore on late in the afternoon. Finally, Perry was asked by one of the attorneys, “May we approach?” A flat-out “No!” was the response. Perry also admonished Baez at least twice to allow Anthony to completely answer the question before interrupting him with another question. I can foresee the judge getting quite testy with this cast of characters as the trial progresses.

It appears to this Turkey that Baez is trying to pound some things into jurors’ heads which he spins as damning toward George, but which are not improper. At one point, Baez attempted to paint Anthony in a bad light by dwelling on the notion that he had contacted his attorney and discussed the matter with him before taking the witness stand. This is perfectly legal, as Judge Perry stated, reading the law verbatim to the jury so they would not hold the attorney discussion against George. The fact that the attorney in question was also an old friend of Anthony’s was brought out by the prosecution later, during re-direct examination.

Courtroom junkies such as I have much to look forward to in forthcoming testimony. The issue of the dead body smell in Casey’s car is sure to be explored literally ad nauseam. Mr. Krunk, the meter reader who discovered the body, is sure to be impeached by Baez. There will undoubtedly be testimony by Orange-Osceola County Medical Examiner Jan Garavaglia, the famous “Dr. G” of television. The computer searches found on the Anthonys’ computer for terms such as “choroform”, “shovel”, “household weapons”, and “neck-breaking” surely will be beaten to death (no pun intended).

Hell, I have jury duty next week, so I can get into the groove this week. No way will I get anything as potentially interesting and yet at the same time as potentially boring as the Casey Anthony trial. But I don’t want to spend a month on the jury, anyway.

For those of you outside of Central Florida who crave coverage of the trial, there are several options. HLN (Head Line News) is covering the event live; however, the commercial breaks are frequent and annoying. Each of the network TV stations in Orlando is doing a streaming, live, commercial-free feed on its web site. These are WESH, WKMG, WFTV, and WOFL.

Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer and I don’t even play one on TV. If you’re looking for a blog where you can get astute legal analysis, you’re in the wrong place. What you’ll get here is my opinion, which has no bearing on anything except my amusement and perhaps, yours.

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Filed Under: Casey Anthony Tagged With: Casey Anthony, criminal law, law, murder trial

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