Newsvine
  • Welcome
  • Help
  • Report Bug
  • Conversation Tracker
  • Your Column
  • Replies
  • Friends
Type Comments Since You Last CheckedArticle Source Last Checked Stop Tracking All Clear Tracking All
Advertise | AdChoices
Log In | Register
Close the Login Panel
Existing users log in below. New users please register for a free account.

New Users:

Existing Users:

E-Mail:
Password:
Forgot Password?
Please enter the e-mail address or domain name you registered with:
E-Mail/Domain:
Back to Login
Log Out
  • Top News
  • Local News
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Odd News
  • More
    • Arts
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Fashion
    • History
    • Home & Garden
    • Not News
    • Religion
    • Travel
What is Newsvine?

Updated continuously by citizens like you, Newsvine is an instant reflection of what the world is talking about at any given moment.

Get a Free Account
Help
Fun Stuff
  • Your Clippings
  • Leaderboard
  • E-Mail Alerts
  • Top of the Vine
  • Newsvine Live
  • Newsvine Archives
  • The Greenhouse
  • Recommended Articles
  • Wall of Vineness
Put a Seed Newsvine link on your own site

Casey Anthony lies low on first day of freedom

Sun Jul 17, 2011 10:58 PM EDT
us-news, us, anthony, casey-anthony
Mike Schneider, Associated Press
Sound of demonstrators shouting as Casey Anthony is released.
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 15 photos
<p>Casey Anthony, front right, walks out of the Orange County Jail with her attorney Jose Baez, left,  during her release in Orlando, Fla., Sunday, July 17, 2011.  Anthony was acquitted last week of murder in the death of her daughter, Caylee. (AP Photo/Red Huber,Pool)</p>

Casey Anthony, front right, walks out of the Orange County Jail with her attorney Jose Baez, left, during her release in Orlando, Fla., Sunday, July 17, 2011. Anthony was acquitted last week of murder in the death of her daughter, Caylee. (AP Photo/Red Huber,Pool)

Advertise | AdChoices

ORLANDO — This is what freedom looks like for Casey Anthony: $537.68 from her jail account, no job, estranged parents, a criminal record, lawsuits pending against her and the scorn of multitudes who think she got away with murder.

She quickly gave reporters the slip after walking out of jail Sunday, but whatever life she manages to build for herself will be lived under a media microscope and the shadow of countless threats.

"Right now we are just moving forward and trying to start putting the pieces back together for Casey's life," her attorney, Jose Baez, told Geraldo Rivera by phone on Fox News Channel late Sunday.

Experts who have helped other notorious defendants through rough times say she will have opportunities as well, but it won't be easy for the 25-year-old, who was found not guilty of killing her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, but convicted of lying to investigators.

With her hair in a bun, Casey Anthony walked out the front door of an Orlando-area jail shortly after midnight, wearing a pink T-shirt, blue jeans and sneakers, and escorted by sheriff's deputies holding semi-automatic rifles. Protesters shouted "baby killer" and "you suck" as she climbed into an SUV.

The vehicle sped away and darted into a parking garage at a building where one of her attorneys has offices. Where she went next is unknown.

Soon after her release, there was police activity at Orlando Executive Airport as two vehicles pulled up to a twin-engine private jet bound for Columbus, Ohio, but no one saw Anthony get out and onto the plane. Ohio is the home state of Anthony's parents, but an official at the Columbus airport said the aircraft was only carrying golfers back from a Florida vacation.

"Casey is in good hands," said Todd Macaluso, a former member of Anthony's defense team who declined to comment further.

Baez did not respond Sunday to email and phone messages left by The Associated Press, nor did other lawyers on her defense team and those representing her father and mother. And in the Fox News interview, Baez declined to talk about his client's whereabouts or state of mind.

Asked her plans including whether she might enter a residential therapy program, Baez said lawyers for Anthony are "certainly exploring all possibilities right now." Baez said he was foremost concerned about Anthony's safety, and struck out at media commentators who have been condemning Anthony as guilty despite the jury's verdict.

"This young woman had her day in court," Baez told Fox News. "We need to start respecting jury verdicts and decisions that juries make."

Asked if Anthony planned to cash in on her fame, Baez said she has "certain rights as an individual in this country." But Baez denied one entrepreneur's claim on the network that he had acquired the rights to an interview with her for $1 million, and said that in fact he wouldn't be meeting with the man after the televised boast. Attorneys planned to handle Anthony's affairs in a "dignified manner," he said.

"If she decides she wants to speak publicly about it, she'll make that decision," he said.

Another former Anthony lawyer, Terry Lenamon, said he had no clue where she was headed, and that probably only a few people close to her knew.

"I wouldn't want anyone to know," he said. "I think she needs to go underground and I think she needs to spend some time to get her life back together."

Anthony's July 5 acquittal shocked and enraged many around the country who had been following the case since Caylee's 2008 disappearance. Anger has spilled onto social media sites and elsewhere. Her legal team said on Friday it had received an emailed death threat.

Anthony did not report her daughter's disappearance for a month and was arrested after telling a string of lies about the case to police. Caylee's remains were found in December 2008 near the home Casey Anthony shared with her parents.

Prosecutors alleged that Anthony suffocated her daughter with duct tape because motherhood interfered with her desire for a carefree life, but her lawyers said the girl drowned in an accident that snowballed out of control. Some of the jurors who acquitted Anthony said they believe she bears some responsibility for her daughter's death but that prosecutors failed to prove that she murdered the child.

Anthony had remained in jail to finish a four-year sentence for lying to investigators. With credit for the nearly three years she'd spent in jail since August 2008 and good behavior, she had only days remaining when she was sentenced July 7.

Her public vilification did not ease with her release from jail. "A baby killer was just set free!" Bree Thornton, 39, shouted as the SUV left the jail.

"She is safer in jail than she is out here," said Mike Quiroz, who drove from Miami to spend his 22nd birthday outside the jail. "She better watch her butt. She is known all over the world."

It won't be impossible for Anthony to get a fresh start, though it will be difficult, said Los Angeles-based attorney Thomas Mesereau. His clients have included the late singer Michael Jackson when he was charged with child molestation and actor Robert Blake when he was charged with murdering his wife.

Anthony could accept requests for paid interviews, or a benefactor may be able to help her in the short term, Mesereau said.

"When you have that degree of celebrity, there is usually somebody who would like to get involved," Mesereau said. "The problem is trusting anyone. People are willing to leak things to the media. They're willing to be paid off for information. It's very difficult to find people whom you can trust."

As of Sunday, though, those closest to her had revealed little about her future plans. Baez said in a brief statement issued as she was being released that he hoped Anthony could "receive the counseling and treatment she needs to move forward with the rest of her life."

Other attorneys on her defense team have not hinted at where she might go, and neither have her parents, whose relationship with Casey Anthony is strained. During trial, Anthony's defense attorneys argued that her father, George Anthony, molested Casey as a child and covered up Caylee's death. He has denied both claims, and neither has been substantiated.

What is known is that Casey Anthony still faces a slew of legal problems even though the criminal charges have been resolved. She has been sued for hundreds of thousands of dollars by a Texas group that searched for Caylee in the weeks after she was reported missing, and prosecutors are seeking to recoup the cost of their investigation into Caylee's disappearance.

Anthony also is being sued for defamation by a woman named Zenaida Gonzalez who claims she has been harassed and unable to find work after Anthony alleged Caylee was kidnapped by a baby sitter with Gonzalez' name. The woman's attorneys had wanted to depose Anthony before she left jail, but the deposition was rescheduled for October.

Any of those civil cases could put a major dent in any money Anthony receives for writing a book, signing a movie deal or doing interviews. Anthony is broke, and her defense team was paid for with taxpayers' money after $200,000 she received from ABC News was spent.

Several book publishers contacted by The Associated Press said they knew of no memoir that was being shopped around and consider her too tainted to sign a deal.

Anthony could avoid the potential liability of hundreds of thousands of dollars from the lawsuits by filing for bankruptcy, though plaintiffs would probably attempt to keep her on the hook for damages if she signs lucrative deals after filing, said R. Scott Shuker, an Orlando bankruptcy attorney.

"There is a potentially huge upside to keep the income and not owe the debt, but you know these folks are going to challenge it so she would be having more trials," Shuker said.

An important step in building a new life is getting psychological help to cope with her notoriety, severed family ties and newfound freedom, said attorneys with clients in similar circumstances.

"Everything she has been through, that's more than most people can deal with in a lifetime," said Daniel Meachum, an Atlanta attorney who has represented football player Michael Vick when he was convicted of dog fighting and actor Wesley Snipes when he was convicted of tax evasion.

Media relations expert Marti Mackenzie, who specialized in legal cases, said it's important for Anthony to make some kind of public statement soon. She said a standard news conference is out of the question, but Anthony needs to say she made terrible mistakes, that she is grateful to her defense team and that she has thought about what happened every day of her life in jail.

"In traditional public relations language, it's called feeding the beast," Mackenzie said. "Even if you don't give the beast a full meal, you respond. Because once you're part of media scrutiny ... how it is handled once the case is over will help to set a tone."

___

Associated Press writer Curt Anderson in Miami contributed to this report.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
  • Enjoy this article? Help vote it up the 'Vine.

Back To Top | Front Page

Published to:

  • Mike Schneider's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: none
  • Regions: United States , Orlando/Daytona Beach/Melbourne
  • Public Discussion (39)
lk734505

Casey got a sentence worse than prison or death.
She is an ostracized pariah tossed into a vengeful world.
She will always be recognized,hounded, even hunted. No family or friends will ever welcome her. She can never trust anyone. No one will ever trust her. She is uneducated, unskilled, and no one will ever employ her.
She will find that those who will use her for financial gain will later reject her. She will lose any money earned toward towering legal and protection bills. .
Interesting to think how far she will fall in one, five, or thirty years. If karma is truly as they say, the worst years of her life are yet to come.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Sun Jul 17, 2011 11:27 PM EDT
Arlene Tognetti

Ik734505

I agree, she has karma to pay to society: The jury did their duty and what they could do

under the law of Florida and the evidence: but here is the truth: society knows/feels something is wrong so she becomes a pariah

An outcast (pariah) is a person who is rejected, and sometimes isolated, by society in general.

Karma good or bad ...exists outside of the law

    #1.1 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:03 AM EDT
    SadMom-3723222

    I do like the idea of Caylee's Law in that it might deter others from trying to "pull a Casey" and think that they could get away with murder as she has clearly done. So sad that this jury was incapable of reading a bit between the lines and seeing the whole "dot-to-dot picture" when just a few little dots were smeared or missing. Too bad there can't be a do-over trial; damn that double-jeopardy sometimes!

    I think that it is imperative in a case like this to prove who exactly had custody of the minor child(ren) at the time of the disappearance and that person, or persons, should be compelled to testify in their behalf(s) and explain under oath what exactly happened to said child(ren) unless they are indeed declared mentally incompetent before trial.

    I did not watch Nancy Grace at all but any normal loving mother on this Earth that saw Anthony smiling away, dancing at nightclubs, getting new tatoos of a "Good Life", shopping and renting videos with her main squeeze, etc. etc. all the while her only child has "disappeared" does NOT need any further evidence of wrong doing because that quite simply goes against the grain of all human nature and defies the normal instincts and behaviors of a mother. Period.

    I think that sociopathic, narcissistic, pathological liars can easily slip through the radar of a psych-exam and I am left with the hope that Casey Anthony will get her tubes tied and does not decide to further her education...all the world needs is a smarter, more-educated psycho!

    Casey was born this way and cannot change who she is. That's my opinion only...we all got 'em!

    • 2 votes
    #1.2 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 3:24 AM EDT
    Stormi NormiDeleted
    SadMom-3723222

    We The People still have the freedom of speech, Stormi Normi...and if that goes then I will highly consider trying to get out of America. We The People can question the system if something seems wrong or in need of a change or amendment and see that our voice goes through proper channels. Might not do a damn bit of good in this case or the next...but it could save lives of innocent victims someday.

    Why don't you go hunt down these "crazy lunatics" who might do something to Casey...while I continue learning, reading and/or commenting about the crazy lunatic named Casey!

    • 1 vote
    #1.4 - Wed Jul 20, 2011 4:26 AM EDT
    Stormi NormiDeleted
    Reply
    JAVE

    Lay low? You think? Sounds a smart move for the most hated women in the USA and I think even the World at this moment.

    What do i know, i think she didn't kill her kid. I think she left the kid in bed, went out partying, came home and found the kid drowned in the crapper. That is very 2 year old. I would imagine the defense went with drowning because that is what happened.

    Ms. Anthony's likely end is this. She does some interview$. The American people watch the interviews, especially the commercials. They turn against the sponsers and don't buy their product. She takes the money and runs. The Devil grants her luck twice. Van der Sloot beats the rap in Peru. They take off for the Islands. Nancy Grace literally eats her own head on TV. The booze and drugs take their toll. Homicide, sucicide or OD it matters not. They we find out she was pregnant by his love child and we all think the kid was lucky. Even the Pro-Lifers.

    • 2 votes
    Reply#2 - Sun Jul 17, 2011 11:42 PM EDT
    Stormi NormiDeleted
    Reply
    giunda

    vote this

    Angry Birds

    • 1 vote
    Reply#3 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 12:02 AM EDT
    Chris-735081

    I never bought into that whole "book deal" gambit. Who the hell would buy a book with her name on it?

    It certainly wouldn't make the kind of money she's going to need.

    Nobody is going to hire her; what job could she do anyway?

    She doesn't have anything going for her. TMZ might give her some cash for something, maybe some of the other tabloids could pay her for interviews, but it's not going to be enough money for what she's going to need: An entirely new existance.

    Best thing she can do is change her name, leave the country and hope nobody ever tracks her down.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#4 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 12:56 AM EDT
    Little Sure Shot

    No way would Harvey Levin (TMZ) ever give her a plugged nickle.

      #4.1 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:59 AM EDT
      Stormi NormiDeleted
      Reply
      A radicial idea

      She is innocent of the crimes they (prosecutors leveled at her). Be it political or stupidity it echoes the OJ Simpson case. 12 jurors acquitted her and left the same questions of the of OJ case. Did the police botch it, did the prosecutors over reach the evidence. We are left with the same conclusion the prosecutors really f***ed it up. For god sakes the prosecution could not establish a cause of death, a time of death and they were so arrogant they entered in to evidence a piece that could not be reproduced (the chemicals in the trunk.) Capital Murder requires maximum proof. Okay charge her with something you can prove.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#5 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:15 AM EDT
      bdjwill

      Which they did. But all the lesser charges were tosses out by the jury as well. I mean, how the hell did they not get child abuse on her?

      • 1 vote
      #5.1 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:20 AM EDT
      A radicial idea

      File a case without sufficient proof (prosecutor stupidity or looking for political advantage).
      If a prosecutor is wrong in a Capital murder case then they are wrong with child abuse case. (juror stupidity)

        #5.2 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 2:45 AM EDT
        Stormi NormiDeleted
        Reply
        VIVA-796465

        sometimes i think we are capable of making our own hell on earth.............

          Reply#6 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:17 AM EDT
          private-1162067

          ALL I have to say Karma is a biatch and who was involve in caylee's death karma will come and Miss Casey, you might think your free from murder but you will wish you was back in prison!!!! your life will never be the same, you will not be able to enjoy society your life will be tied up being guarded.. you will be living in hell out here in this world and to the rest of that family,you world be hell also for what has happen to that baby and no dam adult in that household has helped that baby out may all of you feel the wrath of KARMA!!!!

            Reply#7 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:28 AM EDT
            Stormi NormiDeleted
            Reply
            A radicial idea

            I require a Kidney transplant. Diabetes have totally compromised both kidneys and I am dialysis. Which I go to Canada for. I left my home in El Paso, TX for a home my wife owns in Montana. The cost of our best available medical care would cost me 120,000 dollars. In Canada who has a higher rated medical system then the United States will cost me 000,000,00. I Placed my self on Canada's waiting list and was told that although I have a rare blood (AB+) type that I should have an organ soon. The United States told me essentially don't count on an organ. I am on both lists and for some reason I feel I have a better chance with Canada, but I will take what I get. In the United States I will have to declare bankruptcy to have it done. In Canada they gave me hope and a price tag I could financially live with whereas the U.S. gave me little or none at all at a price that would blow my credit score.

            • 1 vote
            Reply#8 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:31 AM EDT
            Wade-296254

            I require a bank account filled with money. I require a wife that won't take me for everything I have. I could go on with my personal wants and needs. Truth is, I have what I have, and to beg for it, is not a consideration. If I need a kidney, and don't get one, then, well, that is life, and no one lives forever.

            You, sir, and your requirements, and your blatant scam tactics, makes me sick. Why do you even post such garbage here? Go to Canada, go to wherever, go to hell. Who really gives a s h it.

              #8.1 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 3:56 AM EDT
              Stormi NormiDeleted
              Reply
              private-1162067

              lk734505, you are sole right !!! I have watched Karma bite people in the azz and its comming to casey and her family! Noone in that family will ever have a enjoyable life there life is about to begin into hell! Casey's world will never be the same nor will she ever enjoy society! I can't understand how anyone in that family would ever help that baby!!! burn in hell casey!! whomever sends that woman money and offers to help her I hope the wrath of Karma bites you in the butt!!!! Casey is the devil!

                Reply#9 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:34 AM EDT
                Stormi NormiDeleted
                Reply
                private-1162067

                The jury lives will never be the same because of what they have done, there lives are ruined because they made the worst mistake of there lives letting the devil out to hurt others!

                  Reply#10 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 1:36 AM EDT
                  Stormi NormiDeleted
                  Reply
                  Ladyinred1

                  Ain't this a kick in the head? I read on the crawl screen at the bottom of the t.v. Miss Casey has filed an appeal for her "conviction" of lying to police. If that isn't the biggest piece of arrogance I have ever heard, then I don't know what is! Talk about kicking a gift horse in the mouth!! She's already supposedly spent her time in jail for that offense, so what could be gained from even perhaps winning on appeal? Her GOOD name back?

                  OMG, wow!

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#11 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 2:37 AM EDT
                  Stormi NormiDeleted
                  Reply
                  jennifer hernandez

                  Seems to me she didn't have a good name to begin with. Where is the damn justice in this country? Seriously, SMH!

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#12 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 3:17 AM EDT
                  ok101

                  listen people, lets just admit it, this family played us american people to a tee!!! they all played on our emotions from the "GET GO"! I sure hate that term and i think u all know why!!! these people are very good manipulators, they turn on eachother when they cannot get out of the jam they put themselves in! when it is good for one of them to blame another the war begins! they do not play well with OTHERS!!! they all need to be put in jail, because each and everyone of them had a hand in murdering this little girl!!! what a laugh at the memorial, CMA, he cries out, i thought this memorial was to be for little caylee, to honor her, to let her know," I will not stop searching, and I will knock on every door till I find my granddaugter", and we all know who said that, right? RIGHT??? GEORGE, well, whatever, he should of finished what he started, but then again, we all know he wasn't going to go through with it, RIGHT? then that would of messed up the alibi for the one in jail!!! wow what a tangle web we weave, when our dirty little secrects are found out!!!! now for the one who started this who scenario, humm, what can we say, she acutually got what she deseverd, if u really think about it, in jail she was watched, kept away from general population, and was surrounded by um, people who were in the same jam she was in, i believe those were "her" words, but please don't quote me, she has been known to lie! she is now in a much worst situation, whose going to watch her back now? the ones that protected her by defending her, are now the ones who r using her, funny isn't it, it won't be long when they get tired of babysitiing her and well we all know how thats going to end RIGHT? ok, let me give u all a hint, they are going to discard her like trash. like they say "CARMA'S A BITCH"!!!! as for the jury, well, i guess they left they"re common sense locked up somewhere, because the way they are all acting now they never had any!! what lame excuses, that the ones who have given the media they're opinions, embarrasing, and the ones who were talked into the "NOT GUILTY" verdict, showed they're sign of weakness!!! HUNG JURY, MISTRIAL, ANYTHING, would of been more civilized, at least there wouldve been a chance of a jury to see that the defense was no better than they're client, by lying and having no proof in those lies. anyhow it is what it is and everyone who had a hand in deciding that this convict was innocent of those charges, will have to live with it, as well as us the people who have been mourning for little caylee. tomorrow is another day, maybe justice will be served!!!!

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#13 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 4:00 AM EDT
                  Stormi NormiDeleted
                  Reply
                  A radicial idea

                  My family cares. My community cares (I am an activist, a term applied to me by my Us Representative when I stood up and defended gay rights). I have taken my beliefs and made them known to my community and there are many that would miss my death. Finally do we wish to hang Darwinism to healthcare??? The little old ladies and little old men would say HELL NO!!!
                  Sir, If I can get a better deal on buying a car by driving 600 miles. If I could get a new care for say 0.00 dollars. If I drive to this dealership answer a couple of questions and they sign over a brand new care. No strings attached what would you do? You would take the offer and slap yourself on the back for the good deal you made. Why should my kidney be different.
                  Why do you post such (curse word inserted here). Simple we in the United States have a arrogant belief system. We think we are the best at everything. We are not. Of the 10 most industrialized countries we are the only one that does not have socialized medicine for the general population of any sort. I worked 23 years at fairly lucrative career. When I started going blind. I forced to retired. When I became legally blind I was disabled. My kidneys began to act up. Two years later I received Medicareand six years after that I went on dialysis. Even collecting social security (about 1/5th of what I was making before I forced to retire). There is no way I can afford the 20% for the surgery that will save my life. So, I turn to the neighbor to the north for a kidney transplant. REALLY, WHAT WOULD YOU DO?

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#14 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 6:38 AM EDT
                  Stormi NormiDeleted
                  A radicial idea

                  Stormi Normi
                  Thank you some of the what is spent on Obama care and patriotism along with conservatism ends when a person's life hangs in the balance. For me Canada gives me an option that I could not get anywhere in the United States. I am on Medicare because of disability but do not qualify for Medicaid because my SSD is to much. This leaves me with the 20% that Medicare does not cover. Transplant organs are lucrative propositions for those in the health care complex. To get a kidney transplant you need; the need for one, and at the hospital that my specialist uses requires 50% up front (75,000) to do the surgery. The money is more of an obstacle then the organ even though I am AB+ blood type (The rarest type). This is why capitalism in healthcare does not work. If it up to me we would have a single payer system just like Canada. It system works for me a non citizen (of Canada) then the country of my citizenship.

                  • 1 vote
                  #14.2 - Wed Jul 20, 2011 6:19 PM EDT
                  Reply
                  Ted-1487122

                  She got off because she is a good looking middle class white female with a big set of tits. If she were African American, they would be firing up the gas chamber for her right now.

                  • 2 votes
                  Reply#15 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 6:24 PM EDT
                  Stormi NormiDeleted
                  Reply
                  Ted-1487122

                  But, since the gas chamber is going to be empty now, is there any chance we could put Nancy Grace in it?

                  • 2 votes
                  Reply#16 - Mon Jul 18, 2011 6:26 PM EDT
                  Stormi NormiDeleted
                  A radicial idea

                  Am I the only one who sees that the prosecutor in this case f***ed up. That he is either colossally stupid or was counting on using this case to become Florida's Attorney General. It looks like he threw the dice in hopes of getting a conviction and the ride public opinion into a political appointment. It seems to me that the lack of conviction was a gamble that the prosecutor was willing to try. It seems to me that the District Attorney should be brought up on charges and at the very least disbarred.
                  The state could not prove time of death, cause of death, and who actually killed her. The state entered into evidence a piece of forensic work that could not be duplicated by either the prosecution or the defense. This is no evidence at all if it can't be replicated. This sounds to me as colossal stupidity or political ambition.
                  I carry the belief that the mother did indeed kill her child but there is a world of difference between belief and beyond a reasonable doubt. Given the circumstance the DA did not have crap much less enough evidence to eliminate reasonable doubt. I have heard a lot about justice, about new legislation, about changing the way a jury operates.
                  Think think hard do we really want to do that. Justice to me requires the highest burden of proof for a Capital Murder case. Justice to me is not revenge. Justice to me was served. Justice requires the elimination of ALL reasonable doubt something the DA did not have the evidence to do.

                  • 2 votes
                  #16.2 - Wed Jul 20, 2011 6:37 PM EDT
                  Reply
                  Leave a Comment:
                  You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead.
                  You're in XHTML Mode. If you prefer, you can use Easy Mode instead.
                  (XHTML tags allowed - a,b,blockquote,br,code,dd,dl,dt,del,em,h2,h3,h4,i,ins,li,ol,p,pre,q,strong,ul)
                  Newsvine Privacy Statement
                  As a new user, you may notice a few temporary content restrictions. Click here for more info.
                  FUN STUFF:
                  • Leaderboard |
                  • E-Mail Alerts |
                  • Top of the Vine |
                  • Newsvine Live |
                  • Newsvine Archives |
                  • The Greenhouse
                  COMPANY STUFF:
                  • Code of Honor |
                  • Company Info |
                  • Contact Us |
                  • Jobs |
                  • User Agreement |
                  • Privacy Policy |
                  • About our ads
                  LEGAL STUFF:
                  • © 2005-2012 Newsvine, Inc. |
                  • Newsvine® is a registered trademark of Newsvine, Inc. |
                  • Newsvine is a property of msnbc.com