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Chapter 1

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The Court of Public Opinion, Casey Anthony

Prologue

The Social Media Trial of the Century – Time Magazine

Prosecutor Jeff Ashton Quote: “There had never been any trouble at the house. The Anthonys seemed the definition of blissful suburbia.”

The Anthonys’ home on Hopespring Drive, was positioned in a picturesque suburb of

Orlando, Florida. "There had never been any trouble at the house, even when Casey

and her older brother, Lee, were at the height of their teenage years. The Anthonys

seemed the definition of blissful suburbia, especially with the addition of the angelic,

bright-eyed baby girl, {Caylee}.” 1 That was how the home of George and Cindy

Anthony seemed to detectives in the summer of 2008, when they first started

investigating the disappearance of two-year-old Caylee Marie Anthony.

1 Jeff Ashton book


The subsequent trial of Caylee’s mother became the most sensational news story of

2008.2 The Orlando court in Florida’s Ninth Judicial Circuit issued 600 press

credentials,3 and Time magazine dubbed it the social media trial of the century. 4 Close

to one million dollars was spent investigating and prosecuting the lone defendant. 5

Casey Anthony, a 22-year-old single mother, was charged with three felonies including

first degree murder, aggravated child abuse, and manslaughter.

6

Thirty-one days passed before police were even notified that her two-year-old daughter,

Caylee, was missing. Then it wasn’t Casey, but the child’s grandmother, Cindy, who

called authorities, demanding Casey’s arrest. Cindy directed suspicion at her daughter. 7

Pictures surfaced on the internet showing Casey at a nightclub during the month her

2 covereage 3 News article 4 Time magazine 5 article 6 article 7 Cindy interview


little girl was missing. The internet, the media and public went ballistic. 8

More time passed as thousands all across the nation searched for the toddler. 9

Videotaped jailhouse interviews between Casey and her parents were released on

YouTube, and none of them showed the young mother with any apparent signs of

remorse or grief.10 Then in December of that year a grisly discovery was made:

Caylee’s remains were found in a wooded area, only a few feet from a main road, very

close to the young mother's home.

11

Today, the name “Casey Anthony� remains synonymous with murder and still

engenders a visceral animosity. She was named the most unpopular person in America

during her trial in 2011.12 Another poll the next year reattached the same dishonor to her

8 Media coverage 9 Police reports national tips 10 Jailhouse visits 11 Article 12 poll


name, more than a year after her trial ended.13 The public spectacle of the Casey

Anthony trial came close in many respects to resembling the days of the Roman

Colosseum, when the public thirsted to see lions devour the prisoner in their arena. In

our own contemporary times social media became America’s public arena, and Casey

Anthony emerged as the main attraction. What the social media crowds wanted to see

was an embodiment of Caesar give his final “thumbs down” and issue the order to

execute their captured prize. Time magazine reported during the trial, “Virtually no one

doubts that Anthony was involved in her child’s death,” then added, “but if you see

murder in Casey Anthony’s big brown eyes during a live feed of her trial, you can tell all

the world how delectable you will find her execution.”14

Florida's Attorney General, Pam Bondi, said before the trial even started, "The evidence

Is overwhelming. No one else in the world except Casey Anthony could have done

this."15 It was literally impossible to find a single reporter or media commentator before 13 poll 14 Time magazine


or even after the trial who considered this woman could be innocent. The Chicago

Tribune reported, "Just when you think Casey Anthony cannot nauseate you anymore,

there is this: she wants more children."16

On July 5, 2011 the nation waited for the jury’s verdict to be heard from the twenty-third

floor of the Orlando court house. Judge Belvin Perry’s clerk read the jury’s decisions.

“As to the charge of first degree murder, we find the defendant not guilty. As to the

charge of manslaughter, we find the defendant not guilty. As to the charge of

aggravated child abuse, we find the defendant not guilty.” 17

Although there was not a single reporter or news commentator who believed the

defendant could possibly be innocent, 12 sequestered jurors came to that conclusion.

The jury was not at all sympathetic to the defendant yet their first vote was eight to four

15 Orlando Sentinel 16 Chicago Tribune 17 Article


for acquittal. 18They deliberated only 11 hours before unanimously finding her not guilty

of any crime involving the death of her child, Caylee. 19 So this sets up a very interesting

difference of opinion. The jury was sequestered by the court and reached its decision

based on evidence heard within the four walls of their courtroom. The public, on the

other hand, had an information environment supported by mainstream and social

media. The media's court of public opinion was fed by a carnival of pictures, videos, and

opinion on blogs all over the blogosphere. Here is an example: “Are you kidding

me…you still have a daughter that you knew was dead while you partied. Who cares

what you have… you don’t have Caylee because you don’t pay attention. You’ll never

have freedom. Watch out now dog!!! Damn you are insane!!!!”20

Outside the courtroom, crowds, television cameras, and media reporters filled the

streets. Gasps were heard when someone shouted, “She’s not guilty!” Crowds grew

18 Juror interviews 19 Orlando Sentinel 20 Blog item


angry, venting disbelief and exasperation.21 Across the social media world, pent up

emotions and anger erupted in unison. In the Twitter universe of 140 character

messages, 325,000 tweets texted screams of incredulity during the first hour after the

court’s decision.22 News of the jury’s decision spread quickly; a bare one per cent

supported her acquittal.23 Tweets like this one were the rule: "The jury was inept and

lazy. That's why we have a baby killer being set free." 24

Inside the courtroom the acquitted defendant hugged her attorneys and wiped away

tears. Immediately she was escorted into a small ante room, where she shared her

relief privately with her attorneys. The verdict was a twist of irony for the then 25-year-

old girl who spent nearly three years in solitary confinement awaiting trial. During most

of that time her family did not communicate with her. 25 Though the justice system

declared her not guilty, the court of public opinion refused to grant her freedom. She has 21 Orlando Sentinel 22 News report 23 News report 24 Blog item 25 Article


not dared show her face in public since that day of her acquittal. After her release, she

has remained in seclusion for her own protection.26

In her video diary reported January 5, 2012, six months after her acquittal, she said

from her hiding place, "It’s just a little surreal how much things have changed since July,

{2011 when she was acquitted}, and how many things haven’t changed.” 27 Research

into the personal story of Casey Anthony reveals the social media frenzy against her

replicated in the public square what her dysfunctional parents did for years in the

privacy of the Anthony’s home. Casey Anthony lived in a hostile, antagonistic

environment that neither encouraged nor listened to what she wanted to say. 28

The media's prison of negative public opinion was not unlike the prison she experienced

in her home at 4937 Hopespring Drive. Each had the same effect of muting what this

26 Huffington Post 27 News report 28 Police interviews


young woman had to say.29 For that reason alone, the public and media need to take a

breath and hear what Casey Anthony herself said contemporaneously with her arrest,

trial, and ultimate acquittal. It has been many years since her own mother, Cindy,

pleaded with police to arrest her daughter on July 16, 2008. Now new evidence has

been unearthed to solve the mystery of what really happened to Caylee, and who is

responsible for her death.

What is surprising about this case is that testimony and statements from dozens of

people interviewed by investigators actually revealed the truth every step of the way. 30

This story takes those statements made to detectives and presents them for the first

time in the context of the family relationships that defined the Anthonys, and in the light

of the public record and acquittal by her jury. One of two people in the Anthony home

held a loving, living two-year-old Caylee in their arms, and then within minutes, put her

into a laundry bag and left her dead body in a swamp just blocks from their home. 29 Cindy police interview 30 Psychologists’s depositions


For the next six months before she was discovered, parents George and Cindy Anthony

were literally just steps from the swamp where either Casey or George dumped her

body. On December 11, 2008 a county meter reader literally almost fell over her

remains. We will look for consciousness of guilt from the behavior of those two Anthony

family members, a father and his daughter. It would be no surprise to learn someone in

the family covered up the crime. The surprise will come when the identity of that

person{s} is revealed.

We discover the people George and Cindy Anthony were before Caylee was born, and

the kind of parents they were to Casey. This new information provides startling insight

into Casey’s behavior as she burst onto the public stage with the announcement of her

arrest. Casey instantly emerged as the prime suspect by police. It is significant that it

was her mother, Cindy, who brought her to police begging them to arrest her. 31

31 911 call July 16, 2008


We learn answers to key questions never before revealed about the case: Casey

Anthony failed to report her daughter missing to police the day of the incident. Was she

protecting someone else in her family? Why was this 22-year-old mother unable to

show grief from her daughter's death? Why did she invent stories for investigators

claiming it was a fictitious babysitter “Zanny the nanny� who had kidnapped Caylee?

With those answers we can confirm who is responsible for the crimes associated with

the death of Caylee Marie Anthony.

Chapter One

Who Are The Anthonys?

George Anthony Quote: "There was nothing more I could say to her, because I blame her for Caylee not being here." 32

Blogs declared Cindy, George, and Casey were part of a seriously dysfunctional family.

33

The court of public opinion left no doubt it believed the source of the Anthony family's

32 Dr. Phil interview 33 blog


issues was rooted in the lies and behavior of Casey. In fact, the prosecutor, Jeff Ashton,

said exactly that when the trial was over.34 That has become old news. We will take a

fresh look at Cindy, George, and Casey. The Court of Public Opinion, Casey Anthony,

has unearthed new details never before reported. This narrative brings a much needed

balance to the court of public opinion’s judgment it was the twenty-two-year-old single

mom who got away with murder.

By the time the trial started there was certainty about who the players in the Casey

Anthony drama were. The prosecution's theory for the case brought against the young

mother seemed ironclad. The articulate assistant prosecutor, Jeff Ashton, summed up

everyone’s opinion it seemed: “If a mother doesn’t report the death of her daughter,

she’s guilty.” 35 The media reported Casey Anthony was a single mom who wanted to

party rather than be saddled with the responsibilities of raising a little girl by herself. 34 Ashton book 35 Jeff ashton quote 36 Articles

36


She likely used chloroform, Xanax, or perhaps something else to sedate the toddler,

before covering her daughter’s mouth and nose with duct tape, suffocating her, and

causing her little girl's death. Then to hide the crime, she dumped her daughter's body

in woods very near her home. She told innumerable lies to her parents for 31 days,

while she partied and lived a life she secretly craved. She even put a "Bella Vita"

{beautiful life} tattoo on her left shoulder only days after cutting the bonds of

motherhood, and killing her beautiful little child. During these 31 days at least, Casey

was free to dedicate her life to drugs, drinking and partying. 37 For the media and public,

that was all they needed to know about Casey Anthony. The case prosecutors built

through the media was complete, and damning. The court of public opinion reached its

decision early: case closed!

The George We Know

37 Prosecution theory


We think we know Casey's father, George. This silver-haired former sheriff's deputy

worked homicide and narcotics briefly for the Trumbull County, Ohio sheriff's

department.38 He married a local woman from Warren, Ohio, named Terry

Rosenberger;39 then after seven years, they divorced. The following year, George met

Cindy, a nurse who cared for his sister in Trumbull Memorial Hospital. After a whirlwind

courtship they married in 1981.40 Soon after marrying, George quit his deputy’s job and

went to work for his father selling cars.

41

In 1989, George and Cindy moved with their

children, Lee and Casey, to Orlando, where he found work in his new community as a

security guard at the Orlando Arena.42

After his daughter was arrested George occasionally was mentioned in news reports as

he encouraged volunteer efforts nationwide in the search for Caylee. There was no

suspicion at that time he had anything to do with his granddaughter’s death. As the trial 38 Police interviews 39 News story 40 Police interviews 41 George interviews 42 Rick police interview


grew closer however, he had to endure shocking accusations of sexual abuse from

Casey's defense attorneys in his daughter's desperate attempt to avoid the death

penalty in her trial.43 After the two-year-old child’s body was eventually found in woods

near the Anthony home in December, 2008 we learned George attempted to take his

own life a few weeks later in obvious grief.44 For the media and public, that was all they

needed to know about George Anthony. Poor George was a grieving grandfather

broken from the loss of Caylee.45 Case closed!

A Fresh Look: George

The jury foreman surprised a national television audience shortly after the verdict, when

he revealed that the jury, sitting only a few feet from George when he testified,

concluded he had a very selective memory when answering questions from the

43 Defense Opening Statement 44 News report 45 Blog item


defense. After the trial the foreman suggested, "We need to take a close look at

George." 46 The jury foreman was asked to comment specifically on whether there were

suspicions within the jury panel that George may have been involved in covering up

Caylee's death; perhaps he was somehow involved in her accidental death? Were there

discussions among jurors that he could be the actual murderer? The foreman replied to

these questions, ominously: "All three." 47

When George moved to Florida from his hometown in Warren, Ohio, he brought with

him some serious personal baggage. He was described as impulsive and selfish. 48

Something in George’s personality produced serious anger management issues. 49

Interestingly, when he surfaced in the media as a grieving, sympathetic figure, his ex-

wife voluntarily went on cable news channels to announce that she knew George to be,

in her words, "a genetic liar." George's ex-wife, Terry, explained that he was someone

46 Cable tv interview 47 See Greta transcript 48 Ex-wife Dr. Drew 49 Rick interview


who could not keep from lying.50

One can surmise that if someone lies constantly, there is a reasonable suspicion he has

secrets he fears are at risk of being exposed. Shortly after Caylee was born, Cindy

discovered George was secretly gambling online with her debit card. 51 His losses

{funded from the theft of Cindy’s money} exceeded $30,000. Cindy had to take out a

second mortgage on the house and she used her nurse’s retirement fund to keep from

being evicted from their home.52 George fled the home and filed for divorce from Cindy.

His lawyer explained to him that because Cindy provided most of his support during

their marriage, he should ask the court for an award of half the cash value from the

house and also demand alimony.

53

Cindy had a financial incentive for keeping her

marriage to George alive. That decision by Cindy set in motion a sequence of events in

the Anthony family relationships that later culminated in Caylee’s death.

50 See Dr. Drew transcript 51 Mother’s emails 52 Cindy interview 53 George interview


George’s work history was erratic. He had been in and out of multiple jobs as a security

guard since abruptly quitting his deputy’s job in Ohio twenty years earlier. He had been

hired and then fired at more jobs than anyone in the family could keep track of and he

was often unemployed for long periods.

54

It fell to Cindy to make most of their house

payments throughout their marriage.55

Years later, in the last moment of Caylee’s life, George was home and alone with his

granddaughter, but he was never seriously questioned or considered a person of

interest by investigators.56 Cindy told detectives that she found a ladder attached to

their deep above-ground swimming pool in the backyard that day Caylee went missing.

Police never seriously followed up with George on the lead his wife provided detectives. 57

Orange County investigators extended professional courtesies for George, a former

sheriff's deputy. They told him virtually the first day of the investigation they were not 54 Cindy interview 55 See Shirley emails 56 Police interview 57 Police interviews


investigating him for any involvement in Caylee’s disappearance. 58 They instead

protected him as their chief witness for the Orange County Grand Jury to get an

indictment against his daughter, Casey. 59

The Cindy We Know

We think we know that Casey's mother, Cindy, could not possibly be a factor in the

mysterious disappearance of little Caylee. Casey’s strange behavior seemed to have

left Cindy no choice but to ask police to arrest her daughter on July 16, 2008. It seemed

obvious Cindy was helping bring to justice the person responsible for Caylee's

disappearance.

She must have been conflicted listening to George tell investigators he was sure Casey

was responsible for Caylee’s death. The state attorney quickly brought murder

58 See July police interview 59 Orlando Sentinel


indictments against Casey that carried the death penalty for the young single mom.

Then Cindy was horrified when her daughter’s attorney accused George of molesting

Casey. She was torn between supporting her husband against the allegations Casey

made about him as the trial opened, and loyalty to her troubled daughter.

Her conflicted loyalties seemed to grow during the trial. Many believed she lied to

protect Casey when she claimed to have made a computer search for chloroform found

on the desktop computer in the Anthony home just months before Caylee went

missing.60

For the media and court of public opinion, Cindy seemed more grieved from the death

of Caylee than the baby’s mother, Casey, ever was. Cindy's emotional testimony during

the trial was captivating. She buried her face in her hands when forced to recall her last

memories of Caylee.61 Cindy seemed to be yet another Anthony family victim of Casey.

60 News reports 61 Trial testimony


Case closed!

A Fresh Look: Cindy

Casey Anthony emerged as the number one enigma from the media narrative of the

Anthony family. After the trial, George seemed to be a close second. Now today, as a

result of new research for The Court of Public Opinion, Casey Anthony, Cindy surfaces

over and over not as a victim of her daughter's lies and mischief, but as the principal

enabler of a massive denial amid aberrant family relationships so apparent in the

Anthony family dynamic.62

When Casey was pregnant with Caylee and only a few weeks short of her term, Casey

unexpectedly appeared with the family at Cindy’s brother, Rick's, wedding. There was a

buzz among the guests wanting to know more about the expectant mother and when

she was due. "Come on Cindy," Rick said to his sister, "everyone can see she is

62 Psychologists depositions


pregnant. You're a pediatric RN for gosh sakes. What gives?" Cindy told her brother

emphatically Casey was not pregnant, "she is just bloated." Rick, later told police he

didn't understand what was going on in the family between his sister, Cindy, and his

obviously pregnant niece. When they got home, Casey's brother, Lee, asked his mom

about Casey's baby bump. Cindy dismissed her son’s inquiry. 63 Lee would later confide

to a friend, as far as his own family is concerned, “I am completely out of the loop.”64

Cindy’s co-workers at Gentiva Health Services saw Casey regularly as she visited her

mother at work each week during her pregnancy. They commented to Cindy about

Casey's stomach. It was so large it pushed her belly button inside out. They told Cindy

how happy they were for the nineteen-year-old expectant mother. Cindy repeatedly

brushed off their well wishes, refusing admit to her colleagues she had a pregnant

daughter.65 A few weeks later Casey delivered Caylee. Cindy never shared anything

63 See news article 64 See Lee’s email to 65 Police interviews


with anybody about her daughter’s pregnancy.

Cindy was trained in pediatrics 66 and after Casey’s arrest police asked Cindy about

these incidents in their interviews with her. "When did you learn of Casey's pregnancy?"

police asked. She told investigators she never suspected her daughter was pregnant

until just days before her delivery.67 Who was the RN trained in pediatrics, trying to

protect? Was she worried DNA might reveal the real father of Caylee was a male

member of the Anthony family?

68

At another point during the police investigation, the Orlando Sentinel reported Cindy

was withholding information from police.69 The article reported George told police Casey

had her permission to borrow Cindy's Toyota 4Runner around the time an obnoxious

odor in Casey's Pontiac was first noticed, shortly after George borrowed it. 70 When

66 Police interview, Cindy 67 Police interview, Cindy 68 Psychologists depositions 69 Sentinel article 70 Friend interview


police questioned Cindy she denied Casey ever drove her car.

71

Was the newspaper

story true? Did Cindy hide other facts from investigators to protect someone in the

family who may have placed something with that odor in his daughter’s Pontiac Sunfire?

More about all of this later.

Trial evidence confirmed Cindy hid from police the reason for her separation from

George a few years earlier telling lead prosecutor Linda Drane-Burdick at first, the

money George stole using her debit card for online gambling, was actually the result of

market losses in a pension fund account of his.72 Cindy had a different story for her own

mother, Shirley. She told Shirley that she confronted George after she learned he was

gambling online and racked up over $30,000 in losses with her stolen debit card. 73

Jesse Grund was Casey’s fiance in 2006, and almost married into the Anthony family.

Jesse told police, "They are not a cohesive family group. That family was a carnival of 71 George police interview 72 See prosecutor interview with Cindy 73 Mother’s emails


dysfunctionality."74

The Casey We Know

The court of public opinion was convinced it already knew the central player in the

Casey Anthony drama. The state attorney developed a theory for her prosecution and

as a result, we knew Casey Anthony was a single mom who wanted to party rather than

be saddled with responsibilities for raising a two-year-old by herself. Most damning of

all, Casey never grieved for her baby when it was discovered Caylee had died. For the

media and the public, that was all they needed to hear from the prosecutors about

Casey Anthony.75 Case closed!

A Fresh Look: Casey

The linchpin for the prosecution was their claim Casey was narcissistic, tired of being a 74 Jesse police interview 75 Ashton book


mom and desperate to get rid of Caylee so she could have fun. The prosecution used

images of her at a nightclub for the centerpiece of their theory. Those powerful images

fueled the explosion of conversations and opinions in the blogosphere and helped

reinforce the prosecution's case. From the prosecutors’ point of view, it was a slam

dunk. The prosecutors’ road to a conviction however would ultimately run into one major

pothole – their theory was simply not true. The defendant was not narcissistic. 76 All of

her friends told police Casey Anthony was an ideal and selfless mother to Caylee.

77

The jury's quick acquittal of the defendant begs the question: What did the jury hear that

was so different within the four walls of the courtroom? The jury saw those pictures of

the accused at a nightclub as they were introduced into evidence. The jury also heard

the defense rebuttal. What led them to reject the prosecution's theory, and reach an

opposite conclusion from the social media blogosphere and its court of public opinion?

76 Friends police interviews 77 Friends police interviews


We are fortunate to have the jury foreman's explanation for the fact finders' decision to

acquit. He said publicly after the trial the prosecutor's theory for the crime was full of

holes.78 One of Casey Anthony’s best friends was interrogated by detectives soon after

Casey’s arrest.79 The lead detective for the state's attorney's office was Yuri Melich. He

was a veteran investigator assigned to the missing persons unit for the Orange County

sheriff. On October 9, 2008, he interviewed Melina Calabrese, a close friend throughout

high school who later became a co-worker with Casey at Kodak at Universal Studios in

Orlando. 80

Yuri Melich asked Melina if Casey went to a lot of parties in high school and later also

later when they knew each other at Universal. Melina said, “No, she was not a party-

type girl.”

78 Cable tv interview 79 Multiple interviews 80 Melina interview


Lead Detective Yuri Melich: "Did she go to more parties and stuff than you?" 81

Melina: "Oh no. I don't think she went to a lot of parties at all."

Lead Detective Melich: "What about smoking or drinking or drugs?"

Melina: "Never once in high school did we ever."

Lead Detective Melich: "OK, did she ever tell you, hey I experimented, tried this or

that. Anything like that?"

Melina: "No, she was very adamantly against cigarettes and pot."

Lead Detective Yuri Melich: "You mentioned Fusion {nightclub}. You made a comment

about the picture and said it was just not her?"

Melina: "Right."

81 See Melina interview


Lead Detective Yuri Melich: "Tell me about it."

Melina: "You know, Casey and I have had plenty of good times since high school. And

even in high school and since high school, neither of us were the club going {type}, at

least as frequent as what her pictures appeared to be like. You know we went out every

once in a while. You know, big deal. It seemed like those pictures were coming out all

the time."

Lead Detective Yuri Melich: "What about her actions on the pictures?"

Melina: "I would look at my pictures {of Casey} and I would look at those pictures and

they just don't feel like the Casey I knew. She was trying too hard to be someone she

was not. Those {pictures} seem like she was trying too hard, you know, smile for this

camera and do these poses."

Finally Melich asked about the kind of mother Melina knew Casey to be.


Lead Detective Yuri Melich: "Casey's relationship with Caylee from the time that you

remember, how would you describe that relationship?"

Melina: "I had hoped for it to be mine. She and Caylee were adorable. I almost hoped

for it; you know because she was very good with Caylee. She gave Caylee almost

everything a little girl could want. You know Casey was very good with her. She just

never raised her voice. Always you know, and never saw her touch her in a negative

way. To this day, I hope my own mother-daughter bond is going to be like that. And it

almost seemed easy."

The Anthonys

The Court of Public Opinion, Casey Anthony, yields new information which for the first

time informs the reader that each of these players in the Anthony family are individuals

with their own personal agendas. Only with that information can we make sense out of


the dynamic that they created collectively as the suburban Anthony family living in

Orlando, Florida.

This new narrative answers key questions from the Casey Anthony story. What is the

real reason police weren’t notified when two-year-old Caylee was first missing? Why

didn't mother Casey grieve? Why did Casey invent a fictitious babysitter, "Zanny the

nanny" whom she said kidnapped Caylee? Why did George testify for the grand jury

against his daughter, and even after her acquittal continue to blame her? How may

times did Cindy lie to investigators when the effect was to reinforce suspicion against

her daughter when it seemed a virtual certainty she was going to get the death

penalty?82

Is it possible all of these Anthony family members, as individuals, covered up Caylee’s

death? Were they all protecting the same person? We answer these questions and in

82 Cindy interviews


the event discover their shocking relationships as a family. Readers’ conclusions will

change. The truth will surprise virtually everyone as we learn with certainty truth is

stranger than fiction. We look more closely than ever before at the acquitted defendant,

using her own words and the words of her friends and others who knew her and were

interviewed while under oath by detectives.

The mainstream media invited comments from public law enforcement officials like

Florida’s Attorney General, county state attorneys and others, who were providing their

institutional imprimatur on the guilt of the accused before the trial even reached the jury.

Stacy Honowitz, a sitting assistant district attorney from nearby Broward County, was

building a cable commentary career for herself and was only one of many stirring the

pot of hostility in social media against the accused. "I think that she premeditated

{Caylee's murder}. I think that she wanted to live her life exactly as the prosecutors

say.�83

83 See newspaper article


Indeed, mainstream media seemed to have sensed cable and social media was

following cues from its studied anger against the accused defendant. Social media

exploded with conversations and opinions, virtually all presuming guilt for the accused.

There was no limit to the calls for her death, banishment, and even torture. It was

unique in our contemporary social media experience. Time magazine was certainly right

about one thing, the Casey Anthony trial was the social media trial of the century. We

were all part of the spectacle as social media convened a court of public opinion

virtually overnight, and as we know, it declared there was no presumption of innocence

in their court.

In conversations throughout the country there was a visceral predisposition for her

presumed guilt and impatience for her punishment that continued to this day. The

tsunami of negative opinion overwhelmed the image and definition of the name, Casey

Anthony. Her story was the most searched news item on the internet as she became


the most hated person in America.84 It has been many years since the death of Caylee

Marie Anthony but strong feelings and a pent up sense of retribution against her mother

remain fresh for the millions who followed the trial closely. Research invested in a post-

trial look at the entirety of this story has yielded a surprising result. The Court of Public

Opinion, Casey Anthony, will confirm with certainty that none of these consensus

opinions held by the public are true. Pivotal questions have for the first time been

answered: Did prosecutors try the wrong person? Was the jury right to acquit Casey

Anthony? Unbelievable as it may seem now, will the Court of Public Opinion change its

guilty verdict?

84 News articles


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