Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Casey Anthony Trial: Not Guilty. Wendy Murphy, Jury Deliberation and Legal Statements part 2

 Not Guilty. Pictures and video HERE
Watch more video HERE
Part One:Wendy Murphy's theory about evidence  click HERE
part 3 re JUSTICE for caylee HERE



The SHIRT
 Wendy Murphy column below:  
 more, including the $ factor in the DSK case:
HERE  (DSK and the UNCONSCIONABLE STING
 OF CH-CHING IN RAPE PROSECUTIONS)


and Wendy Murphy re: another rape case HERE   
Murphy For The Patriot Ledger
July 4, 2011
(TMZ split screen reading of verdict here)
"With jury deliberations getting underway on our nation's anniversary, we now know the reason Baez dragged out the trial and came up with nutty excuses to delay things over the past six weeks - including his particularly odd request for a recent two-day delay to have Casey evaluated for competency. He wanted to get the jury's red, white and blue blood flowing as they decide whether to take away Casey Anthony's liberty - and maybe her life. There are only two days in the calendar that defense attorneys like better: Christmas Eve and Thanksgiving Eve. The "feel-good" time of the season can add a nice thumb on the scale in favor of the accused.
Independence Day is a very good pro-defense holiday, too, because lawyers get an extra bang out of the points Baez's co-counsel Cheney Mason made when he went on and on during his part of the closing argument about the Constitution and liberty, and American values, etc. Mason was a bit arrogant and pedantic in his professorial admonitions to the jury about their "duties" as citizens sitting in judgment, but he rightly pointed out that it is a very big deal to find someone guilty of murder.

The closing arguments overall were pretty good - though weird. In more than 20 years in this business, I've never felt as though I agreed with both sides at the end of closing arguments, but in this case, the prosecution and defense were both right when they accused the opposition of engaging in fantasy.


Before I get to the closing argument I would have given, a few technical observations about the lawyers:

Prosecutor Jeff Ashton was smoother and more organized than Columbo-esque Jose Baez - who had an awful lot of linguistic lapses, though he managed to make the points he needed to make. He messed up most when he said George was involved in disposing of Caylee's body. Like prosecutor Ashton, I laughed out loud along when Baez raised his voice to condemn George as a Plan B suspect. George came across as mostly sympathetic during trial (e.g., he cried real tears) and far too likable to be seen by the jury as evil enough to duct tape his beloved grandchild's mouth shut - with THREE pieces of tape - and dump her little body in a swamp.
I suspect George didn't mind taking the heat for his daughter, but he seemed genuinely irritated by Baez at certain points during trial, and he was no doubt livid when, during closing arguments, Baez accused him of not being a good enough father to Casey because he wasn't as loyal to her in his testimony as Cindy and Lee had been. I wondered whether Baez was suggesting that George was less loyal because he wasn't willing to lie as much as Baez wanted. Cindy put herself straight out on the perjury line by claiming she was the one who searched for the word "chloroform". Prosecutors easily proved this was a lie with work records that showed Cindy wasn't even home when the searches were made. They also made the point by getting Cindy to admit that she never typed in the phrase "how to make chloroform", which showed up in the searches and should have been enough to put the whole issue to bed. I thought the prosecutor missed another moment to hammer home Cindy's lie when she testified that she only searched for the word "chloroform" after being DIRECTED to the word by her computer after she searched for the word "chlorophyll". Computer experts found that someone actually typed in "chloraform" at one point - a misspelled version of the word. A computer search engine wouldn't send a user to search for a word that doesn't exist. Casey, however, a high school dropout, might have misspelled the word in her attempts to learn how to make the stuff.

Baez tried to make a big deal out of the chloroform evidence, but succeeded only in emphasizing the fact that the deadly concoction is a big part of the story. And his focus on who smelled decomposing flesh, likewise, felt like a constant reminder that SOMEONE'S flesh was decomposing in the trunk - though I have to admit, I liked that he put up and took down photographs of the various witnesses to demonstrate in numbers how many said they DID smell something and how many said they didn't. The problem of course is that many of the witnesses were people who would have had no way of noticing the smell. I liked the photograph technique anyway. He used it on a couple of issues. It's clever.
Baez was at his best when he implored the jury to be mindful of their biases against Casey. He admitted that they were right to perceive Casey as a liar and a "slut" and he was exactly right when he said he was terrified the jury might find her guilty based on how they feel about such an immoral - seemingly pathological young mother. A jury voting their emotions would find Casey Anthony guilty simply because she did not report her child missing for 31 days. When they sit down to deliberate and think to themselves "what kind of mother would do that?" - they will naturally respond with the answer "the same kind who would kill her child".

It makes sense. Which is why Baez had to name the elephant in the room and get in bed with the jurors - so to speak - on that issue. If emotion drives the deliberations, Casey is screwed. Baez had to acknowledge and respect their feelings, and help them put their feelings aside in the jury room.


On the hard evidence, Baez also got it right when he repeatedly said that reasonable doubt "lives and breathes" in the case. But he didn't showcase the spots where doubt matters most. He did what some lawyers do when they don't want the jury focused on the real evidence. He propped up a bunch of red herrings involving accidents and Anthony family dysfunction - and then talked about these themes as if they matter. This part of his closing was a profound waste of time and it's why when he FIRST brought up the nonsense about the drowning and sexual abuse stuff during his opening statement in May, I said on many news programs that it was like a "Saturday Night Live" skit. Pure folly. I also said at the time, on the Today Show, that if the prosecution's opening statement was a declaration of their best case, Casey Anthony would be acquitted. I took a lot of heat for being the first pundit to say this out loud - but I don't make statements to be popular. I call cases like I see them and this one was easy.
Prosecutor Jeff Ashton's closing has been described variously as "powerful" and "compelling", and I'll agree that he gave a nice chronological presentation, without overdoing the emotional stuff (Baez calling Ashton out for exploiting jurors' emotions was out of line. Ashton could have done MUCH more to pull at jurors' heartstrings if he wanted to). Ashton set out an orderly timeline for the jury - taking them literally day by day from the moment Caylee was last seen at George and Cindy's home on June 16, 2008 to the day her body was found in a swamp hear their home six months later. He wove lots of facts into a story about what he believes the evidence shows, and he did it in an engaging narrative style that will help the jury to see the meaning of certain evidence. The problem is - his story made no sense and the gaps in logic were gargantuan. Baez made a poignant observation about the gaps when he started his closing by reminding the jury that the trial may have raised more questions than it answered.
Indeed.
The closing argument is supposed to be the prosecution's best moment; the time when they get to paint a picture and fill in blanks with inferences and characterizations about the evidence. Unlike the opening statement when prosecutors can only say things like "you will hear X and Y" - the closing is the time when prosecutors can say "X and Y together prove guilt because they allow you to draw the following conclusions …."
The problem is - the evidence does not support the conclusion that Casey killed her child - by accident or otherwise. This isn't a case of manslaughter vs. murder, it's a classic "who done it" only neither side seems to care.

Inexplicably, Baez didn't even mention most of the real reasons the case is full of reasonable doubt. So here's my attempt at the closing he should have given:
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, the state would have you believe that Casey Anthony intentionally killed her child with deliberate premeditation and that she did so in order to be free from the burdens of motherhood, and so that she could go out partying with her friends. But let's examine whether they've proved the three things that matter: motive - opportunity and intent.

Motive. The state claims Casey wanted to kill Caylee so she could live the life of a party girl. But on the last date Caylee was seen alive, Casey spent the night watching movies at home with her boyfriend. She wasn't out partying. She didn't go out to a club. She didn't go out dancing. In fact, there is zero evidence Casey wanted Caylee dead for ANY reason.

Opportunity. Casey didn't even have custody of Caylee on the day she died. The video from Blockbuster shows Casey and her boyfriend renting movies on the evening of June 16th, and Caylee is nowhere in sight. The state would have you believe Caylee was already in the trunk, but you know that's not true because Caylee didn't die on the 16th. When her body was found, it was in a bag with clothing that she was not wearing when she was last seen on the 16th. Recall that Caylee was described as wearing a pink top and a denim skirt. Her remains were found with pink and white shorts (that were too small) and a T-shirt. Whoever had the child changed her clothes. While it's possible Casey changed her outfit on the 16th, does it make sense that the child would need an entirely new outfit in the few short hours between the time she left Cindy and George's home, and the time when Casey is seen on video with the child at 8 pm? Even if she changed the child's clothes, would she have packed an outfit that the child had long ago outgrown? The bag in which the body was found contained no underwear or pull-up. Would Casey have re-dressed the child without underpants?


The far more rational explanation for the change in clothing is that someone other than Casey had custody of Caylee on the night of the 16th; someone who had cared for the child in the past and a few of the child's old clothes at her home. Clearly, it was someone Casey was not worried about as she appeared calm on the Blockbuster tape. She told police that when she went to pick up Caylee from the caretaker the next day, the child and the babysitter were gone.

At some point on or about the 17th, Casey didn't have her car. Her friend Christopher Stutz told police Casey visited him while driving a borrowed Jeep. Who had her car? Who had her child? Whatever the answer, the fact that Casey had neither car nor child at various times on the 16th and 17th means there is much doubt about whether Casey had the opportunity to kill Caylee.

Intent. It's easy to infer intent in a case where a woman charged with murder admits that she failed to report her child missing for one month. But, recall that Lee Anthony testified Casey told him someone took Caylee to "teach her a lesson" and that Casey was warned not to call police. Whatever "lesson" Casey needed, the fact that she didn't report Caylee missing for a month makes sense in light of Lee's testimony. The only way Casey could get Caylee back was to stay quiet and NOT talk to cops. That she then went out partying may seem creepy - but remember, she knew the person who had Caylee (it's clear she'd been bringing the child for months to SOMEONE for "babysitting", whether she needed a real sitter or not, because lots of witnesses described Casey as being alone at times when the child was with someone else, and it wasn't Cindy or George because they were often at work). In other words, Casey was comfortable believing she'd dropped Caylee of with a person she could trust to give her back - because she'd given her back so many times in the past.

Whoever took Caylee was no nanny - but there was a someone to whom Casey regularly brought her child for some purpose. Maybe the purpose was something about which Casey feels great guilt and shame. Remember that Ricardo Morales told police that in the weeks before Caylee died, Casey would deliver Caylee to unknown persons after receiving phone calls in the middle of the night at their apartment. Casey would rouse her sleeping toddler to bring her to an unknown location - then return to Ricardo's apartment, alone, and go back to sleep. Whatever was going on with the "babysitter" and the middle of the night deliveries, Casey was involved in activities that made her very reluctant to tell cops the truth. You can judge her harshly for this decision - and even hate her for it - but it's not proof of intent to murder.
Ladies and gentlemen, there are far too many questions about the untold story in this case for you to fill in all the banks in the prosecution's case with anger toward Casey and sadness for Caylee. As much as you might want to know more about what was going on with the mysterious babysitter and latenight "deliveries" of the child to unknown locations, the fact is, I can't tell you certain things because this is a trial where the rules of evidence prevent me from giving you a fuller explanation. For example, lots of evidence in this case is under seal, including photographs of Caylee that have been deemed too prejudicial.

I empathize with your frustration - and wish I could reveal what I know about some of the unanswered questions in this case but please know that when you don't have all the evidence that you need to feel certain about what really happened, you have no choice but to vote "not guilty". Who knows, after an acquittal, the state might bring new charges that will resolve some of the mysteries in this case.

Until then, know that your discomfort with the leftover questions you have after being her for so long is not only reasonable - it's reasonable doubt.

If you're wondering whether there is more to the story - rest assured - I agree with you. And if you don't want to believe what I've said her today on behalf of a woman you might not like, then heed the words of little Caylee.

Recall that Geroge Anthony testified it was CAYLEE who told him, on June 16, 2008, that she was going to "Zani's". Little Caylee was not quite three years old, and while she was very verbal and super smart, she was not old enough to be a co-conspirator in what some have called the completely fictitious nanny that Casey made up out of whole cloth. Caylee was telling the truth when she told her grandfather she was going to Zani's. Whether or not there's a real person named "Zenaida Gonzales", Caylee was innocently telling George she was going to see a person she knew, at a place where she'd been before. Casey told cops this was the person who took Caylee away because she never gave Caylee back. Lee said it was to teach Casey a lesson.

We may never know what lesson Casey needed - or who it was exactly that believed it was necessary to kill a child to make a point. And I'll go so far as to say it's reasonable for you to believe that even if Casey Anthony did not kill her child, she deserves to spend the rest of her life behind bars because she was engaged in nefarious business that exposed her child to dangerous people. But you cannot find Casey Anthony guilty of murder unless you have EVIDENCE that shows she actually killed the child herself. There is no evidence of that in this case because she did not kill her child.
Casey Anthony may well deserve your scorn and disdain for the things she did that exposed Caylee to harm. If she were on trial for being a bad mother, or for pimping her child for sex and porn, I would find her guilty myself. But she is on trial for murder - and in this country, she is entitled to be judged only on the facts that relate to the state's allegations of murder. The state has failed to prove motive, opportunity and intent to kill beyond all reasonable doubt, laving you with the only morally appropriate verdict -- "not guilty".

for more on the epidemic of child abuse:
http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2010/12/sexual-physical-and-emotional-child.html

and human trafficking:
http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2011/04/human-trafficking-in-usa-lecture.html


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