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Memorial created 07-13-2010 by
Amber Ragulsky
Caylee Marie Anthony
August 9 2005 - June 16 2008

Murder Victim. Caylee was last seen on Father's Day 2008, although she wasn't reported missing until a month later on July 15. Her disappearance captivated a nation, making months of national media coverage after her mother, Casey, spun an outrageous tale full of inconsistencies after she claimed the nanny abducted the toddler. Updates on the missing girl, as well as her mom were reported nightly throughout the Summer and into the Fall on several news outlets. But all leads were proved false over a period of nearly six months, as her mother would be jailed, released and re-jailed on various charges. In October, Casey was indicted for first-degree murder. Although Caylee still had not been located, the forensic evidence was suggesting that she was deceased from the very beginning. On December 11, 2008, the remains of Caylee were found less than a mile from the family home. Caylee was a bright toddler approaching her 3rd birthday. She could already count up to 45 in Spanish and knew her full name. She could also recite nursery rhymes and loved singing, "You Are My Sunshine

 

Caylee Marie Anthony[1] (August 9, 2005 - June 16, 2008) was an American toddler who disappeared in June 2008 and was subsequently discovered dead, attracting national attention. Her mother, Casey Anthony (born March 19, 1986), was indicted on October 14, 2008, for her first-degree murder. Police found Anthony's account of Caylee's disappearance suspicious after learning that Casey had not reported her daughter missing for more than a month; the last time Casey Anthony claimed to have seen Caylee was on June 16, 2008, but the child's disappearance was not reported to police until July 15, 2008. On December 11, 2008, the skeletal remains of Caylee Anthony were found near the Anthony home by a meter reader, later confirmed on December 19, 2008 by the Orange County Medical Examiner to be those of the toddler.[2] The cause of the child's death is listed in the autopsy report as "homicide by undetermined means." Casey Anthony is currently in jail, arrested on first-degree murder charges with a trial start date for May 2011. Casey Anthony, her lawyers and her family maintain that she did not harm her child and that she is innocent of all charges.

 

The Globe received images from a passenger on a recent cruise ship with George and Cindy Anthony.  Here they are sporting their new tattoos.  Cindy’s displays the name “Caylee Marie” entwined with a butterfly and is located on her tummy.  George’s is on his chest and has the inscription, “My Sunshine”.  It has a girl with sunbeams streaming down on her.

 

 

The grandmother of a Florida toddler missing for more than a month disputes investigators' claims that they detected the scent of human decomposition in the trunk of a car used by the child's mother.

"Do me a favor," the grandmother, Cindy Anthony, said Wednesday. "Put a little piece of pizza or any piece of garbage in your car today and leave it shut up for 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 days in this heat and then come back to me in 19 days and tell me what it smells like."

Anthony's granddaughter, Caylee Marie, was last seen on June 9. The child's mother, 22-year-old Casey Anthony, is considered a "person of interest" in the disappearance and is currently jailed, trying to raise a $500,000 bond.

At Casey Anthony's bond hearing Tuesday, Det. Yuri Melich testified that the odor of "decomposition" was detected in the trunk of a vehicle used by the young mother.

"The smell I smelled was that of decomposition," Melich told the judge. He also testified that strands of hair similar to those of the young girl, as well as dirt, were found in the trunk.

Cindy Anthony disputed the decomposition testimony Wednesday after her daughter's lawyer revealed the family had received a tip that a child matching Caylee's description had been seen at the Orlando International Airport boarding a flight to Atlanta.

The tip was even more credible because the person reported that the little girl pronounced her last name the same way Caylee's grandparents say she does, attorney Jose Baez told FOX News.

Cindy Anthony said the tip was from a woman who lives in Orlando and was left on her voicemail. The grandmother said she called the woman back and they talked.

The caller claimed to have seen Caylee board the flight with an older woman. When she talked to the woman and child, the youngster apparently said her name was Caylee "Antony," pronouncing it without the "h" the way Cindy Anthony says her granddaughter does. When asked her age, the little girl said she was 3; Caylee is almost 3 years old.

'Compulsive Liar' Florida Mother Arrested in Toddler's Disappearance Last Month

Prosecutors said Tuesday the case is beginning to look like a homicide.

Anthony's attorney said there is circumstantial evidence of a possible killing, but not enough to give prosecutors the confidence to charge her with homicide, kidnapping or any similar offense.

Detectives revealed that Anthony had become more of a focus of their investigation into her daughter Caylee's disappearance after they found the evidence in the trunk.

When asked whether he considered the child's mother a suspect in her disappearance, Melich said he'd classify her as a "person of interest."

Melich also said a witness he interviewed remembered seeing bruises on Caylee's body and a mark under her eye without knowing that Melich had a photo showing similar marks on the toddler.

On cross examination, Melich admitted he didn't have any direct evidence that Casey Anthony played a part in her little girl's disappearance.

Investigators used cadaver dogs to search the child's grandparents' yard last week after a neighbor told them Anthony had asked to borrow a shovel around the time her daughter Caylee was last seen.

They previously have said that almost nothing Anthony has told them about her child's disappearance has checked out to be true. They haven't even been able to get information about the child's father, who Anthony has said is dead, Melich testified.

Also at Tuesday's hearing — held to argue over whether or not to release Casey from jail — the child's grandmother said her daughter is a good mom and hasn't committed a crime but has been dishonest before and has had trouble keeping jobs.

"Casey's lied to me in the past and when she's lied she's always told me the truth," Cindy Anthony said. "We've gotten to the bottom of the truth when I talk to her and spend time with her."

She told attorneys that her daughter is her "best friend outside my husband" and she had no reason to believe anything had happened to her granddaughter until last week because she'd "spoken to Casey on a daily basis."

"Without a doubt, she is a great mom," Cindy Anthony testified. "You can see it in her eyes. You can see it when they're together. There's nothing but love."

She said her daughter should be released from jail "because she hasn't committed a crime" and because she needs to help find Caylee.

Cindy Anthony speculated on the stand that someone was threatening her daughter and that's why she hasn't told the whole story about where Caylee is.

Earlier Tuesday, Cindy Anthony said Casey left the child in the care of someone she trusted, but that person betrayed her.

In an interview on FOX News Tuesday morning, she implied that her granddaughter might have been kidnapped.

Casey Anthony has been in prison since last week, when she finally reported her toddler daughter missing at her parents' urging. She was arrested on charges of child endangerment, making false officials statements and obstructing a criminal investigation.

Her attorney denies that his client has been lying to police and says she's been cooperating.

Cindy Anthony said Wednesday that 14 billboards across Florida, including two in Orlando, will show a picture of the missing girl. The reward for information leading to Caylee's return has been raised to $200,000, according to MyFOXOrlando.com.

Volunteers in the Orlando, Fla., area were continuing to canvass neighborhoods this week, distributing about 50,000 fliers, according to MyFOXOrlando.com.

Cindy Anthony said a family who had flown out of Orlando International Airport on July 2 had reported seeing a girl resembling Caylee. The girl apparently said her name was Caylee "Antony" — pronouncing it without the "h" — like the missing girl does, according to her grandmother. When asked her age, the girl said she was 3. Caylee is almost 3 years old, MyFOXOrlando.com reported.

Cindy Anthony said the woman who gave her the tip was to meet with Orange County Sheriff's detectives to produce a composite sketch of the woman seen with the girl

 
 

The case of the little missing three-year-old girl in Florida, Caylee Anthony, has riveted the nation. Caylee’s mother, Casey Anthony, has been charged with seven counts of first degree murder even though Caylee’s body hasn’t been found. DBKP takes a look at other similar cases and whether the Florida courts have enough evidence to convict Casey Anthony of first degree murder. Cases that include oil drums, crab traps, and a commercial chipper.

Caylee was first reported missing to the authorities in Orange County, Florida, on July 15 by Cindy Anthony, Caylee’s grandmother. According to CNN, Cindy had to “plead” with her daughter, Casey, to “tell her” where Caylee was. Casey purportedly told her mother that she, Casey, hadn’t seen her 3-year-old toddler for “31 days”.

Caylee’s mother was arrested on October 14th after a grand jury returned seven indictments of capital murder, aggravated child abuse, aggravated manslaughter of a child and four counts of providing false information to police.

An amber alert was issued for Caylee who has now been missing since June. Forensics will play a key part in the case against Casey Anthony: cadaver dogs picked up the scent of death in Casey’s car as well as the backyard of her parent’s home. Preliminary testing of air and carpet samples in the trunk of the car found evidence of human decompisition, along with an “an unusually large concentration of chloroform”. Other evidence against Casey include a neighbor who told police that she had asked to borrow a shovel.

Casey’s lifestyle at the time of Caylee’s disapearance may come into play: Casey spent a majority of her time partying in clubs and never mentioned that her daughter was missing. It was only until her mother and brother pleaded with her to tell where Caylee was that Casey gave a convulated story about leaving her with a babysitter. An investigation by the police found that the story Casey gave about the babysitter was false: an address she supplied resulted in an empty apartment, the “babysitter” turned out to be a woman who had never met Casey. Casey Anthony insists that her daughter is still alive. Her mother also maintains her daughter is innocent, even though it was her mother who first reported to authorities that her daughter’s car “smells like a dead body”.

According to FOX New’s Greta Van Sustern, two dates are key to the investigation: on June 18, a neighbor observed Casey back up her car into her parent’s driveway, something the neighbor had never seen before. What’s also important to note is that Casey and Caylee were living with her parents at the time of the little girl’s dissappearance. The same day, Casey borrowed a shovel from a neighbor. The car which Casey drove belonged to her grandparents. On June 24, Casey’s father allegedly wanted to open the trunk of the car and was met with “resistance” from Casey. When he opened the trunk he discovered gas cans that he had thought were “stolen” from a shed in the backyard. On June 27, the car was abandoned and towed to an impound lot. The Anthony family recovered the car on July 15. It was then that Casey’s mother, a nurse, noticed the car smelled like a “dead body”.

The Florida prosecutors that will try Casey Anthony for the first degree murder of her daughter are faced with the task of trying a case without the victim’s body nor any evidence as to the cause of death. Conviction for first degree murder in the Florida courts requires that the prosecution prove their case “beyond a reasonable doubt”. Even so, there have been similar cases that led to a murder conviction.

Blood Evidence

In April of 2002, an Arizona jury found David Anthony, no relation to Casey Anthony, guilty of the murders of his wife and her two children who disappeared on July 7, 2001. Even though Anthony had his home professionally cleaned, police found traces of blood at Anthony’s house: on walls, in his wife’s truck, the children’s bed, and beneath the carpets. Anthony had also bought new mattresses, sheets, a washing machine, dryer, and vacuum cleaner. Along with financial transactions the evidence was enough to convict Anthony of first degree murder in the deaths of his wife, 54-year-old Donna, stepson, 12-year-old Richard Romero, and stepdaughter, 14-year-old Danielle Romero.

Despite the fact the none of the victim’s bodies had been found, in 2004, Anthony was sentenced to death row but the convictions were overturned last July. The case was sent back for retrial by the Arizona Supreme Court who ruled circumstantial evidence that Anthony had molested his stepdaughter was used in the trial even though he had never been charged.

The bodies were found in 2005 stuffed in oil drums.

In 1999, then 53-year-old Willie Crain received the death penalty in Florida for the murder of 7-year-old Amanda Hartman. Crain, a convicted sex offender, was found guilty after prosecutors showed evidence of traces of blood in his toilet and underwear matched Amanda’s DNA.

Crain had met Amanda’s mother, Kathy Hartman, at a bar in September of 1998. The next evening Crain was invited into Hartman’s home for dinner where he played tic-tac-toe with Amanda, helped her with her homework and also gave her $2. The three went to Crain’s Tampa trailer home to watch a movie where Crain spent time alone with the little girl. They then returned to Hartman’s house where the mother claimed she fell asleep after ingesting five sedatives and drinking alcohol. When she awoke her daughter was missing. During the death penalty phase, the judge allowed testimony from five girls that Crain was convicted of raping in 1986. Crain was sentenced to the death penalty in 1999.

Amanda’s body was never found: prosecutors theorize Crain had stuffed Amanda into a crab trap.

The Woodchipper Murderer

When a Pan-Am flight attendant Helle Crafts dissappeared November 18, 1986, in Connecticut, investigators were able to piece together, literally, enough evidence to convict her husband, Richard, of murder. Evidence showed Richard had purchased new bedding, bought a chest freezer, and rented a commercial woodchipper.

Luckily, a witness had spotted a wood chipper near the Housatonic River. Forensic evidence included a blood smear along a mattress consistent with Helle’s blood type. Near the river, detectives found an envelope addressed to Helle. Also found on the snow covered riverbank: 2,660 hairs, a fingernail, toe nail, two teeth caps, and five droplets of blood. Dental records showed a match of one of the tooth caps to Helle. In the river, searchers discovered a chain saw and serrated cutting bar embedded with human hair and tissue in the teeth.

The first jury deadlocked. A second trial ended in a murder conviction for Richard Crafts who was sentenced to 50 years in prison.

The Caylee Anthony case is interesting: forensic evidence includes preliminary tests using laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, or LIBS, a chemical analysis test. Tests of the air and carpet of the car trunk indicated “five key major compounds associated with human decomposition”. Trace amounts of Chloroform, which can be used to render someone unconscious, were discovered in the car as well as what investigators are claiming is a single strand of Caylee’s hair.

According to WFTV, Casey Anthony’s home computer was used to search for “do-it-yourself” websites which instructed persons on how to make their own chloroform, “around the same time as Caylee disappeared”.

DBKP took a look at the Florida criminal court statutes relating to first degree felony murder. Casey Anthony was charged with seven counts. For the state to prove the crime of first degree felony murder the prosecution must prove:

1. The victim (Caylee) is dead. Will the jury find the evidence presented by the prosecution, of chemical analysis of human decomposition in the trunk, as proof that Caylee is dead?

2. Caylee’s death occurred as a consequence of, and while, Casey was engaged in a commission of another crime or,

3. Caylee’s death occurred as a consequence of, and while, Casey was attempting to commit another crime, such as the trace amounts of chloroform found in the trunk of the car. Will prosecutors prove chloroform was used to “sedate” Caylee, a sort of “unpaid” babysitter for Casey, while she continued to party with friends and at clubs? Or,

4. Caylee’s death occurred as a consequence of, and while, Casey Anthony, or an accomplice were escaping the immediate scene of a crime.

In order to convict a person of First Degree Felony Murder, Florida prosecutors do not have to prove premeditation, that Casey Anthony did not have a premeditated “design” nor “an intent to kill”.

In order to prove a murder was “premeditated”, prosecutors have to show Casey had a “conscious intent” to kill her daughter at the time of the murder. The law does not “fix” the exact time period between the “formation” of the premeditated intent and “killing”. A jury would have to decide whether the prosecution proved “beyond a reasonable doubt” that premeditation existed at the time of Caylee’s death.

If Casey Anthony is convicted of Capital Murder she will face a separate court proceeding where a jury will hear testimony in order to determine whether Anthony should get death or life in prison but it is the judge who will ultimately decide, his decision based on the jury’s vote. It is then up to the Florida State Supreme Court, within a sixty day period, to ratify the sentencing court Judge’s decision.

WFTV argued that “without” a body, there probaby wouldn’t be any “push” for a “death penalty qualified” attorney for Casey Anthony. The Casey Anthony case is located in Orlando, Florida. Willie Crain, convicted of murder in the case of the missing 7-year-old Amanda Hartman, whose body was never found, was given the death penalty in Tampa in 1999. The only forensic evidence entered in the Crain trial was blood matching his seven-year-old victim in his underwear and on his toilet

 

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