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« Reply #80 on: September 29, 2008, 02:39:19 PM »

Anything but clothes part y& Caylee pictures

http://www.wesh.com/slideshow/news/17564824/detail.html
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« Reply #81 on: September 29, 2008, 02:41:06 PM »

Casey Anthony to meet with home-confinement officer

Robyn Shelton and Sarah Lundy | Sentinel Staff Writers
11:35 AM EDT, September 29, 2008

Casey Anthony is scheduled to meet with her home-confinement case manager at the Orange County Jail this afternoon. She must be back at her house by 4 p.m.

This is a regular meeting with her case manager who will set up Anthony's schedule to leave home this week.



http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/orange/orl-casey-anthony-092908,0,830360.story
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« Reply #82 on: September 29, 2008, 02:43:31 PM »

Files Released In Casey Anthony Case
Saturday, September 27, 2008 3:14:17 PM



Audio, Video Recordings Released

Authorities are releasing hundreds of pages of documents in the Casey Anthony case, including interviews with friends and families, text messages and more.

Here are those pages with unrelated information removed and the remainder edited to remove personal information, such as dates of birth and phone numbers.

Note: Some PDFs are lengthy, so please be patient while the documents load.
GO HERE
http://www.cfnews13.com/News/Sidebar/2008/9/24/files_released_in_casey_anthony_case.html


Released Sept. 26, 2008
Transcript of interview with Karen Angel
Transcript of interview with Mike Kozak
Transcript of interview with Nicole Lett
Transcript of interview with Maria Kissh
Transcript of interview with Danny Colamarino
Transcript of interview with Chris Stutz
Transcript of interview with Jeff Hopkins
Transcript of interview with Jamie Realander
Transcript of interview with Matthew Crisp
Transcript of interview with Anthony Rusciano
Transcript of interview with Shirley Pleasea
Transcript of interview with Sean Daly
Transcript of interview with Jonathan Daly
Transcript of interview with Simon Burch
Transcript of interview with Gary Ridgeway
Transcript of interview with Brittany Schieber
Instant Message history between Casey and NYItaliano
Orange County Sheriff's Cell Telephone Reports
Orange County Sheriff's Office Documents
Computer Forensics Report of Casey Anthony's computer

Released Sept. 23, 2008
Calendar Noting Key Moments In Casey Anthony's Case
Transcript of Lee Anthony Interview, July 29, 2008
Transcript of interview with Amy Huizenga, July 23, 2008
Transcript of interview with Anthony Lazaro, July 22, 2008
Forensic Cell Phone Report for Cynthia Anthony's Cell Phone, Aug. 4, 2008
Text Messages taken from phone of Brittany Schieber
Text Messages from phone of Troy Brown, Collected On July 25, 2008
Transcript of interview with Troy Brown, July 25, 2008
Transcript of interview with Brian Burner, July 30, 2008
Transcript of interview with Brittany Schieber, July 24, 2008
Transcript of interview with Lauren Gibbs, Aug. 1, 2008
Transcript of interview with Ricardo Morales, July 25, 2008
Transcript of interview with William Waters, July 30, 2008
Transcript of interview with Jesse Grund, July 23, 2008


 
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« Reply #83 on: September 29, 2008, 02:57:03 PM »

The Full IM's between Casey and Tony R. (cop)

http://www.cfnews13.com/uploadedFiles/02%20IM%20History%20Casey%20&%20NYItaliano.pdf









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« Reply #84 on: September 29, 2008, 06:13:26 PM »

Anthony family's neighborhood loses bid to limit protesters

Henry Pierson Curtis and Sarah Lundy | Sentinel Staff Writers
4:32 PM EDT, September 29, 2008


Trust fund re-opened, more documents released
4:30 p.m.: The Caylee Marie Anthony Trust Fund is back open. This time it's at Wachovia Bank.

Mark NeJame - the attorney for George and Cindy Anthony - has posted the documents on the www.helpfindcaylee.com site for those who want to seek more information.

This comes after several bloggers on the Web have doubted how the money in the trust fund was being used. Some suggested the family was using the donated money for reasons other than searching for the three-year-old.
 

But both the fund's administrator and NeJame said there is no indication of any impropriety.

Anthonys' neighborhood loses bid to limit protesters
3:45 p.m.: The neighborhood where the Anthony family live lost its bid to today to keep protesters out.

Orange Circuit Judge Cynthia Mackinnon denied Chickasaw Oaks Phase Three subdivision's request for a temporary injunction.

The homeowners association wanted the judge to order protesters to move to a vacant lot at the end of Hopespring Drive -- hundreds of feet north of George and Cindy Anthony's home. Dozens of protesters have gathered outside the home since Casey Anthony was released from jail earlier this month.

In a 20-page decision, MacKinnon wrote how the homeowners association again failed to adequately notify the protesters of the pleading -- giving protesters time to defend themselves against the allegations. The neighborhood tried to notify some of the protesters by handing out a notice of a hearing and posting signs on unknown number of mailboxes. It's unclear how many notices were handed out or whether any protesters actually received the information, the judge wrote.

"That the residence of Chickasaw Oaks Phase Three have endured inconvenience throughout this saga cannot be denied," MacKinnon concluded. "There should be no mistake that the Court's action is not a license to protesters or the Anthonys to do what they want, where they want, whenever they want. There is no First Amendment right to trespass, litter or inflict violence on another, and law enforcement personnel need not feel hamstrung in dealing with such activities."

The judge will allow the HOA to file another request for a temporary injunction if they want.

Beary says sheriff's office is working to solve Caylee's disappearance
11:48 a.m.: The Orange County Sheriff's Office is doing everything possible to solve the disappearance of Caylee Marie Anthony, Sheriff Kevin Beary said this morning when questioned by reporters after an unrelated press conference.

The child's mother, Casey Anthony, continues to be the lone "person of interest" in the investigation that Beary also acknowledged had played out daily in the national news.

Beary declined comment on what his investigators are doing in conjunction with the Orange-Osceola State Attorney's Office to prepare a case. His staff is working closely with prosecutors, he said.

"You might say it's a challenge," said Beary, referring to the investigation's complexity.

Sheriff's officials are meeting at 4 p.m. today to discuss strategy in the case, particularly in terms of patrolling the neighborhood where protesters regularly gather outside the house where Casey Anthony has been living with her parents.

Casey Anthony faces a bevy of charges, including child neglect and check fraud.

Anthony to meet with home-confinement officer

1:35 a.m.: Casey Anthony is scheduled to meet with her home-confinement case manager at the Orange County Jail this afternoon. She must be back at her house by 4 p.m.

This is a regular meeting with her case manager who will set up Anthony's schedule to leave home this week.

----------------------
FROM THE SEPT. 28 PRINT EDITION OF THE ORLANDO SENTINEL
Video
 
Related links
Anthony trust documents, receipts
Caylee Marie Anthony videos Video
New Casey Anthony evidence photos released Photos
READ FOR YOURSELF: Casey Anthony case discovery documents (Second Batch)
The Caylee Anthony saga in photos Photos
Audio files in the Caylee Marie Anthony case Audio
HEAR THE AUDIO: Lee Anthony's interview with authorities Audio
HEAR THE AUDIO: Anthony Lazzaro's interview with authorities Audio
HEAR THE AUDIO: Jesse Grund's interview with authorities Audio
HEAR THE AUDIO: Jesse Grund's second interview with authorities Audio
Caylee Marie case: 'How's the letter coming?' Audio
Caylee Anthony case: "It's something new every day" Audio
READ FOR YOURSELF: Casey Anthony case discovery documents
HEAR THE AUDIO: Lee Anthony's interview with authorities Audio
HEAR THE AUDIO: Anthony Lazzaro's interview with authorities Audio
HEAR THE AUDIO: Jesse Grund's interview with authorities Audio
HEAR THE AUDIO: Jesse Grund's second interview with authorities Audio
Complete coverage of missing Caylee Marie Anthony
 

By Robyn Shelton
Sentinel Staff Writer

Standing shoulder-to-shoulder, about 30 people bowed their heads in prayer Sunday outside the home of missing 3-year-old Caylee Anthony.

It was the Anthony family's weekly vigil, which had been canceled last week after scuffles between family members and protesters. Bathed in lights from television cameras, neighbors accepted candles from Cindy Anthony, the girl's grandmother.

They sang, prayed and asked God to help the Anthony family endure hostility from others and the sadness of not knowing Caylee's whereabouts. The toddler has been missing since June and her mother, Casey Anthony, is a person of interest in the case.

"We know you are out there somewhere. Caylee, wherever you are, we promise you will be back in our arms real soon," Cindy Anthony said.

A handful of protesters held signs across the street and taunted the supporters.

"She's dead, Cindy, give her justice," one shouted.

The protesters also called for Casey Anthony, 22, to emerge from the house. But there was no sign of her during the 45-minute gathering.

The child's grandfather pledged to keep the peace from now on.

"I will not lash out at them anymore; I'm done with that," said George Anthony. "I will tell them over there, 'God bless you.' "

Casey Anthony says she left her daughter in the care of a baby sitter. She has been charged with child neglect and check fraud.


http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/orange/orl-casey-anthony-092908,0,830360.story
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« Reply #85 on: September 29, 2008, 06:23:45 PM »



 Order denying HOA's request for Temporary Injunctive Relief


http://www.wftv.com/download/2008/0929/17583509.pdf




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« Reply #86 on: September 29, 2008, 07:23:05 PM »

Witness List Released In Casey Anthony Case
Sheriff's Officials Decide Anthonys Should Hold Vigils Inside

POSTED: 12:48 pm EDT September 29, 2008
UPDATED: 6:44 pm EDT September 29, 2008

There are 85 names on the witness list including Anthony's own family and Zenaida Gonzalez -- the woman who said Casey and the Anthonys ruined her life by naming her as the baby sitter who disappeared with Caylee.

The questions persist about if Casey Anthony will be charged in connection with Caylee's disappearance.

Orange County Sheriff Kevin Beary gave a detailed response on Monday.

<snip>
http://www.wesh.com/news/17581962/detail.html
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« Reply #87 on: September 30, 2008, 02:56:23 PM »

Casey Impersonator Joins Protests, Residents "More Than Fed Up"

POSTED: 6:30 am EDT September 30, 2008

UPDATED: 1:27 pm EDT September 30, 2008

ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. -- A judge ruled against an injunction (read full ruling), but residents in Casey Anthony's neighborhood are still planning to show up at the county commission meeting Tuesday to demand protection from protestors.

County leaders are trying to figure out what can be done legally to protect everyone's rights. Eyewitness News has been told the county has ruled out a neighborhood protest ordinance similar to the one the city of Orlando has, because it likely would not hold up in court.

George Anthony showed up at the meeting Tuesday morning, either to voice his opinion at the meeting or just to listen to what everyone else has to say, but the issue will be heard Tuesday afternoon during the public comment item on the agenda.


CASEY IMPERSONATOR:
Images | Watch Interview


Protesters have been showing up at the Anthony home on a regular basis, starting with the Labor Day weekend. The Anthonys cancelled one prayer vigil at their home because of it, but went forward on Sunday night with the vigil even though the homeowners' association asked them not to.

Most protesters were pleased with the judge's denial of the injunction request, but one protestor, a Casey impersonator, was more concerned about the media.

"I'm not talking, because you guys twist everything around and you don't know how to say what we say," the woman told Eyewitness News reporter Derrol Nail.

"I have the decision that says you can stay. What is your reaction?" Nail asked her.

The impersonator gave no response.

The county has pretty much ruled out a curfew. What's expected Tuesday is for the county commission to tell the sheriff's office to do what it has to in order to keep the peace in the Anthony's neighborhood.

The sheriff's new nearly $190 million budget for next year kicks in Wednesday, so commissioners will suggest Sheriff Kevin Beary can do whatever he needs to so he can "take care of business" as he likes to say.

Neighbors of the Anthonys who want to be heard on how to control the protesting in Chickasaw Oaks subdivision can be heard Tuesday afternoon at the Orange County Administration Building during the time dedicated to public comment at the meetin
g.

http://www.wftv.com/news/17587671/detail.html#
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« Reply #88 on: September 30, 2008, 05:45:10 PM »

On Monday, Circuit Court Judge Cynthia MacKinnon refused to allow the homeowner's association representing the neighborhood where Casey Anthony lives to restrict protesters in front of the home -- but not for the reason you would expect, namely the right of all Americans to free speech and to protest on public property, that being the sidewalk in front of the Anthony home.

In fact, the judge actually warned protesters that free speech doesn't give them an absolute right to trespass on private property or litter while protesting. True, but those two restrictions won't prevent people from standing on the sidewalk in front of the Anthony home doing their thing, which I believe is probably what the homeowner's association really wants.

Instead, the judge threw the motion out on a technicality -- that the association hadn't adequately notified the protestors of the legal complaint so they would have an opportunity to defend themselves in court.

If that's the judge's standard, the homeowner's association might as well give up, because it seems like the Anthony home gets a new set of protesters every day. How do you notify all of these people about the legal proceedings?

If there's one thing this case has demonstrated, it's that there are a truly scary number of really pathetic losers in this state. Watching crowds gather around that home night after night, as if it were some kind of sacred shrine with amazing healing powers, is pitiful beyond words. While there may be a few people sincerely protesting against the child's disappearance, you can see from the fist fights and vulgarity of others that this home just has a natural pull for freaks that come in all shapes and sizes.

Don't any of these people have lives? Families at home? Jobs to go to? Hobbies beyond picking through the Anthony trash or hoping to stick their face in front of one of the local, round the clock TV cameras perched there? What would they be doing if the Anthony family lived in New Jersey? Hopping a bus?

I feel for the homeowner's association here. The very concept was created to provide a level of order and control over neighborhoods like this one. And while we've all heard the horror stories of overly picky and aggressive HA's that make the lives of some homeowners miserable, we've also heard the horror stories about brand new subdivisions where there is no homeowner's association because only a small handful of the homes actually got sold and have people living in them.

In this case, it must be pure torture for the people living anywhere near the Anthony home -- the constant noise, the camera lights all evening, the hideous parade of freaks who gather there. From the invasion of your privacy to the lack of sleep, living in the midst of a three ring circus has got to be maddening.

What can they can do it? When this case ends -- assuming it ever does -- that should help. But until then, who knows? The neighbors' high misery index is the price you pay for having notoriety next door. It serves as a clear object lesson to the rest of us: keep your fingers crossed that your neighbors remain quiet and uncontroversial for as long as possible.


http://blogs.theledger.com/default.asp?item=2267204
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« Reply #89 on: September 30, 2008, 05:47:06 PM »

FOXNEWS.COM HOME > U.S.
Judge Denies Request to Bar Protesters, Press From Missing Florida Tot's Neighborhood

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

ORLANDO, Fla. —  A judge denied a central Florida homeowners association's request to keep protesters out of their neighborhood, where a 3-year-old girl was reported missing in July.

Casey Anthony's neighbors had asked a judge to force protesters and members of the media away from their homes.

An Orange County judge wrote in her decision that the association again failed to adequately notify the protesters of the pleading and give them time to defend themselves against the allegations.

Anthony's daughter, Caylee, was last seen in June.

Investigators say Anthony, 22, is a "person of interest" in the case and evidence indicates the girl's decomposing body was in her mother's car.

But Anthony has repeatedly said she doesn't know what happened to the girl.

She has been charged with child neglect, making false statements and obstruction.

Anthony also faces unrelated check fraud charges and is currently at home with her parents on house arrest after several stints in the Orange County Jai
l.


http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,430481,00.html
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« Reply #90 on: September 30, 2008, 07:04:06 PM »

Anthonys Agree To Move Prayer Vigils To Church
Commissioners May Authorize Curfew, Funds For Deputies


POSTED: 9:00 am EDT September 30, 2008
UPDATED: 5:50 pm EDT September 30, 2008
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Cindy and George Anthony attended a county commissioners meeting Tuesday evening where their neighbors discussed their grievances with the protesters in their neighborhood.

The meeting concluded with the Anthonys agreeing to hold their weekly prayer vigils at a church, instead of at their house.
the Anthony home late at night.

Anthony family attorney Mark Nejame expressed the family’s frustration with the constant crowds at the house.

"I will not dignify the miscreants that have been in front of their lawn by calling them protesters," Nejame said. "As I said, they would not know the constitution if they threw that against the house."

Things had calmed down over the past week, but that ended on Sunday night when a prayer vigil was held in the Anthonys' front yard for missing toddler Caylee Anthony.

"Most of the people that come around here, they really don't care about what's going on at the house. They're more concerned with getting themselves on TV and stuff," neighbor Michael Ortiz said.

An effort by the homeowners' association to move protesters down the street to a vacant lot has failed twice in court. Neighbors are frustrated.

"The traffic has increased a lot, so now we have to be watchful out there for cars coming in and coming out," neighbor Rafael Torres said.

The Orange County Sheriff's Office said additional deputies are patrolling the neighborhood, but they want the Anthonys to do more.

A spokesman for Orange County Sheriff Kevin Beary said the sheriff’s office has received and responded to nearly 300 calls from neighborhood residents since Casey Anthony was released from jail. He said they have posted undercover officers in the area, detracting from the amount of deputies in high-crime areas.

The sheriff’s office agreed to assign two deputies to patrol the area around the Anthony home.


http://www.wesh.com/news/17588432/detail.html
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« Reply #91 on: October 01, 2008, 11:18:29 AM »

Anthonys' neighbors seek relief from protests
Willoughby Mariano | Sentinel Staff Writer
October 1, 2008

County Commision chambers. Commissioners discussed issues concerning protesters near the Anthony home. (Red Huber, Orlando Sentinel / September 30, 2008)
Residents of the subdivision where the family of missing 3-year-old Caylee Marie Anthony lives asked the Orange County Commission for money Tuesday to help them quiet protesters and curious onlookers they say are disrupting the peace.

Since Caylee was reported missing in mid-July, her case has received national media attention. Protesters have gathered outside her family's east Orange County home to heckle the family.

"I will not dignify these miscreants by calling them 'protesters,' " said Mark NeJame, the attorney for Caylee's grandparents, Cindy and George Anthony. "They would not know the Constitution if they threw that against their [the Anthony's] home."

Caylee's grandparents attended the meeting but did not speak

Karen Wonsetler, an attorney for the homeowners association, said they have few other options. An attempt to restrict protesters to an empty lot collapsed after an Orange-Osceola Circuit Court judge ruled twice that the association failed to adequately notify demonstrators. A vote by association members to pay for additional security fell short.

County Commissioner Tiffany Moore Russell asked the homeowners association to raise its own funds for security.

"I sympathize with these folks," Moore Russell said of the Anthonys' neighbors. "But it's tough for me to look at my residents and say we'll use taxpayer dollars when I can't do that for my residents who have much bigger crime problems."

The Sheriff's Office has responded to 300 calls for service in the neighborhood and is using off-duty officers paid by the county to patrol the community. The Anthonys have gotten into shoving matches with protesters.

County staffers offered to help residents enact temporary parking restrictions to quiet the neighborhood.

The Anthonys agreed to move their weekly candlelight vigils to a church to avoid attracting visitors, NeJame said. Protesters have been videotaped and may be arrested on battery and other charges, he said.


http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/orange/orl-anthony0108oct01,0,6659609.story
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« Reply #92 on: October 01, 2008, 02:46:18 PM »

Casey Anthony Enters "Not Guilty" Plea On Fraud Charges

POSTED: 12:51 pm EDT October 1, 2008
guilty" to all of the check fraud charges against her. Her arraignment is scheduled for later this month, but she is not expected to show up for the arraignment because of that written plea.



HOA SAYS RESIDENTS BEING HELD HOSTAGE

Orange County Commissioners resisted requests for more money to pay for deputies' overtime to patrol the Anthonys' neighborhood.
The HOA says its residents are held hostage in their own homes because of unruly behavior by protestors in front of George and Cindy's home.

The sheriff's office says it needs extra funding because they are pulling deputies out of high crime areas to respond to calls to the Anthony home.

However, commissioners were unwilling to give the sheriff's offices' budget a boost.

"It's tough for me to look at my residents and say we'll use taxpayer dollars when we have residents that have bigger criminal activity going on in their community," said Orange County Commissioner Tiffany Moore Russell.

An attorney for the Homeowner's Association said the community doesn't have enough money to continue seeking an injunction against the protesters in court.

http://www.wftv.com/news/17598964/detail.html
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« Reply #93 on: October 01, 2008, 04:30:10 PM »

Casey Anthony Officially Called 'Suspect'
Sheriff's Office Says She Is Only One Who Can Lead Them To Caylee

POSTED: 4:02 pm EDT October 1, 2008
UPDATED: 4:18 pm EDT October 1, 2008

ORLANDO, Fla. -- Casey Anthony is the first -- and so far only -- person to be called a suspect in her daughter Caylee’s disappearance, the Orange County Sheriff’s Office told WESH 2 News on Wednesday.

She is the only one who can lead investigators to the truth about what happened to Caylee, who has been missing for 79 days, an agency spokesman said.

Until now, investigators did not call Casey Anthony a suspect, usually calling her a “person of interest.”

But Capt. Angelo Nieves of the sheriff’s office said Casey Anthony is a suspect because of the evidence the agency has received from the FBI indicating that Caylee’s body was in her mother car. He also said she has repeatedly lied to investigators.

“Well, she was the last person to person to see her daughter, and we are continuing to follow up on this information, and granted she would be a suspect,” Nieves said.

Casey Anthony is out on bond on a variety of charges, from child neglect to check fraud. She initially told investigators her daughter was last with a babysitter.

Attorney Jose Baez, Casey Anthony’s attorney, said it doesn’t make a difference whether investigators call her a “person of interest” or a “suspect.” He declined a request for a further interview
.
http://www.wesh.com/news/17600620/detail.html
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« Reply #94 on: October 01, 2008, 07:11:21 PM »



Below are the names from the state witness list in the Casey Anthony case.

Sgt. John Allen, Orange County Sheriff’s Office

Karen Angel, Dora Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, 

Mount Dora, where Casey Anthony’s grandfather lived.


Cynthia Anthony, Casey Anthony’s mother, Caylee Anthony’s grandmother

George Anthony, Casey Anthony’s father, Caylee Anthony’s grandfather.

Lee Anthony, Casey Anthony’s brother.

Deputy Charity R. Beasley, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Gerardo Bloise, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Rosanna Bonilla Resident of 301 Hillside, the seniors-only facility, who talked with LE during their search for Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez
Also Rosanna Bonilla Lives at the address Casey gave to police as a possible location of Zenaida?


Simon Burch, works at wrecker company that towed Casey Anthony’s car.

Brian Burner, neighbor of Cindy and George Anthony who loaned shovel to Casey Anthony.

Deputy Sandra G. Cawn, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Ann Marie Chase Mother of Mark Hawkins, Marine friend of Casey’s stationed in California. Anne Marie last saw Casey in Target on July 10,

Kristina Chester, friend of Casey Anthony.

David D. Clarke, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Danny Colamarino, works at tattoo parlor that Casey Anthony visited.

Dee Crawford, Event Imaging Solutions Group.

Matthew Crisp Went to high school with Casey (Colonial High School). He last saw Casey on July 7, 2008, at Subway.

Kiomarie Cruz Casey’s childhood friend who says Casey told her that she wanted to give Caylee up for adoption

Jonathan Daly, Works at tattoo parlor that Casey Antony visited.

Kelly Deguzman, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Tanya DePalmo, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Annie Dowling Friend of Casey's  Previously lived in Sawgrass Apartments

Deputy Ryan Eberlin, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Eric Edwards, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputy Rendon Fletcher, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputy Jason Forgey, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Thomas Galaida, Tom’s Auto Repair.

Harry Garcia, Sawgrass Apartments, where Casey Anthony said Caylee’s nanny lived.

Rich Garrad, Carlson Restaurants, Texas.

Zenaida Gonzalez, woman whose name Casey Anthony used as Caylee’s nanny.

Jessie Grund, Casey Anthony’s ex-boyfriend.they were Engaged at one time

Mark Hawkins, friend of Casey Anthony.

Deputy Susan Hempfield, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Jeffrey Hopkins II, identified in police report as former high school classmate of Casey Anthony who ran into her in late June.

Jeffrey and Melissa Hopkins, Jeffrey II’s parents.

Reginald Hosey, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Roy House  House, Roy Clint – aka Clint House. Anthony Lazaro’s former business partner and roommate.

Amy Huizenga, friend of Casey Anthony. Casey took her check book.

Sgt. Matthew Irwin, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Michael Kispert, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Maria Kissh  Acquaintance of Casey. Met her through her boyfriend Clint who is a close friend of Tony Lazaro’s

Anthony Lazzaro, recently Casey Anthony’s boyfriend.

Ricardo Lee, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Anne Lennington, from nursing home where Casey Anthony’s father was.

Nicole Lett, from wrecker company that towed Casey Anthony’s car.

Dannielle Lucey-Austin Manager of Chuck-e-Cheese Restaurant at 541 West Highway 436 in Altamonte Springs, FL. She provided video surveillance tape to Yuri Melich from July 15 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Amanda Macklin, Sawgrass Apartments, where Casey Anthony said Caylee’s nanny lived.

Tom Manderville, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputy Peter Marino, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Awilda McBryde, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Joy McCabe, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

William McCoy, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputy Samara Melich, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Yuri Melich, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Officer William Moore, Orlando Police Department.

Ricardo Morales, dated Casey Anthony.

Custodian of 911 Calls, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Custodian of Records of Johnson’s Wrecker Service, which towed Casey Anthony’s car.

Custodian of Records of AT&T Wireless.

Ryan Pasley  Friends with Casey since about age 4 or 5. Has never heard of the nanny, and finds it odd that Casey says she had known Zanaida or Zani for four years, but has never mentioned the name to him.

Shirley Plesea   Mount Dora Nursing and Rehab Center,

Melissa Remy, FDLE

Gary Ridgeway, Johnson’s Wrecker, which towed Casey Anthony’s car.

Pedro Rivera, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Kari Roderick, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Dante Salah   Friend of Casey’s who did live in the Sawgrass Apartments. Worked at Don Reid Ford; quit as of June 17  Worked at Muscle Cars and Handlebars on Orange and Landstreet

Deputy Michael Salamat, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Katherine Sanchez, Amscot

Nicole Schieber, Johnson’s Wrecker, which towed Casey Anthony’s car.

Deputy Michael Seagraves, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Renee Simpson, Valencia Community College.

Dianne Tighe, Colorvision

Dave Turner, Sawgrass Apartments, where Casey Anthony said Caylee’s nanny lived.

Leonard Turtora, where Casey Anthony said she worked.

Michael Vincent, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputy Appling Wells, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Deputy Jerold White, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Lance White  worked at Cast Iron Tatoo

Bobby Lee Williams employee of Cast Iron Tattoo. He is the tattoo artist who did Bella Vita (Beautiful Life)

Deputy Ryan Williams, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.


http://www.wesh.com/news/17601789/detail.html


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« Reply #95 on: October 02, 2008, 09:53:00 AM »

On "Today," Casey Anthony's former fiance tells her: "Tell the truth. This isn't about you anymore"
posted by halboedeker on Oct 2, 2008 8:10:45 AM



Thursday morning to reveal what she knows about missing daughter Caylee.

"Casey, tell the truth. This isn't about you anymore," Jesse Grund said. "This is about Caylee. Stop dragging people's lives through this, stop destroying people's lives and tell the truth. What happened to Caylee? Because we're all done with it. We're all done with having to listen to your lies and your stories that make no sense over and over and over again. So tell the truth about what happened."

Grund summed up the frustrations so many people feel with Casey Anthony. Lauer conducted a good interview that provided several memorable moments in this perplexing, drawn-out story.   

Grund explained why he was attracted to Casey Anthony. He found her to be smart, sarcastic and fun to be around. But she started to lied the end of their rleationship and stole $250 from him.

He described Casey as a devoted and doting mother to Caylee. But at end of their relationship, Casey  pulled away, turned selfish, started partying and became closer to her mother, Cindy Anthony, Grund said.

Lauer asked if Casey Anthony could have hurt her child.

"Who knows the real Casey?" Grund said. "I think only she does. I think her personality has been so changed and molded over the years, I don't even know if she knows who she is." 

"Today" preceded the interview with a report by Kerry Sanders in Orlando. He noted the Orange County Sheriff's Office is now calling Casey Anthony a suspect in her daughter's disappearance. Sanders said that change came in an interview with reporter Bob Kealing of WESH-Channel 2.

Jose Baez, Casey Anthony's attorney, countered that there's little difference between being called "person of interest" and "suspect."

Perhaps Grund's words are the ones that will make a difference.



http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment_tv_tvblog/2008/10/on-today-casey.html#more
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« Reply #96 on: October 02, 2008, 04:43:07 PM »

TRANSCRIPT

Lawsuit filed by Zenaida Gonzalez against Casey Anthony
September 24, 2008
http://media.myfoxorlando.com/photogalleries/092408zenaidalawsuit/indexGallery.htm
 





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« Reply #97 on: October 02, 2008, 05:55:46 PM »

Can murder be proved without a body?
There are ways But can they prove it?



Nearly two months after Caylee's disappearance became public, the search for a child, living or dead, continues. Authorities have charged the toddler's mother, 22-year-old Casey Anthony, with child neglect, but she remains a "person of interest" in what could turn out to be a homicide case.

If no girl is found, legal experts say that prosecuting anyone for murder would be a challenge -- but it has been done.

"I don't think he was ever going to give it up without that kind of pressure," White said.

Only fragments of the evidence in Caylee's case have been disclosed, but sheriff's officials have openly speculated in court and elsewhere that the child could be dead.

Caylee had been missing several weeks before she was reported missing in July, and from the beginning, investigators have accused her mother of lying -- about her job, about circumstances of the girl's disappearance, about the people she claimed to have told about it.

Openly dismissive of Casey Anthony's story that a baby sitter took Caylee, they continue to urge her to tell them what she knows.



More ominous is the information released so far about the Pontiac that Anthony drove. Dogs trained to smell signs of human decomposition alerted on the trunk, where investigators found dirt, a mysterious stain and hairs. Tests of air samples from the trunk also indicated that a body once lay there.

Last week, news emerged that lab tests also found traces of chloroform -- the one-time anesthetic that can kill if inhaled in sufficient quantity. Still not disclosed are the results of DNA tests on evidence from the trunk.

And then there is the shovel Anthony requested from a neighbor in June, several days after the last reported sighting of Caylee at her grandparents' home in east Orange County.

Grandparents Cindy and George Anthony have reacted angrily to suggestions that Caylee is dead and continue to urge people to look for a live girl. Casey Anthony has not budged from her account that the child was kidnapped -- and that she, too, is a victim.

Legal experts say Orange County prosecutors don't have to rush to charge anyone with murder because there is no time limit on homicides.


'Proceeding cautiously'

"The prosecutors handling the case are extremely experienced," said criminal-defense attorney F. Wesley "Buck" Blankner Jr. "They are waiting to see the results from the lab. They are trying to see what they can prove. The state is proceeding cautiously."

Investigators would have to look at whether a death were caused by accident or criminal intent.

They must consider whether the case they have is the best it will be or whether they should wait for more evidence.

"If they lose the case, the defendant can't be retried," Putnam said.


How some cases were prosecuted

Roy Ballard: Autumn Marie Traub vanished in 2006, and her body was never found. Ballard awaits sentencing. Forensic tests showed Traub's blood was on a bag in the trunk of Ballard's car.

Anton Daryl Meyers: This was the first time prosecutor Chris White pushed forward with murder charges without a body. Meyers was convicted and eventually led authorities to the remains of Kathy Engels.

 "If the body has not been found or recovered, [prosecutors] must present circumstantial evidence that allows the jury to conclude the victim is dead and died at the hands of the defendant," said Charles Putnam, a former prosecutor and researcher at Justiceworks, a research group in justice studies at the University of New Hampshire.

In most homicide cases, prosecutors have a body as direct evidence that a killing took place.

Investigators in Modesto, Calif., waited until the bodies of Laci Peterson and her unborn child were found in 2003 before they charged her husband, Scott Peterson, who had been identified as a person of interest for months.

Without a body, circumstantial evidence becomes key.


This can include evidence acquired by crime-scene investigators, statements from witnesses, and details about the behavior and actions of the suspect in the crime. To prove a circumstantial case, the information presented at trial must be sufficient to convince a jury that a murder is the only reasonable explanation of what took place.

This summer, prosecutors in Polk County did this when a jury convicted Roy Ballard of first-degree murder for killing his stepdaughter.

Autumn Marie Traub, 33, disappeared Sept. 13, 2006, and her body was never found. A jury recommended the death penalty.

He is awaiting sentencing by a judge.


Forensic tests


In Ballard's case, authorities had forensic tests that showed Traub's blood was on a bag in the trunk of Ballard's car. He bought a pipe more than a week before she disappeared. A witness who shared a cell with Ballard testified that Ballard confided to him how he brutally beat his stepdaughter and used acidic water to get rid of the body.

Polk County prosecutors would not comment about the case because the outcome is pending. However, 10th Circuit State Attorney's Office spokesman Chip Thullbery said, "Theoretically, you could have a no-body case that was stronger than a body case, depending on the all the facts."

In Seminole County, seven years passed between the disappearance of 14-year-old Kathy Engels and the guilty verdict for her killer, Anton Daryl Meyers. This 1994 case was the first time veteran prosecutor Chris White ever pushed forward with murder charges without a body.

"There were a bunch of facts that made me confident we could do it," he said.

Three jailhouse snitches testified that Meyers confessed to them. Meyers was seen with the teenager on the night she disappeared. Investigators also found a shoe impression on Meyers' chest that matched the type of sneakers worn by Engels -- as if someone had kicked him hard, White said.


Applying pressure


Meyers was sentenced to death. But in 2001, Meyers agreed to confess to the killing and lead authorities to Engels' body if the state would convert his death sentence to life in prison. Investigators dug up her remains in a wooded lot between a chiropractor's office and a bank on Lake Mary Boulevard.

"I don't think he was ever going to give it up without that kind of pressure," White said.

Only fragments of the evidence in Caylee's case have been disclosed, but sheriff's officials have openly speculated in court and elsewhere that the child could be dead.

Caylee had been missing several weeks before she was reported missing in July, and from the beginning, investigators have accused her mother of lying -- about her job, about circumstances of the girl's disappearance, about the people she claimed to have told about it.

Openly dismissive of Casey Anthony's story that a baby sitter took Caylee, they continue to urge her to tell them what she knows.


More ominous is the information released so far about the Pontiac that Anthony drove. Dogs trained to smell signs of human decomposition alerted on the trunk, where investigators found dirt, a mysterious stain and hairs. Tests of air samples from the trunk also indicated that a body once lay there.

Last week, news emerged that lab tests also found traces of chloroform -- the one-time anesthetic that can kill if inhaled in sufficient quantity. Still not disclosed are the results of DNA tests on evidence from the trunk.

And then there is the shovel Anthony requested from a neighbor in June, several days after the last reported sighting of Caylee at her grandparents' home in east Orange County.

Grandparents Cindy and George Anthony have reacted angrily to suggestions that Caylee is dead and continue to urge people to look for a live girl. Casey Anthony has not budged from her account that the child was kidnapped -- and that she, too, is a victim.

Legal experts say Orange County prosecutors don't have to rush to charge anyone with murder because there is no time limit on homicides.


'Proceeding cautiously'


"The prosecutors handling the case are extremely experienced," said criminal-defense attorney F. Wesley "Buck" Blankner Jr. "They are waiting to see the results from the lab. They are trying to see what they can prove. The state is proceeding cautiously."

Investigators would have to look at whether a death were caused by accident or criminal intent.

They must consider whether the case they have is the best it will be or whether they should wait for more evidence.

"If they lose the case, the defendant can't be retried," Putnam said.


How some cases were prosecuted

Roy Ballard: Autumn Marie Traub vanished in 2006, and her body was never found. Ballard awaits sentencing. Forensic tests showed Traub's blood was on a bag in the trunk of Ballard's car.

Anton Daryl Meyers: This was the first time prosecutor Chris White pushed forward with murder charges without a body. Meyers was convicted and eventually led authorities to the remains of Kathy Engels.


Sarah Lundy can be reached at slundy@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-6218.


http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/orange/orl-murder0708sep07,0,931506.story?page=2
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« Reply #98 on: October 02, 2008, 06:34:28 PM »

Two New Areas Being Checked In Search For Caylee Anthony

POSTED: 5:13 pm EDT October 2, 2008
UPDATED: 6:12 pm EDT October 2, 2008


ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. -- Eyewitness News has learned detectives have been searching for the body of Caylee Anthony in two more places in east Orange County. Caylee was reported missing 78 days ago. Detectives say she is dead and that at one point her body was in the trunk of her mom's car.

Both wooded areas they're searching are not far from where Casey Anthony lives with her parents. One is near the Amscot at Goldenrod and Highway 50 where Casey abandoned her car in late June. Investigators have searched the area more than once with cadaver dogs.

The other area is closer to Orlando International Airport, where a driver told investigators she saw a car like Casey's white Pontiac Sunfire parked in the median days after Caylee disappeared and she saw someone slight of build wearing a baseball cap and what looked like athletic wear walk out of the woods, someone she believes could have been Casey. It was odd to her because it's not a popular spot for joggers.

Thursday, Casey's attorney said it's not in her best interest to tell what she knows about where Caylee is.

"It does her no good to show her cards to give the prosecution any advantage they have to put her away for life," Jose Baez said.


Judging by what he said, it would seem that Casey would get herself into trouble by telling what she knows about Caylee's whereabouts.

"Casey, tell the truth. It's not about you anymore," said Jesse Grund, Casey's ex-fiance.

Grund shot back at Casey's mother Cindy, who told investigators he's involved in Caylee's disappearance. He said when Casey and Cindy patched things up, Casey's maternal instinct withered away.

"Stop destroying people's lives and tell the truth. What happened to Caylee?" Grund said.

The sheriff's office says it has no idea how many times investigators have searched for Caylee over the last two and a half months or how much it's costing taxpayers. The helicopter alone costs $500 an hour every time it goes up.


ZENAIDA'S ATTORNEY SAYS ANTHONYS LOOKING TO PROFIT

Attorney John Morgan who is representing Zenaida Gonzalez, a woman who shares the name of the so-called nanny Casey claimed had her daughter said he is certain that Casey's team is trying to profit from the case. Morgan appeared on CNN's Nancy Grace Wednesday night.

"I know for a fact that magazines have been approached by members of her team to receive monies," said Attorney John Morgan (watch interview).

Morgan's client is suing Casey for defamation of character. Zenaida was questioned by deputies and says she can't get a job because her name was used.

Gonzalez says she's never even met Casey and investigators have cleared her in the child's disappearance.


http://www.wftv.com/news/17610344/detail.html
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« Reply #99 on: October 03, 2008, 10:09:44 AM »


 
October 3, 2008

For the first time, Casey Anthony has been labeled a suspect in her daughter's disappearance.
case

Bianca Prieto | Sentinel Staff Writer
Anthony, 22, was previously called a "person of interest" by investigators looking into what happened to 3-year-old Caylee Marie.

Sheriff's spokesman Capt. Angelo Nieves said Thursday there was no new evidence to prompt the change -- just a culmination of several factors, including Anthony's persistent deception.

He cited "the subsequent totality of those deceptive responses, lies, uncooperativeness, coupled with the investigative efforts that are still ongoing in this investigation, cause her to be a suspect in the continuing missing-person investigation," in an e-mail to the Orlando Sentinel explaining the change.

A person of interest is someone law enforcement wants to speak to in order to provide information about a case, Nieves said. A suspect is someone who is thought to have been involved in crime.

"Her information has been suspect since we began this investigation," Nieves said. "This is a person who has been uncooperative since the first day."

The child was reported missing July 15, but Anthony told detectives that she hasn't seen Caylee since mid-June, when she said she left her daughter with a baby sitter.

Detectives have not been able to find the baby sitter and question whether she exists.

Deputies also have suggested that the child may be dead.

During a bond hearing in July, Detective Yuri Melich, the lead investigator on the case, called Anthony a person of interest for the first time.

She became a suspect this week.

"Over the past two and half months, we have been diligently working to resolve the case of the missing child," Nieves said. "The information she has provided has proven to be false."

Meanwhile, the Florida Department of Children and Families confirmed Thursday it has concluded its investigation related to Caylee's disappearance.

DCF spokeswoman Carrie Hoeppner said the agency's findings have been given to the Sheriff's Office, but she did not say what those findings were.

"The information obtained in the investigation does not meet the criteria for release at this time," she said in an e-mail.

DCF's role in the case remains "very limited," she said.

A spokesman for Anthony's attorney said calling Anthony a suspect is ridiculous.

"They won't say what she is suspecting of doing?" said Todd Black, a spokesman for Anthony's attorney, Jos� Baez. "A suspect in [her child's] disappearance means that she left her child with a baby sitter?"

The Anthony family could not be reached for comment.

Anyone with information about the child's whereabouts is encouraged to call Crimeline at 1-800-423-8477
.

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/crime/orl-casey0308oct03,0,7843744.story
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