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-   -   Casey Anthony (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/showthread.php?t=42802)

robfla 07-05-2011 08:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robfla (Post 788964)

Just goes to show that being hot and being a young white female can go a long way.

Looks like today is your lucky day if you live in Florida..... 3 for 3 today....


http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/flo...,3271187.story

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/pal...,7924159.story

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/bro...,4863006.story

lord007 07-05-2011 09:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by geeker2 (Post 788942)
Porn

Def a Playboy spread

Coach Pants 07-05-2011 09:49 PM


fpsoxfan 07-05-2011 10:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach Pants (Post 788990)

LOL! Love it!

philcski 07-05-2011 10:09 PM

She's a gross whore who killed her baby so she could party.

And our legal system totally sucks.

robfla 07-06-2011 08:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by philcski (Post 788992)
She's a gross whore who killed her baby so she could party.

probably

Quote:

And our legal system totally sucks.
FALSE - would you rather live in South Korea or Libya or numerous other places where they execute without due process? The US justice system is the best, and while I don't agree 100% with the outcome, I do agree with the process. And lets face it, the prosecution didn't prove much in this case. Remember, the jury ONLY heard what was said from the witness stand, they didn't get to hear the media's assassination.

jms62 07-06-2011 09:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robfla (Post 789023)
probably



FALSE - would you rather live in South Korea or Libya or numerous other places where they execute without due process? The US justice system is the best, and while I don't agree 100% with the outcome, I do agree with the process. And lets face it, the prosecution didn't prove much in this case. Remember, the jury ONLY heard what was said from the witness stand, they didn't get to hear the media's assassination.

Rob.. You need to study your geography a bit. South Korea is a democracy and they require due process.

robfla 07-06-2011 09:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jms62 (Post 789026)
Rob.. You need to study your geography a bit. South Korea is a democracy and they require due process.

ok - bad example then, but you get my drift

Danzig 07-06-2011 09:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robfla (Post 789023)
probably



FALSE - would you rather live in South Korea or Libya or numerous other places where they execute without due process? The US justice system is the best, and while I don't agree 100% with the outcome, I do agree with the process. And lets face it, the prosecution didn't prove much in this case. Remember, the jury ONLY heard what was said from the witness stand, they didn't get to hear the media's assassination.


i agree, the problem isn't with the judicial process. there will always be times when guilty folks go free-which is a damn shame. but it's got to be better than the alternatives.
i worked with a girl who is pro-death penalty...i told her i disagreed with having it, as who would want to be responsible should an innocent person be put to death. she is under the impression that only guilty people get arrested. i told her to consider if she was the person in the wrong place at the wrong time, she might feel differently were she charged with a crime she didn't commit.
i find it ludicrous that the jury cited george as a reason to have doubt. george wasn't on trial, and casey's 'defense' if you wish to call it that was completely disproved to the point that the supposed drowning couldn't even be mentioned in closing by her joke of a lawyer. her lawyer and her lame stories didn't get her off. i guess anyone wanting to get away with a crime has learned something. duct tape, and lie like hell.

robfla 07-07-2011 09:23 AM

A perfect couple


bigrun 07-07-2011 11:39 AM

Justice is served!!
 
(CBS/WKMG/AP) ORLANDO, Fla. - Casey Anthony will be released from jail on Wednesday of next week, according to a court official.

Anthony was sentenced Thursday by Judge Belvin Perry to four years in prison for lying to police, but with credit for time served and good behavior she will remain in jail for just one more week.


http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_1...in;contentBody

ateamstupid 07-07-2011 12:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 789030)
i find it ludicrous that the jury cited george as a reason to have doubt. george wasn't on trial, and casey's 'defense' if you wish to call it that was completely disproved to the point that the supposed drowning couldn't even be mentioned in closing by her joke of a lawyer. her lawyer and her lame stories didn't get her off. i guess anyone wanting to get away with a crime has learned something. duct tape, and lie like hell.

Is that accurate? I thought it was just the supposed sexual abuse from her father that couldn't be mentioned. I think the accidental drowning thing was central to their argument all the way through.

Didn't the meter reader dude try to alert authorities to the whereabouts of Caylee's body like four months before they actually found her? What the hell were the cops doing that they couldn't check out this dude's potential sighting of a missing person for four months? Gotta love Florida.

Clip-Clop 07-07-2011 12:18 PM

The cop who went to check it out fell in the swamp and the meter guy laughed at him so he pulled out. He was later fired is the story.

robfla 07-07-2011 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ateamstupid (Post 789261)
Is that accurate? I thought it was just the supposed sexual abuse from her father that couldn't be mentioned. I think the accidental drowning thing was central to their argument all the way through.

the judge ruled that anything that wasn't proven to in testimony could not be argued in closing arguments. But it could be inferred to

Quote:

Didn't the meter reader dude try to alert authorities to the whereabouts of Caylee's body like four months before they actually found her? What the hell were the cops doing that they couldn't check out this dude's potential sighting of a missing person for four months? Gotta love Florida.
see clip clops answer

ateamstupid 07-07-2011 12:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robfla (Post 789265)
see clip clops answer

Oh, so that wasn't a joke?

Danzig 07-07-2011 01:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ateamstupid (Post 789261)
Is that accurate? I thought it was just the supposed sexual abuse from her father that couldn't be mentioned. I think the accidental drowning thing was central to their argument all the way through.

Didn't the meter reader dude try to alert authorities to the whereabouts of Caylee's body like four months before they actually found her? What the hell were the cops doing that they couldn't check out this dude's potential sighting of a missing person for four months? Gotta love Florida.




Judge Belvin Perry issued an order Friday instructing the attorneys at Casey Anthony’s murder trial on what he will and will not allow when they present their closing arguments to the jury on Sunday.

The list of 16 restrictions cites specific case precedents for each item. It could limit the defense’s ability to refer back to defense attorney Jose Baez’s claims in his opening statement that 2-year-old Caylee Anthony drowned in the family pool on June 16, 2008, that Casey’s father George Anthony helped cover up the death and that meter reader Roy Kronk did something with the remains that prevented them from being found until December 2008. Baez had also claimed that George sexually abused Casey and that her brother Lee also attempted to molest her.



now, i didn't watch any of it, so i don't know what was ultimately allowed...but from what i read, i thought the drowning was banned from closing.

Clip-Clop 07-07-2011 01:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ateamstupid (Post 789267)
Oh, so that wasn't a joke?

No that is reported as fact.

Might have made the difference too.

Danzig 07-07-2011 01:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ateamstupid (Post 789261)
Is that accurate? I thought it was just the supposed sexual abuse from her father that couldn't be mentioned. I think the accidental drowning thing was central to their argument all the way through.

Didn't the meter reader dude try to alert authorities to the whereabouts of Caylee's body like four months before they actually found her? What the hell were the cops doing that they couldn't check out this dude's potential sighting of a missing person for four months? Gotta love Florida.

same state that gave a football player a month in jail for vehicular manslaughter. of course, he is a good player...

clyde 07-07-2011 02:27 PM

Thank God for radio.

Antitrust32 07-08-2011 08:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 789270)
same state that gave a football player a month in jail for vehicular manslaughter. of course, he is a good player...

that is because he settled with the family and other circumstances (the deceased walked out in the road where there was no crosswalk)

Danzig 07-08-2011 09:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antitrust32 (Post 789382)
that is because he settled with the family and other circumstances (the deceased walked out in the road where there was no crosswalk)

wasn't the player over the blood alcohol limit? also, it's a law now in most places that if someone calls the cops for a domestic disturbance, the perpetrator has to be arrested, whether the victim wants to press charges or not. but you can tell the cops not to push a murder charge??
no, something fishy there.

Antitrust32 07-08-2011 10:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 789385)
wasn't the player over the blood alcohol limit? also, it's a law now in most places that if someone calls the cops for a domestic disturbance, the perpetrator has to be arrested, whether the victim wants to press charges or not. but you can tell the cops not to push a murder charge??
no, something fishy there.

what if someone calls in a completely bogus domestic disturbance because of malice? someone still has to be arrested?

Danzig 07-08-2011 10:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antitrust32 (Post 789394)
what if someone calls in a completely bogus domestic disturbance because of malice? someone still has to be arrested?

perhaps the caller for filing a false report? all i know is they started passing those laws because women would be getting their ass kicked, call the cops, and then say i don't want my sweet hubby going to jail. some couples have files on them inches thick.
matter of fact, another football player just went to court over a domestic disturbance. she called the cops, and then goes to court saying she didn't want him arrested. yeah, that makes sense! a lot of places have started changing domestic dispute laws so that victims can be saved from themselves, not just from their attacker/boyfriend/husband.

Danzig 07-08-2011 10:55 AM

http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/g...portion-070611

Underwood, who was arrested in June following an altercation with his wife in which he allegedly ripped a Super Bowl necklace from her neck and dragged her out of his car, appeared in a Wisconsin courthouse Wednesday with his estranged wife by his side.

"I told police I did not want them to arrest him," Brandie Underwood, 25, said upon leaving the courthouse. "He's never harmed me in any way, shape or form."

"The last thing I wanted was for him to get in trouble," she said while fighting back tears, according to the Press-Gazette.

According to court documents, Underwood was arrested June 16 following a team ceremony at Lambeau Field in which the Packers players were awarded their Super Bowl rings.

Underwood's wife, who filed for divorce in May but continues to live with her husband, told police the couple began arguing in the car on the way home from the event. She claimed Underwood became agitated over the necklace she was wearing that had been awarded to the players' wives.

The 25-year-old defensive back allegedly ripped the necklace from his wife's neck while the two were still sitting inside the car in the driveway of their home. He then allegedly got out of the car, walked over to the passenger side and dragged the mother of his three children from the vehicle before driving off.

Brandie Underwood then called police and her husband was arrested upon his return. Wisconsin state law requires officers to make an arrest in a domestic abuse report if reasonable grounds exist that the abuse occurred and if continued abuse is likely, according to the Press-Gazette.

Antitrust32 07-08-2011 01:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 789396)
perhaps the caller for filing a false report? all i know is they started passing those laws because women would be getting their ass kicked, call the cops, and then say i don't want my sweet hubby going to jail. some couples have files on them inches thick.
matter of fact, another football player just went to court over a domestic disturbance. she called the cops, and then goes to court saying she didn't want him arrested. yeah, that makes sense! a lot of places have started changing domestic dispute laws so that victims can be saved from themselves, not just from their attacker/boyfriend/husband.

I am okay with that. I just dont want the USA to get to a point where anyone can call the cops and to try to get someone else they dont like in trouble.

Example: you dont like someone, so you call the cops and tell them so and so is a drug dealer. so then so and so has the cops show up at their door and their house searched. god forbid they have a joint stashed in the freezer.

I dont think that is right.

Danzig 07-08-2011 01:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antitrust32 (Post 789428)
I am okay with that. I just dont want the USA to get to a point where anyone can call the cops and to try to get someone else they dont like in trouble.

Example: you dont like someone, so you call the cops and tell them so and so is a drug dealer. so then so and so has the cops show up at their door and their house searched. god forbid they have a joint stashed in the freezer.

I dont think that is right.

i don't think the cops can search a house just based on a call. i have no doubt that the cops have seen and heard everything, including neighbors trying to get the guy across the street in trouble.

Storm Cadet 07-10-2011 08:53 PM



Casey is already advertising for a new job!


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