RedHanded - FROM THE VAULT - Casey Anthony: Web of Lies - Part 2

Episode Date: March 5, 2025

This week, we were speechless to learn that Casey Anthony is now on TikTok (and Substack), trying to reposition herself as an online advocate and activist for those wronged by the justice sys...tem. And, so you can understand why this idea made our heads spin, we've rereleased this classic two-parter from 2021. So – enjoy, then come and join us on our socials, to let us know your thoughts...--This week, in the concluding part of our Casey Anthony series - Hannah and Suruthi head into a courtroom full to the brim with bulldog lawyers, yet more lies, accusations of incest and forensic fuck-ups.In a case that just gets stranger and stranger, the shocks really do come right at the end...Exclusive bonus content:Wondery - Ad-free & ShortHandPatreon - Ad-free & Bonus EpisodesFollow us on social media:YouTubeTikTokInstagramVisit our website:WebsiteSources available on redhandedpodcast.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondry Plus subscribers can listen to Red Handed early and ad free. Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple podcasts. Before we kick off this week's episode, we have got some extraordinarily exciting news for you. Wondry's Exhibit C, a true crime cruise, is happening and it's happening from January the 26th to the 30th, 2026. Setting sail from Miami, Florida to Nassau in the Bahamas. And this exclusive voyage has got all sorts. It's got your favourite podcast hosts, true crime experts, interactive workshops and opportunities for you to connect with other True Crime fans on the high seas. The full talent line-up was just announced and I and Ceruti, both of us, are on that list.
Starting point is 00:00:54 We can't wait to meet you on board. Make sure you sign up for the pre-sale before the 26th of February to secure your spot for the best choice of cabin. If you're a Wanderui Plus subscriber and you are listening to us on Wanderui Plus right now this second, you can get some special perks on board. Go to exhibitseacruise.com for even more juicy, juicy details. In the 1980s, a rose swept the country. Hey Mike, I really like this white Zinfandel. Well good, good. Now put it down, I'm going to try another one.
Starting point is 00:01:27 White Zin became America's top-selling wine. But most don't know that this sweet drink has a sour history. What began in 1986 with counterfeit bottles… A big fraud. A multi-million dollar fraud. …sent investigators chasing one of the most powerful families in the business, the Lacharties. But the closer the feds got to them, the more dangerous things became. It's a story of deceit.
Starting point is 00:01:52 At the time I was paranoid. Threats. You touched my kids. I will kill you. And murder. With a.22 caliber bullet to the head. What started with a scheme to mislabel wine spilled into a blood-soaked battle for succession. Welcome to Blood Vines.
Starting point is 00:02:10 You can binge listen to Blood Vines exclusively and ad-free on Wondery Plus. Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. I'm Saruti and I'm Hannah for the last time in 2021. Yes, this is, as Hannah has given away, sorry, starting the thunder there, sorry. The final episode of Red Handed for 2021. What a year it's been. What a year, what a dish, what a dollar, as Megara says in Hercules. We said it all last week. We did. We're recording these back to back. It's mega Casey day at Red Handed HQ today.
Starting point is 00:02:54 We met Sarah and I just went to go grab some lunch and actually spoke to each other for the first time in about two weeks. I was like, oh, hello you. How are things? What's going on with you? Those very important life things. I'm just like, you just come into the office and I just like look up, grunt at each other and then get back to work. So no, today has been a double Casey day, which is why we kind of said everything we wanted to say
Starting point is 00:03:14 at the top of last week's episode. Yes, yeah, yeah. Thank you for being here, being loyal, being listeners, being lovely, we love you. We most certainly do. And because we love you, we are not gonna leave you hanging. And because we love you, we are not going to leave you hanging. So when we left you last week and where we left Casey was she was in custody having
Starting point is 00:03:31 been arrested in connection to the disappearance of her daughter, three-year-old Kayleigh. Even after the arrest and by this stage, months of scrutiny and time in jail, Casey was sticking to her nonsensical story of Zanny the nanny having stolen her child. And we've got a police interview for you where Casey gives a detailed history for Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez, the lady she claims is her permanent private nanny. Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez Zanny the nanny doesn't exist. Just a reminder in case anyone forgot, she never existed. So let's have a little listen shall we?
Starting point is 00:04:05 Yeah. If we find that out that people don't look at you the wrong way. No sir. You're telling me that Zenaida took your child without your permission and hasn't returned her? She's the last person that I've seen with my daughter, yes. Is she Puerto Rican, is she Dominican, is she white? She's mixed. She's black and Puerto Rican. She's mixed. She's black and Puerto Rican. Is there any underlying cause to why Zenaida was taking your child?
Starting point is 00:04:30 Nothing that... Sure to make any statements to you about... Only how much she loves Kaylee and how great of a kid she is. And when you talk to Jeffrey afterwards, I'm assuming that Jeffrey's child is still with him? His child is still with him. You said Zenaida had family up in New England, up in New York? Yes, she has family down south,
Starting point is 00:04:49 her mother and her sister, her brother's in New York. She's originally from New York, pretty much grew up there, moved down here, went to the University of Florida. New York is quite famously not in the south. Well, she has family down south, her mother and her sister live there, but her brother's in New York,
Starting point is 00:05:04 and she's originally from New York but she went to Union. Just the rate of making it up is great. She's not skipping a beat. No she's black, she's half black, she's half Puerto Rican. Yeah what's next? What's next? You want a family history? Sure. What? What? Here's their ancestry.com profile. Mate it is. It's unbelievable. Again just case anyone's forgotten, Zenaida doesn't fucking exist. But the police obviously don't know this yet. They don't know that Zenaida doesn't exist. And they have to, whatever they might think, they have to follow up on Casey's story. They have to look for this person. Right. And interestingly, they did actually find a Zenaida Gonzalez living about 20 miles south of Orlando
Starting point is 00:05:48 in the town of Kissimmee. It's Kissimmee, and do you know why I know that? Oh, I was listening to an American say it and he said Kissimmee. Anyway, Kissimmee, what did he say? Anyway, whatever, that place, sorry. That's where my mom's houses are in Florida. So I have spent seven Christmases.
Starting point is 00:06:02 How do I say it? We've always said Kissimmee and that's what the agency say. Okay. It never comes up again. It's, um, there's fuck all this. Honestly, it's like it's closer to Tampa than it is to Orlando and Tampa is Tampa. Full stop. No concept of what's happening. But yes. So they find a woman named Zenaida Gonzalez living in this town. Again, like I said, 20 miles south of Orlando. So very close, very close. But this woman, she was middle-aged, not 25 like Casey had said about her nanny.
Starting point is 00:06:36 Really good Walmart. Oh really? I mean, I've never been in a Walmart I didn't like. I don't think I've ever been in a Walmart. It's like Costco, but crazy. I've been in a Target. I have been in a Target. I've been in a Target with you. You had a bad time. Oh, it's very much too much. This woman, Zenaida, when the police went and interviewed
Starting point is 00:06:54 her, she denied knowing Casey, Kayleigh or anyone connected with the Antonis at all. And the police quickly released this Zenaida after it became clear to them that she had nothing to do with anything. And maybe you're thinking, well, you know, that's only one Zenaida Gonzalez that they found. Maybe they should have kept looking. They only ruled this person out. Well, apparently there were only around 200 women in the whole of the United States at the time with the name Zenaida Gonzalez. That's a nation of 330 million people. She shot herself in the foot a bit with the name Zenaida Gonzalez. That's a nation of 330 million people. She shot herself in the foot a bit with the name Zenaida. This is the thing is like, do you go Susan Smith or do you go Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez?
Starting point is 00:07:35 I think given how rare a name it was as a combo name, the fact that the police found anyone with that name living nearby was frankly unbelievable. You know, again, some people might be like, how did they rule this woman out that easily? She was only 20 miles away, she's got the right name. Well, Casey Anthony couldn't pick her out of a lineup. So she's probably not a fucking nanny, right? I'm gonna guess. And then whenever they confront her with the fact that they can't find anyone by this name,
Starting point is 00:07:57 she's like, they're not searching the full name. They're only searching Zenaida Gonzalez. She goes by sometimes Zenaida Fernandez, sometimes Zenaida Gonzalez, sometimes all three names and they're just not looking for her properly is Casey's argument all the time. You couldn't make it up. So yeah, like I said, the fact that they found anyone by this name at all nearby was frankly unbelievable given those statistics. And now I know that we've already revealed to you the fact several times that there is no Zanny the nanny but if you think that is the end of the intrigue surrounding the name Zenaida
Starting point is 00:08:29 Fernandes Gonzales then you would be incorrect. But we're gonna put a pin in it for now and come back to it later on this episode because it's even weirder than you think. What we need to focus on now is that the police by this stage were completely convinced that Casey not only had something to do with the disappearance of her daughter were completely convinced that Casey not only had something to do with the disappearance of her daughter, they were convinced that Casey Anthony had killed her daughter Kayleigh. Yeah, they've got the banding in the hair, they've got the smell, they're convinced that Kayleigh is dead and that if she's dead, that Casey's the one that did it. And the people of Florida felt pretty much the same way. Every
Starting point is 00:09:01 single night, Nancy Grace was hitting the screens across the states screaming, top mom. This was her catchphrase. This was her nickname for Casey Anthony. I don't get it. I don't know. Every mom is a top mom. Yeah. Don't know. Maybe it stands for something. Maybe. I don't know. Too old to mom. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:09:21 Definitely. Sorry, Nancy Grace. You've lost me. You lost me a long time ago, to be honest. She's out in full force on the Casey Anthony case. We'll come back to her later. But yeah, it's a lot. It's a lot. And since public record laws in Florida are very, very open under the Sunshine Act, it means that the public and the media are given access to all 911 calls, all interviews, all videos from prison visits that pertained to even the tiniest corner of Casey Anthony's case. And obviously when people saw these they freaked out and protesters actually began turning up outside the Anthony home every day. If you're even cursorily aware of this case you will have seen the videos of this. They're very easy to find.
Starting point is 00:10:01 It's full of very weird scenes of people going on banging on the Anthony's family home, screaming at them, physically fighting with lovely George. It's madness. It really is. There's no other word for it. I'm just like, whatever your opinion is of what's happened, even if you think that the Antonys, like as in George and Cindy are involved, why you would take it upon yourself to turn up at their house and scream at them?
Starting point is 00:10:23 I'm not saying it doesn't happen. It's super common. I can't get into the mind of those people. No, but it's a vigilante justice thing, sort of quasi vigilante justice, like what am I doing? How do I make this about me? Yeah, 100%. If I'm the one that knocks lovely George out, then I've helped. Yeah, definitely, definitely. It's fucking terrifying. So in the meantime, while all this is going down, the police, believing that they had
Starting point is 00:10:48 enough evidence from what they had found in the car, given the hair and the stain etc, and believing that they had sufficient probable cause, charged Casey Anthony with murder in October 2008, two months after her initial arrest. By this stage, Casey had engaged the services of a then little-known defence attorney named Jose Baez. Jose Baez is going to become another key addition to our cast of crazy characters. A major player. A major player in this. So, Baez, how can I describe him? He's like a smarmy bulldog.
Starting point is 00:11:23 He's good at what he does. And if I ever get charged with murder, I would like you to call Jose Baez. Okay, done. Right. I hate him, but he's very good at history. This is gonna make you hungry! Booster Juice just dropped new guacamole and black bean grilled fresh options! What the guac? Yeah, a guacamole black bean wrap, guacamole chicken panini, and an egg and chipotle black bean wrap.
Starting point is 00:11:50 What a trio! Holy guacamole! Bye bye, boring as bread sandwiches! Guac, yeah! New flavors, new cravings! Avocuddle up to wrap some paninis from Booster Juice. Canadian-born blending since 1999. Download the Booster Rewards app and order one today. Behind the closed doors of government offices and military compounds, there are hidden stories and buried secrets from the darkest corners of history.
Starting point is 00:12:17 From covert experiments pushing the boundaries of science to operations so secretive they were barely whispered about. Each week, unredacted, declassified mysteries, we pull back the curtain on these hidden histories, 100% true and verifiable stories that expose the shadowy underbelly of power. Consider Operation Paperclip, where former Nazi scientists were brought to America
Starting point is 00:12:38 after World War II, not as prisoners, but as assets to advance US intelligence during the Cold War. These aren't just old conspiracy theories. They're thoroughly investigated accounts that reveal the uncomfortable truths still shaping our world today. The stories are real. The secrets are shocking. Follow Redacted, declassified mysteries on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to Redacted early and ad-free right now on Wondery+. So as soon as Jose Baez took over as Casey Anthony's lawyer, he began severely restricting
Starting point is 00:13:15 her communication with investigators. Because up until this point, we could just make a 10-part series of us playing clips of Casey Anthony and being interviewed by the police. She just talks them constantly. She says nothing, but she constantly talks them and incriminates herself. Jose Baez puts a stop to that. And the police knew, despite everything they thought they had on Casey, if they were going to get anywhere with this case, especially on a murder conviction, they needed a body.
Starting point is 00:13:40 And enter my favourite name of 2021. On the 11th of December 2008, a city maintenance worker named Roy Cronk pulled over onto the side of the road and headed into the woods to relieve himself. Naughty Cronk. And that was when he spotted scattered bones lying in the undergrowth. Police could hardly believe it. The location was less than a quarter of a mile from the Anthony's home. I am more familiar with this particular area of Florida than I would like to admit. I have spent a lot of time there. And when they're saying woods, they mean jungle. Like it is so dense, like you literally cannot see more than two feet. Like it's the tree start and literally cannot see more than two feet
Starting point is 00:14:25 Like it's the tree start and they don't stop they flip-flop between the terms woods and swamp Yeah, it's I can I can see it in my mind It's not somewhere you want to be you just do not go in there, especially if you are me so this wood swamp jungle forest was This wood swamp jungle forest was literally down the road and basically the first spot if you left the Anthony's place where there were no houses. This discovery spot also becomes very interesting later on but just like with Senaida Gonzalez's name, we're going to leave it on the pin cushion. When forensics teams arrived, alerted by Roy Cronk, they were led by the chief medical examiner Dr. Jan Garavaglia, or as she's known on her hit TV show, Dr. G.
Starting point is 00:15:11 The remains were totally skeletonised and spread over an area of a few feet in the swampy jungle forest trees. It appeared to Dr. G that at one point the body had been inside two plastic bin bags and a large canvas bag. The remains had clearly been disturbed by animals and the body also seemed to have been at one stage wrapped in a Winnie the Pooh baby blanket that was also found at the scene. That bit just makes me so fucking sad. Yeah it's not, it's not great. It's just so sad. So a week after the discovery of the body, Dr. G confirmed in a press conference that the remains were indeed those of Kayleigh Anthony.
Starting point is 00:15:52 She also stated that the means of death in her opinion, her professional opinion, she was ruling it a homicide. Dr. G admits in interviews that given the state of the remains, because remember, it's just bone. It's just dry bone. It's six months after Kayleigh went missing. We know no one saw her after she went missing. I think it's safe to say she died as soon as she went missing. So she's been dead for six months. Because of the state of the remains, there wasn't much that Dr. G could do in terms of toxicology tests
Starting point is 00:16:23 or identifying some sort of real cause of death. The bones showed no physical trauma and there was no soft tissue left to examine. She stated that she had ruled it a homicide given the other surrounding circumstantial evidence, which a lot of people like criticised, but that is literally the job of the medical officer. The chief medical officer's job or the coroner here is to look at the other circumstances, the way in which the body is discovered, where the body is discovered, all of these things and to come to a conclusion that they think is the most reasonable conclusion. It's not her job to be like, well, I don't know, I've just got a bunch of bones. What are you looking at me for? So she doesn't like overstep the
Starting point is 00:17:03 mark. She rules a homicide based on what she sees. And she says that the key pieces of evidence for the homicide theory were how well hidden the body seemed and, crucially, the discovery of three pieces of duct tape stuck to Kayleigh's skull. The duct tape was found attached to her mandible or lower jaw and Dr G theorised that the duct tape was the murder weapon and that the cause of death had most likely been suffocation. According to Dr G, the duct tape must have been on Kayleigh's face when she died because the mandible was still attached to the rest of the skull. Normally when decomposition
Starting point is 00:17:42 starts the lower jaw falls off pretty quickly because it's not attached by bone. Oh I don't like thinking about that. Yeah but it makes sense doesn't it? If the mandible is still there it wasn't put on afterwards or it didn't just end up stuck there afterwards. It must have been there before the decomposition process started. So what is holding it there? Like ligaments? Yeah like ligaments. Ligaments and muscle.
Starting point is 00:18:04 I saw a really horrible tweet the other day That's gonna make you feel really uncomfortable. I'm gonna tell you anyway. Excellent. I'm so glad I just ate It was like one of those threads of like what makes you feel the most uncomfortable and one person tweeted that your bones are wet All the time they're wet all the time They're wet all the time. Stop it. You're welcome. I'm leaving. Dr G was also surprised to find that all of Kayleigh's teeth were still in place.
Starting point is 00:18:34 Typically with the remains of children that young, the baby teeth, since they don't have roots, fall out by that stage of decomposition. The duct tape having been wrapped around Kayleigh's face at the time of death or very shortly after her death, so pre-decomposition, would have been the only way to explain the mandible and the baby teeth still being in place. It seemed like there could be no explanation for why someone would tape up the face of a child that was already dead. So it makes sense to theorize that the tape was therefore used to kill, not as anything to do with body disposal or something after the fact.
Starting point is 00:19:11 This is the thing. Basically, people will argue that the tape was just found at the scene of the crime and it got stuck to the skull because the skull gets tossed about by animals. Oh yeah, there's fuck loads of animals in those words. Yeah. So some people will say, well, how do you know that the tape just wasn't in the woods and when a fox or whatever. You wish. You wish it was foxes, my friend. Whatever the fucking alligator came and like tossed this skull about, how do you know that
Starting point is 00:19:33 the skull didn't fall on the duct tape and that's when it got stuck to it? And Dr. G's point is it must have been there pre decomposition. So at the point or shortly after death for the mandible and the teeth to still be in place. So that is her evidence for why she is saying, or that's her reasoning for why she is saying that the duct tape was the murder weapon, because it's over the mouth and the nose. Dr G also pointed the finger at Casey Anthony being the killer, and she did that by strongly suggesting that a stranger murder seemed highly unlikely. For example, the Winnie the Pooh blanket that was found at the body discovery site matched the theme of Kayleigh's bedroom. The canvas laundry bag,
Starting point is 00:20:12 the one found at the scene which it was assumed that Kayleigh was kept in, was sold in pairs from a local store and the other half of that pair was found in the Anthony house. The duct tape also matched the type found at the Anthony residence, so they're not trying particularly hard. And this is the thing, if you're saying she was kidnapped by somebody else somewhere outside of my house, again, it's just, it's none of, I know none of this is like smoking gun, but it's pointing more and more at the fact that this happened inside the Anthony household.
Starting point is 00:20:43 So following these findings, Casey was charged with first degree murder and she spent the next two years in county jail awaiting trial. And it was the trial that everyone was waiting for. It would be the trial of the century, as the papers reported. People were queuing up around the fucking block like all night, like camping out
Starting point is 00:21:03 to get tickets to get inside. I don't know, tickets? Is that the right word? To get in. Just some guy like selling tickets on the side like touting these fake tickets. Like it's crazy. It's crazy like watching the people queue up. And also, fun fact, 40 million people watched it on TV. Fun fact, 40 million people watched it on TV. The population of the UK is 66 million. That is crazy. Three quarters of the population of the UK watched the Casey Anthony trial. And as you would expect with such a high stakes case, the difficulties started straight away.
Starting point is 00:21:42 The defence argued that there was no way that Casey could get a fair trial in Orlando. Everyone in the area had already decided her guilt. It was far too emotional and there was no way that a jury picked from there would be impartial. So the judge decided, and I've never seen this before, maybe it's more common, but I don't know, the way that it's kind of spoken about makes it seem like it's kind of a weird move. Instead of moving the trial somewhere else, the judge decided to bring a jury in from out of town. From,
Starting point is 00:22:09 I think it's Pinellas County? Let's go with that. From Pinellas County, Florida to be exact, which is over 100 miles away from Orlando. So again, I think it's worth mentioning because 100 miles is not an insignificant distance. I don't know that people 100 miles away haven't heard about this case or watched everything just in the same way people in Orlando have. But also what you're then saying is these people can't even go home that night after jury duty. They're now living there as long as this first degree murder trial takes. Yeah. So all they have to do is turn on the TV.
Starting point is 00:22:41 And also what I'm saying is that that's another level of stress that you're adding to an imported jury. Yes, true. And this is actually really funny. In some of the documentaries, there were, for all the people that wanted to get into the trial, there were some jurors that were like, I'm not fucking doing this because I don't want to be involved in. So I don't want to go live a hundred miles away from my house.
Starting point is 00:22:57 So there's this one guy that gets interviewed and he's like, I didn't want to do it. So I just start talking about it. And then they were like, you're getting fined in contempt of court and you're chucked off the jury. And he paid, I think it was like $4,000. He paid in fine. And they actually said, Tim, did you do this on purpose because you didn't want to do it? And he was like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:14 And then he went home. I wouldn't want to do it. No. Even with this jury situation, as we've outlined it, the fact that these jurors are being imported in, they're probably very unhappy about this, given the fact that most people know about this case. The prosecution, I think, still thought that this case was going to be a slam dunk. But they had no idea what they were up against with the dream team that was Jose Baez and Casey Anthony.
Starting point is 00:23:39 In court, Casey, this is the oldest trick in the fucking book, turned up dressed very conservatively, hair up, no makeup, looking very plain. This image was clearly to contrast what she knew would be coming first, right out of the gates from the prosecution. The jury was shown a string of photos and videos from the time that Kayleigh was missing. They were all of Kaycee Anthony, out at bars and clubs and seemingly having the time of her life. These images, which you can find very easily, Casey is wearing very little, she's grinding about and looking pretty smashed. And apparently during the month when she thought that Kayleigh had been abducted by her nanny,
Starting point is 00:24:12 Casey even took part in a hot bod contest. Probably at that so dope Friday's or whatever the fuck it was called. Toni Lozaro, her now ex-boyfriend and club promoter behind the nights out that Casey was pictured at, testified that Casey had seemed absolutely fine during the month. She never cried. She never said that Casey was missing. She'd never been unhappy. The prosecution also played the court CCTV that showed at 7.45pm on the day that she
Starting point is 00:24:39 claimed Casey had vanished. Casey was with Tony in a blockbuster, casually just choosing films. And that's the night that she says she tried to go pick Kayleigh up and there was no one at the house. Blockbuster does it again. I'm so sad. It's such a societal loss.
Starting point is 00:24:54 Yeah, I can't tell you why, Tony. And I won't tell you why until I'm eventually arrested for this fact. But I really feel like what I need to do is go to a blockbuster's with you just to take my mind off some things that I can't talk about it's fucking ridiculous so you can understand with shit like this and how much Casey lied that the prosecution think it's a open and shut case but I really do get frustrated with them because I feel like as good as Jose Baez is I feel like the prosecution really dropped the ball mm-hmm during this fateful month when Kayleigh was missing Casey also decided to get herself
Starting point is 00:25:26 a tattoo on her shoulder that read, Bella Vita. Just in case your Italian isn't totally brushed up. Bella Vita translates to beautiful life. She's such a fucking twat. So the prosecution actually managed to track down the tattoo artist who gave her this beautiful artwork. And this tattoo artist testified in court that while Casey was getting the tattoo, remember during the month that her child is missing, apparently all she talked about during
Starting point is 00:25:56 that tattoo session was her boyfriend Tony. Yikes. It's like, and I feel like this is quite obvious when you listen to Casey speaking, it's like a 16 year old. It's like she's not 22. She's very arrested in her development, very, very immature. And prosecution also found an old friend of Casey's, a woman named Keo Marie Cruz, who told the court that apparently Casey had never wanted Kayleigh. She said that she'd wanted to give the baby up for adoption, but the Cindy had forbidden it and made Casey keep the baby. And the prosecution also had a diary entry from Casey's journal. This diary entry was dated
Starting point is 00:26:33 the 21st of June which would have been just five days after Kaylee was last seen and probably five days after Kaylee was last alive. The diary entry read, quote, I have no regrets, just a little worried. I just want for everything to work out okay. I completely trust my own judgment and I know that I made the right decision. I just hope that the ends justify the means. This is the happiest I've been for a very long time. I just hope my happiness continues to grow. Pretty suspect right? Yep. Problem is the year wasn't noted so that could have been the 21st of June any year and she could be talking about literally anything. And Jose Baez obviously used that piece of information to tear through this evidence like a piece of wet toilet
Starting point is 00:27:20 paper. My frustration again with the prosecution here is you didn't just find scraps of paper. It was in a diary. Could you not tell from other things she's talking about and they're probably like fucking Tony what year it was from? Yes, that's extremely true. I think that's one of those things you can't take without the context. Yeah. So I feel like they're probably right that this wasn't 2008 because otherwise it would have been... We know if there's one thing that Casey Anthony talks about, it's Tony. And if it's no mention of Tony in this diary or on the pages next to this entry, then it's not 2008. So don't fucking bring it up in court because you're going to get torn apart and it's going to look really bad.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Yeah. And she's only 22. Like how many diaries can there really be? I went to school today and drew a picture of a horse. Okay. It's not that one. You know what I mean? Yeah. Again, this is my frustration at the prosecution. I'm like, leave it, leave it out if you can't back it up because Jose Baez is going to tell you apart and it's going to make the jury be like, oh. Uh, so yeah, all of the evidence is pretty circumstantial, but circumstantial evidence is evidence. But unfortunately for a first degree murder charge, the prosecution
Starting point is 00:28:22 needed a little bit more than that. Which brings us very neatly onto the forensic evidence. Unfortunately, for a first degree murder charge, the prosecution needed a little bit more than that. Which brings us very neatly onto the forensic evidence. The prosecution's case was this. Kaylee had died some sort of asphyxial type death, probably involving drugs. So they're saying that Kaysee had administered the drugs and then once Kaylee was passed out, Kaysee had taped her daughter's mouth and nose shut with three pieces of duct tape, and then Kayleigh had died.
Starting point is 00:28:49 And the drug that the prosecution settled on was chloroform. And this was because when expert in human decomposition Dr. Arpad Vass tested the gases from the carpet in the boot of the car, he found very high levels of chloroform. He actually said said and this is a quote, it was shockingly high, the highest levels I've ever seen in my 20 year career. But the defense hit back at the chloroform and said the chloroform is also present in many cleaning products and that it could simply have been there because of that. Also the way in which Dr. Arpadvas does his analysis hadn't been really used in court
Starting point is 00:29:28 before. So, it was very easy for Jose Baez to be like, where's the evidence for this? Like, where's the precedent for this? Like, we haven't seen this before. His favorite thing Baez to do is to undermine the scientific capabilities of every expert put in front of him. He also goes after Arpadvas, who is not like some random guy they pulled off the street. He worked at like that body farm and stuff.
Starting point is 00:29:49 Like he's the real deal, but he's just like, what's your actual like field of expertise? And Dr. Arpad Vass was actually an anthropologist, but he had taught himself chemistry and come up with these experiments himself on how to do this. So Jose Baez just tears him apart. I'm not saying it's not true but again the prosecution kind of leave themselves open to this. And also the other thing was the toxicology on Kaylee's bones also showed no signs of chloroform which the prosecution obviously made a big deal about. However chloroform in the body disappears after just a day or two and so finding chloroform
Starting point is 00:30:26 in soft tissue after a few days would have been hard enough, let alone finding it in dry bones after six months. But the problem is, this point was never made clear to the jury. Byers just says it and then it really frustrates me because in all the documentaries they're like we never got a chance to rebut that and I'm like how do you, what do you mean you never got a chance to rebut that? I don't understand. I don't think I know enough about how the American justice system works to like make that call, but can't they cross examine?
Starting point is 00:30:54 Like surely. I don't know, but this is the thing you need to know is that Baez makes these claims that yeah, all right, you found chloroform. Chloroforms in cleaning products. You already said that somebody had tried to clean out the boot and you didn't find any in her bones. Can't find it in the bones, but nobody hears that bit. The jury don't hear that bit. And I don't know, perhaps the state thought that their other finding would be proof enough of their chloroform theory because Google searches had been found on the Anthony's household computer on chloroform. And apparently
Starting point is 00:31:27 someone had searched for chloroform online a whopping 84 times on that computer. And not just chloroform, how to make it. This is the thing, some places it says how to make it, some places it says chloroform, it's something like that. But the word chloroform is searched for and they're also saying it was done 84 times. But once again, Cindy Anthony, Enabling Mom of the Year, swings in to save the day. Cindy took the stand and stated that she had been the one to search for chloroform. Apparently, the Anthony's dog had been eating some bamboo leaves in the back garden and getting a little bit sick. So Cindy had googled chlorophyll and Google had showed her suggestions that included chloroform.
Starting point is 00:32:11 And out of pure curiosity, the nurse clicked on it. Cindy was adamant though, she'd only searched for chloroform the once. In an aha moment, the prosecution questioned Cindy on how she could have been the one at home googling chloroform when her logins and time cards at work showed that she had been there at the time and not at home. Cindy said she didn't know but it was definitely her at home. You can't answer that one officer. Just so you know the important thing is it was definitely me. It was definitely me. Even though literally all of the hard evidence points to the contrary, I can promise you,
Starting point is 00:32:47 me, the trustworthy Cindy Anthony can say that I definitely was at home and not at work. Precisely. But then it was the defense's turn for an aha moment. Because apparently, the software that the prosecution had used to check the number of times that chloroform had been searched had had a glitch. And instead of 84 times, as the state had said, chloroform had actually only been searched for once from the Anthony computer. And some people say, oh, look, that's consistent with what Cindy said, because Cindy stuck
Starting point is 00:33:20 her guns on the stand. She said, I only did it once. I did not search 84 times. I was searching for chlorophyll, saw chloroform, clicked on it one time. And people make a big deal about that. But I'm not saying it wasn't Cindy. But obviously, Jose Baez had the information that there was a glitch with the software and it had only been searched for once. And obviously he would have told Cindy, you go up there, you tell them it was you and say it was only searched for once and then I'll come out and say, and we know it was only
Starting point is 00:33:48 search for once. She goes out there and says, yeah, I searched for chloroform 84 times by accident. Then he can't use this evidence about the glitch. He obviously would have told her. In any case, all of this really, really hurt the prosecution. Byers also just dismissed the hairs that have been found in the boot saying that the kind case. All of this really, really hurt the prosecution. Byers also just dismissed the hairs that had been found in the boot, saying that the kind of DNA the state had, so mitochondrial only, couldn't even definitively prove whose hair
Starting point is 00:34:14 it was. And then he just sort of shrugged off the bounding that we discussed in last week's episode. This again undermined the state's way of showing that Kayleigh's dead body had been in the back of Casey's car. At one point, Baez really, really goes after Dr G, even going so far as to claim that her methods were unscientific, said the lawyer to the scientific doctor. In court footage, the judge even looks a bit confused, but everyone just sort of lets it happen. This is the thing, when he's saying, making these accusations at Dr. G and at Dr. Arpad Vast, you can see the judge in the background being like, what?
Starting point is 00:34:51 Like he looks like a state, you're going to do something about it. It's just shocking. It's shocking. Hey everybody, we have some exciting news that we want to share. If you want to go on an adventure with Generation Y, we'd love for you to join us. January 26th through the 30th, 2026, we'll be sailing from Miami to the Bahamas on Wondry's first ever True Crime Cruise aboard the Norwegian Joy. Aaron and I will be there to chat, hang out, dive into all things true crime, and we're
Starting point is 00:35:25 thrilled to be joined by some familiar voices in the true crime podcasting world. Sirte and Hannah from Red Handed, Sashi and Sarah from Scam Fluencers, and Carl Miller from Kill List. Super excited to hang out with them too. We've got some cool activities, interactive mysteries we can solve, testing our forensic skills with a blood spatter expert, and so much more. So for some sun fun and just the right amount of mystery solving, come join us. If you'd like to know more and secure your spot, visit exhibitseacruise.com for presale information. Imagine this, you
Starting point is 00:36:00 help your little brother land a great job abroad, but when he arrives, the job doesn't exist. Instead, he's trapped in a heavily guarded compound, forced to sit at a computer and scam innocent victims, all while armed guards stand by with shoot to kill orders. Scam Factory, the explosive new true crime podcast from Wondery, exposes a multi-billion dollar criminal empire operating in plain sight. Told through one family's harrowing account of sleepless nights, desperate phone calls,
Starting point is 00:36:36 and dangerous rescue attempts, Scam Factory reveals a brutal truth. The only way out is to scam their way out. Follow Scam Factory on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of Scam Factory early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus. And then the defense, Jose Baez, brings out the big guns. He brings out Dr. Werner Spitz. And that name probably sounds familiar to many of you true crime fans out there because Dr. Spitz was and is a highly recognisable and respected medical examiner, having been involved in cases like the OJ Simpson trial and the JFK assassination.
Starting point is 00:37:21 It doesn't get much bigger than that. Not really and it doesn't get much bigger than Dr. Werner Spitz in this world. No, unless it's Nuremberg. There isn't any bigger criminal arena he could be in. No. And Spitz actually did a second autopsy on Kayleigh's remains, and he refuted Dr. G's duct tape theory, which was, after all, the main element that the prosecution could point to
Starting point is 00:37:42 to say that the death was a homicide. Without the duct tape, there's say that the death was a homicide. Without the duct tape, there's no way of proving it was murder. Obviously apart from the fact that the body was fucking hidden inside three bags in the fucking swamp woods. Spitz pointed out that his reasoning for saying that the duct tape wasn't valid evidence was that there was no DNA on the duct tape to prove that it had ever been over Kayleigh's mouth. Remember, Dr. G was saying that it had been over Kayleigh's mouth because of the mandible and the lower teeth still being there. He said, like many other people, that it could have just been in the swamp and
Starting point is 00:38:11 got stuck to the skull when it had been tossed about by animals. The prosecution hit back that the tape had been in 90 degree heat. That's Fahrenheit. In Celsius, that's 32 degrees. It's a hot, hot, hot, hot, hot. It's humid as shit. Oh yeah. It's in a fucking swamp.
Starting point is 00:38:25 And like the body had been submerged under water for various points because like the water level had dropped and risen in that area so many times during the six months it had laid there. So yeah, they say obviously there'll be no DNA left to find. It was out exposed for so long. But remember, and this is the key thing that Bayez just loves to fucking say, the defense don't have to prove anything.ez just loves to fucking say, the defence don't have to prove anything. They just have to poke enough holes in the prosecution story to introduce beyond reasonable doubt.
Starting point is 00:38:53 And that's what he does very well. He proves nothing. He's just there with his stick. Which is Bogan. Bogan. And speaking of sticks, Baez also brought up the main man, my favourite, who had found Kayleigh's remains, the glamorous Roy Cronk. Roy, when he had found the remains, had made a huge mistake.
Starting point is 00:39:14 Yeah. Learn from Roy, don't be Roy, what we're about to tell you next. If you are in this situation, don't do it. Don't do it, don't do this." Because Cronkers had picked up a stick and put it in the skull's eyehole and lifted it up. So that means he's contaminated the crime scene and Baez made the case that because of this all of the forensic evidence that the prosecution had presented was completely out of the window, which I think when you consider how long the body has been exposed, I really don't
Starting point is 00:39:45 think you can put that on Kronk's shoulders, his broad shoulders. No, but he does testify in court and he says, I knew it was a skull. He knew it was a skull. He wasn't like, it's a rock and let me poke it. He was like, I knew it was a skull and I shouldn't have picked it up. My bad. Kronk. Like don't do that. If you find a fucking skull in the woods, don't do it. Call the police. Go do that instead. Because this case could be made, you could be made to say you contaminated, you did whatever.
Starting point is 00:40:10 I'm not saying it's fair or right. And this didn't actually happen. The forensic evidence wasn't thrown out. But Baez, again, was able to just poke another little hole and say how secure is what we're even looking at. That duct tape, maybe it was stuck to fucking Roy Cronk's boot and he stomped in there and got it stuck to the face. You just don't know.
Starting point is 00:40:29 So let's leave the forensics in Cronk's completely incapable hands and move on to the easily provable lies that Casey had told police throughout the process. And these were, of course, the front and center of the prosecution's case against her. And so much of it was so incredibly damning. And even though Baez brought in dozens of Casey's friends, who all said that Casey was a great mom, they all had to admit that Casey had seemed fine during
Starting point is 00:40:55 the month that Kayleigh was missing. And she hadn't told a single one of them that she had been taken. So Jose Baez had to find a way to explain all of the lies and odd behaviour that had come from his client. Like, why did she not tell anyone as soon as Kayleigh disappeared? Why did she lie about everything from working at Universal Studios to all of the made-up people? Why did she not call the police for 31 days after Kayleigh supposedly vanished? And to counter the sheer weirdness of it all, Baez was going to have to go hard and create an equally shocking reason to counter
Starting point is 00:41:31 Casey's actions. And yeah, f***ing hell did he drop an atomic bomb on proceedings. Here's what he did. Baez told the court that Kayleigh had never even been missing, but that she had in fact died on the 16th of June 2008 in the family home. According to this new statement, the three-year-old Kayleigh had got into the garden and someone had left the stairs down to the above ground pool. Kayleigh who loved to swim got into the pool and tragically she drowned. Apparently when Casey had woken up she found Kaylee missing and she and George searched everywhere. Eventually it had been George who found Kaylee's lifeless body in the water. George screamed at Casey that she was going to go to jail for the rest of her
Starting point is 00:42:17 life and that Cindy would never forgive her. Byers continued that Casey begged her father for help and finally he agreed to help her and hide the body, for Cindy's sake. So George took Kayleigh's body, wrapped it up and told Casey he'd handle it. Then apparently, former police officer George Anthony took his beloved granddaughters body and dumped it in the woods a quarter of a mile from his own front door, wrapped up in very recognisable things from his own house. Yep. George, leave George out of it. Oh, he gets so much more.
Starting point is 00:42:49 I know, I know, I know, I've read it. So the poor theory was Baez's way to explain what had happened to Kayleigh. Since the Zanny the Nanny stuff was so obviously a non-starter and they had found Kayleigh's body a quarter of a mile from the house, he had to find some way to explain what happened to Cayley. And since no physical evidence was present to explain a real cause of death, because remember there's no soft tissue, no trauma to the bones, drowning could have been plausible. Baez, however, when he offers up this theory in court, offers not one shred of evidence for the drowning story. In fact, he finds a weird way, and
Starting point is 00:43:26 I haven't put this in the notes because it felt like my brain was melting, but I'll tell you about it. It's talked about quite at length in one of the documentaries. He finds a way to blame Dr. G for the fact that he has no evidence for the fact that Kayleigh Anthony drowned. Is this like a Piers Morgan, Meghan Markle situation where maybe Dr. G just once didn't text buyers back and now his entire career is based around bringing her down and just talking smack. Oh mate.
Starting point is 00:43:51 Baez is, like I said, he wasn't really well known when this case happened, but he got to be Casey Anthony's defense lawyer. If I can get her off, I'm it. I am it forever. I will hire him. This was his case to make his career. The way he blamed Dr. G for the fact that he didn't have any evidence of the drowning was he said that a way that you could tell about drowning is checking for diatoms in the body of a victim.
Starting point is 00:44:19 Diatoms are like single cell algae that live in water, but they also live like elsewhere, just like in fucking mud and shit. And he said that if you had tested her body for diatoms, we could have told whether she had dropped. This is absolutely fucking nonsensical. You test for diatoms in the liver or in the bone marrow. They just got bone. They just got dry bone.
Starting point is 00:44:40 And also diatoms can come from anywhere, like I said. And also for you to test for diatoms, like I said. And also, for you to test for diatoms, you would also need a sample of the water to test against that. By this point, it's been two and a half years, because the trial takes place two years later, but it has been six months since after Kayleigh had died when her bones were found. So where are you getting the sample of pool water that's not been refreshed for almost three years? And even if they had found the diatoms, even if you'd found liver and tested it and tested it against the sample and found a match, we already know she fucking swam in that pool
Starting point is 00:45:12 anyway. She could have swallowed it and that's how it could have got into her body. Again, I feel like the jury are not told this part. They're just told, well, we could have had it, but we don't because you didn't test for diatoms. She drowned. I rest my case. It's remarkable. Wow. So yeah, he offers no shred of evidence for this drowning story, but obviously this plot line hit everyone in court like a ton of bricks. It was completely unbelievable. And I honestly
Starting point is 00:45:37 think that it was all the more shocking because Baez was the one saying it all. And in the court footage, of which there are hours and hours and hours and hours on YouTube that you can watch, Casey just sits there staring silently. She does this thing where her eyes are constantly darting. It's like she's like hmm between this person, this person. She's like watching Baez and she's like how are they taking it? How is this coming across? She's a mega blank face as well. She has like the blankest expression in court the entire time. Ah, blank face, son of blank face. Absolutely, completely blank face. Rarely shows any emotion in court. Again, I know
Starting point is 00:46:10 that's not particularly indicative of something, but you have to look at this case like with everything together. The worst part, there's so many bad parts, one of the worst parts is when Jeff Hopkins, everybody remember him from last week's episode, he comes to court and he's like, I don't know her. We didn't even work together. Yeah, and I said, I don't know who Zenaida Gonzalez is. I don't have a nanny. I don't even have any children. And Casey Anthony's just sat there with a blank face. I would have died of embarrassment. Oh my god. She just sits there. She's like, she doesn't have the embarrassment gene. Zero. So the state took hold of this drowning story and pushed back on it. Dr G took the stand and said that in her 20 years of experience with dealing with accidental
Starting point is 00:46:53 deaths, parents and families just don't act like the Anthony's. She said quote, no matter how stiff the body, they always call 911 when it's an accident because there is still, in their minds, a chance. Of the 120 cases I've seen in the last few years, even when a mum's on crack cocaine, she calls 911. And that makes sense. If it's an accident, I feel like you would think I just, there is a way. There is a way. But if the jury was surprised by this new revelation from the defense it was about to get even more crazy because Byers now needed to explain away
Starting point is 00:47:33 all of Casey's lies and this was the reason he came up with. We are what we are because of who brought us into this world and how we were raised. Casey was raised to lie. This child, at eight years old, learned to lie immediately. She could be 13 years old, have her father's penis in her mouth, and then go to school and play with the other kids as if nothing ever happened. Nothing's wrong. That will help you understand why no one knew that her child was dead. That's the most important thing you
Starting point is 00:48:17 must keep in the back of your mind, is that sex abuse does things to us. It changes, Pew. Some people are fortunate to live with it. Others are not. And in this sad tragedy, it had to happen to Casey. So, um... Yep. Er, Jesus Christ doesn't quite cover it.
Starting point is 00:48:49 Yep. It's so graphic. Yeah, yeah. I mean, it's beyond graphic and it's even worse because it's George. And Baez is not a man of half measures, he goes the full hog. It's like he picks a story that is so out there. It's too crazy not to be true And by as the Swami get the years Unfortunately is just one step ahead. He is just better than the prosecution Yeah, I mean if you break down the way in which buyers tackles this case, it's really smart
Starting point is 00:49:17 He picks apart every single thing. How do I explain the fact that she didn't tell anybody? Okay, it's because she drowned in the pool and it was like a family secret, they covered it up. And how do I explain the lying? Because of the sexual abuse she's got of her dad, like it all ties together. He paints a much better picture and tells a much better narrative, even for something that makes absolutely no fucking sense, than the prosecution did. And that's the way in which, again, I don't want to be like, oh, yay, go Byers, but I'm
Starting point is 00:49:43 like, he did it very well. So the entire time Byers is talking about the abuse, incredibly graphically, like we said, KC has sat there crying and George, oh my god, please, I'll leave links again, go watch the court footage. George is sat in the courtroom with absolutely no expression on his face at all. Now he's blank face, blank face George. And apparently, Byers had told George and Cindy just that morning that he was going to throw George
Starting point is 00:50:10 under the bus in court. Apparently Byers told him, according to George, you're going to have to fall on your sword for this. But George didn't play along. Or if it was true, if the sexual abuse was true, I don't personally think it is because there is once again no evidence whatsoever or any history of this or any accusations and Cindy and George to this day are still together and in interviews they sit there holding hands and I'm not saying mums don't enable abusive fathers or anything like that but it's just none of it makes any sense. So yeah George doesn't play along with it or if it's true he doesn't admit it. When he took the stand for the prosecution he was asked
Starting point is 00:50:45 have you ever sexually molested your daughter Casey Anthony and again he's asked this by the prosecution. He replies no sir I'd never do anything like that. When he was asked were you present in the home when Kayleigh Anthony died he replied no and when I heard that today, it hurt really bad. The whole time, Casey just sits there as her dad is humiliated and mauled in court. It's unbelievable. And I know that's the prosecution, they're not trying to maul him, but it's emotionally mauling. And like I said, I don't believe the abuse story for a second. Byers and Casey would have and did say anything they had to.
Starting point is 00:51:24 When the defense questioned George, everyone was expecting them to hit him with the abuse claims and tear apart his denial. But Byers didn't even bring it up. Why? Because he had no evidence whatsoever. He just brought it up once to plant the idea in the jurors minds. And then he never mentions it again because he knows a seed is enough. He knows not to keep digging because then it's gonna get pulled apart and if
Starting point is 00:51:48 people keep seeing George deny it they might believe him. So don't bring it up again, just leave it. So when Byers had his turn with George at stand he took another arguably even more malicious route. He brought up George's suicide attempt from January 2009. After Kaylee's body had been discovered, George found himself unable to cope. And one day he drove to a hotel in Daytona Beach, took 70 pills and drank as much beer as he physically could. He even left a note to his family that read, I miss Kaylee. I want to be with her.
Starting point is 00:52:21 I love you, Cindy, but Kaylee, here I come. George was found and he was resuscitated and he says in interviews that he just couldn't go on because when they found Kayleigh, she'd been so close to home the entire time that he did blame himself. Every jail visit, Cindy tells Casey, your dad's been out all night looking for Kayleigh. He didn't know where she was. Yeah, because in all those jail visits we hear Cindy and George coming in looking exhausted. And Cindy always says to Casey, your dad's been out all night, all day looking for him. And that's why George can't live with himself because Kayleigh was found so close to home
Starting point is 00:52:57 and he was looking everywhere. Just don't believe for a second he knew she was there. No, oh my God, no. So when Byers brings up the incident of George's attempted suicide, he listens to George say that it was because he was sad. But Baez says to the jury, it wasn't because he was sad, it was because of the guilt. Again, that's all you need. That's all you need to just apparently, that's what you need. Well, I think when you're a piece of shit fucking murder defense lawyer like Baez is,
Starting point is 00:53:27 you'll just go, I mean, he's done a clearly very good job, but he's got no shame. No, that's why him and Casey are like the perfect match. So when Baez accuses George of having done it and having tried to kill himself because of the guilt, George breaks down on the stand. And it's honestly, I found it one of the most stomach churning parts of this case to watch. And speaking of stomach churning to watch, it's Cindy in the interviews after. Like I said, they're still together. When the interviewers in one of the documentaries I watched asked Cindy about this incident, about Baez bringing up George's suicide attempt, she just says,
Starting point is 00:54:02 it must have been one of the hardest things for him to go through. I feel like you've got to watch it in the context to understand how callous it sounds because she makes it sound like an inevitability. She makes it sound like, well, that's just what he had to do. You know, I had to say the shit about the fucking chloroform. Like it was just what he had to do. It's kind of the subtext I took away from it. Not instead being angry at the fact that Bias did it or the fact that Casey obviously went along with it because, yeah, she's not the one saying it, but she's there. Yeah. I just feel so, so sorry for George. And throughout the trial, Casey never takes the stand.
Starting point is 00:54:36 She never ever testifies, which I think again is another very smart move from Byers because I think Casey had taken the stand, opened her mouth, the jury would have fucking hated her. And finally, after a painful trial, it was time for the closing arguments. Judge Belvin Perry actually forbade the allegations of sexual abuse from being mentioned in the closing arguments as the defense had shown absolutely no evidence for it.
Starting point is 00:55:00 On that grounds, I have no idea why it wasn't struck from the record, but it wasn't. But even if it had been struck from the record, the jury still heard it. Byers didn't even bring up the pole drowning theory in his closing remarks either, because again, he didn't have any evidence. And he actually says, we might never know how Kayleigh died. After you literally proposed a theory of how she died saying this is what happened. Not even a theory. He says, Casey has admitted this is what happened. Not even a theory. He says, Casey has admitted this is what happened. Casey has admitted to me that Kayleigh drowned in the pool. It
Starting point is 00:55:30 wasn't a theory. He was saying that is what categorically happened. And then in his closing arguments, he says, we might never know what happened. Honestly, this is filling me with joy for my jury duty that starts on Monday. Oh yeah, shit. That's it. We're actually me with joy for my jury duty that starts on Monday. Oh yeah, shit. That's it. We're actually like trying to take two weeks off after this. Panda's got tree surface. Hopefully only two weeks. Do you know what? The real shitter, they've moved it from the Old Bailey. Oh no. I think it's still an Old Bailey. So apparently they're called Nightingale Courts. So it's
Starting point is 00:56:00 still in the city. It's still in the South East Home, East Cheap or something. So it's a lower court, but it's an Old Bailey case because it's a COVID thing. You can't have too many people in the building. So I think it's still an Old Bailey case, but it's fucking a bit of a shitter. I can't even go in the Old Bailey. Oh, that is a bit of a shitter. And also this just makes me sound like the work misogynist that I am that I'm like, oh, East Cheap is actually really close to here.
Starting point is 00:56:18 So if we need to come into work after it's really easy. Yeah, because we're not actually off. No, no, no, no. So many moving cogs, so many levers being pulled by crocs. So, Baez doesn't directly say the pool theory in his closing statements, but he does hint at it by showing a picture of Kayleigh opening the French doors at the back of the Anthony house, all on her own, and within this shot you can see the pool in the background just suggesting a way, just reminding. He's basically saying, look, proof she can open the door on her own and go out into the pool. Like subliminal advertising.
Starting point is 00:56:57 Byers then told the jury to base their verdict on evidence, not on emotion, even though he has literally provided none. And he said all the state was doing was trying to slut shame Casey, but they had no evidence for what happened, even though they presented loads of evidence. Yeah. And this is the thing in interviews with Baez, like he goes on the Dr. Phil show, obviously, sorry, the Phil McGraw show. And he like, after he stops representing Casey and talks about the case, the thing that really infuriates me, and maybe I'm wrong, maybe you can correct me, the thing that irritates me is he constantly keeps saying, when Phil is like, you talked about, because
Starting point is 00:57:36 Phil is very much like he thinks George didn't sexually abuse Casey Anthony, like most people in the world are. And when he said, you know, you were saying that George had sexually abused Casey as a child, where was your evidence? Where was your evidence? Where was your evidence for this? And you said that Lee had sexually abused her, where's the evidence? Byers keeps saying, as the defence, I don't have to prove anything. I just have to create beyond reasonable doubt. But my understanding is that's what you have to do with the overall charges of the case. Not that you can just say whatever fucking crazy shit you want with no evidence. Yeah, it seems pretty unreasonable that the defence can just stand up and chat shit for days on end and no one can pull them up on it.
Starting point is 00:58:16 Because you don't have to prove anything. I feel like that's not what that means. No, I also think that that's not what that means. I'm sure him and Phil McGraw get on really well. Yeah. Both fucking snake oil merchants. I really feel like all that means is when the defense don't have to prove anything is like, they don't have to prove that Casey Anthony didn't kill Casey. They just have to create beyond reasonable doubt as to the prosecution's case.
Starting point is 00:58:38 But you can't just say whatever shit you fucking want. Like her dad sexually abused her, offer no evidence, and then say, well I'm the defense, I don't have to prove anything. That what? Anyway, I thought that was like quite an interesting part of his defence about himself. So the state closed by saying that Casey had killed Kayleigh because she'd wanted a new life, one with her 22 year old club promoter boyfriend Tony Lozaro. They said that she wanted to have a life and be out there and be free, but she knew she'd either have to sacrifice herself or her child. And I think it's safe to say that after the trial, after the closing arguments, even
Starting point is 00:59:15 despite Baez's performance, I think most people were expecting a guilty verdict. But when the jury returned, they unanimously found 25-year-old Casey Anthony not guilty of first-degree murder, of aggravated child abuse or aggravated manslaughter. And honestly, from Casey herself to the judge, everyone in that courtroom looked shocked. The reporters look like they can't fucking believe it. It's unbelievable. After this, Casey was only convicted of providing law enforcement with false information, for which she was sentenced to a year in prison. But she was let off with time served and good
Starting point is 00:59:58 behaviour given she had spent about three years at this point in a county jail. And so she actually walked out of jail just 10 days after sentencing. Everyone in the whole world was making that noise. People were furious. And they were as angry at the jurors as they were at Casey herself. There were protesters outside the courthouse with signs that read, jurors 1 to 12 guilty of murder. that read jurors 1 to 12 guilty of murder. I don't want to go on Monday. I mean guys like fucking I understand your anger but I'm like again you can't just start saying whatever you fucking want. No no no no. You're not Jose Baez. Jurors even got death threats. One guy said he got 1,000 emails a day from people raging at him.
Starting point is 01:00:46 The members of the jury have said in interviews that most of them actually believe that she did do it, but they felt that the state just didn't have the evidence to back up how, when and where Kayleigh had died. But there are a few things that didn't come out at trial that we think are worth discussing. Again, prosecution, if they had done their job better, instead of, I don't think they did a bad job in court, I do think that they were complacent in their case building. So firstly, fact that didn't come out, or not fact, thing that didn't come out at court, at trial, the drowning story.
Starting point is 01:01:22 Well, when that came out out it sounded awfully familiar to another young woman out there named April Whelan. April had been Casey's jailhouse neighbour and in 2007 her 15 year old son Isaiah had tragically drowned in their family pool and April's father had been the one to find him. And April's like I'm pretty definitely sure I tell Casey Anthony about that when we basically lived together. Not enough? Okay I've got more. On the 16th of June 2008 the day that Kayleigh vanished Casey had been on the Anthony's computer scrolling through Facebook for hours. She had looked through hundreds of pictures of her friends partying and we know it was her
Starting point is 01:02:01 because she also MSN chatted with her friends. Those were the days. Uh huh. Then she had googled shot girl costumes. A few hours later there was a more ominous search for suffocation. Shortly followed by foolproof suffocation. And then Casey Anthony clicked on an article about suicide that had discussed taking poison and putting a bag over one's head. All these searches and internet activity were on a Firefox browser. Cindy and George are old so they obviously always used Internet Explorer. So guess who used the younger hipper better version? I'm guessing it wasn't Kaylee. No, no it was not. It was
Starting point is 01:02:39 Casey. So when police analysts collected information from the family computer, they only vaguely looked for anything connected to chloroform on Internet Explorer. And they did that because they were so sure about what they'd found in the car. They didn't think they would need anything else. And once more, the state didn't ask for it either. But Baez, Baez knew about these searches. In fact, in an interview after he stopped representing Casey, he said that he thought the state were going to hit him hard with these in court, but they didn't because they totally overlooked Firefox. This is the thing. Baez fucking knew that she had done these searches and the prosecution
Starting point is 01:03:17 didn't. Mmm. Yep. All right, time to get the pins out of the pin cushion because it's time to talk about Zenaida Gonzalez. Okay. So remember we told you last week to put a pin in that name and we also told you to put a pin in the location of where Kayleigh's body had been found in the swamp woods. Well now it's time to remove those pins.
Starting point is 01:03:38 Remember that we said Kayleigh's body had been found about a quarter of a mile from the Anthony's home. It was found in a wooded clearing between two houses. One house was number 4701 and 4709. Guess who lived in these two houses? The person who lived at 4701 was Zenaida Eliya and the person who lived at 4709 on the other side of this gap was Peter Gonzales. It's like, I can't remember, there's a magician who has a trick for remembering a pack of cards and he's like you visualize a walk that you do often and you put the card in your mind on the gate of the house that you passed first. And that's a memory technique. So it's the same walk and then you just change the things that you like put on the hook.
Starting point is 01:04:29 It's like she's done that. Yeah. Just by pure instinct. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, I don't think she's been doing brain training. I think she's just pulled this one out of her ass. I don't know if it's got anything to do with it, but come on. Come on. I know it's Florida. Yes, it is Florida, but it is one fuck of a coincidence even for the Sunshine State, my friend. Jesus. Okay, so none of this matters. Despite how hot and heavy we're getting about it, it doesn't matter. Also, this is all very well known.
Starting point is 01:04:57 I didn't dig this out as some super sleuthing. This is all very well known. There's like a million fucking AP articles about it. I'll leave links below. But none of this matters, in a legal sense at least, because thanks to double jeopardy, Casey Anthony cannot be retried for the murder of Kayleigh Anthony. She's free. And I do have to wonder like, if they hadn't gone for first degree, but then she doesn't even get convicted of aggravated child murder. I think aggravated child, whatever it was, manslaughter.
Starting point is 01:05:26 Like, I don't know. Even the judge afterwards is like shocked. I'm amazed that they didn't overturn the jury's verdict because they can do that. I don't know why the judge didn't because he has gone on record and said that he thought that the state showed enough evidence for a conviction of one of the homicides,
Starting point is 01:05:43 if not first degree for one of the homicides. I don't know why he didn't overturn it. I guess that goes some way to like, maybe you don't want to do that all the time because like it undermines and maybe with a high profile case like this, maybe undermines confidence in the jury system. But it's not just us saying it and it's not just you. It's a fucking high profile. Like everybody knows this case, but you, yeah. The whole thing seems completely unbelievable and the defense were probably not as thorough as they should have been but even still there's no way you can watch the footage of Casey Anthony being interviewed and not think
Starting point is 01:06:13 she's completely guilty. We will talk theories at the end but we have a little bit to get through before we get to that stage. So let's talk about Casey's personality and what might have been going on with her mental health. Like we said, if you watch her being interviewed she spends most of her time laughing and joking with the police officers. She's never furious like you might expect a parent who is innocent to be. I'd imagine I'd be pretty seething at the police for wasting my time talking to me rather than looking for my missing child and her abductor after 30 days. But Casey is very chill, she shows no emotion, she even presents very open body language. It's very believable. If you don't know the context, you'd be forgiven for thinking that she was being honest.
Starting point is 01:06:59 But once you actually listen to what she's saying, you realize it makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. So for a better understanding of you know what maybe personality disorder is going on with Casey or whatever it might be, we went to Dr Grande on YouTube. I will leave a link to his video analysis below and he makes the point that it's almost counterproductive for Casey to be so together and Jim Can't Swim also says something very similar, again we'll leave a link below. If you were in this situation, you would expect somebody to actually be pretending to be upset, pretending to be frantic. Why does she pretend or why is she appearing like everything is fine? It's like it's a facade that she can't take off. It's like she can't stop pretending that everything is okay all of the time. It's like she can't change her behavior. And of course, a question becomes what's going on with
Starting point is 01:07:49 her then? Because whether you believe she did it or not, she never seems bothered by the disappearance of her child. Even if you think she didn't kill Kayleigh, why isn't she fucking terrified then? Why isn't she terrified of being labeled a literal child murderer and then going to prison? Being a cop isn't fun in prison, but being a child murderer in a women's prison is horrendous. It's the worst of the worst. I bet. So whether you think she did it or not, her behavior doesn't match up to the circumstances that she's in because she's got a missing and then a dead child. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:21 So is she a psychopath? Is she a sociopath? What's going on? Interestingly. And again, we don't often kind of get this level of information. It's once again, thanks to Florida Sunshine Laws, that we have all of this information. Two mental health professionals assessed Casey using what's known as the MMPI, which is the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. If you've read the book, you will read about us talking about Carla Hamalka's MMPI in there. Basically, it is the gold standard for personality assessment. Both of these mental health practitioners who assessed Casey using this assessment tool found that she had normal results, which means that there was no evidence of any sort of
Starting point is 01:09:02 mental or personality disorders, which makes me want to scream, how? In a way, that's more terrifying. Yeah, I'm baffled. I'm absolutely baffled by this case. I will say MMPI is the gold standard, but as we saw with Carla Hamalka in the book, it can churn out incorrect results if it's not done properly. These assessments were looked into by other experts and it was said that it was done properly. So like I can't, I can't repeat it. I don't fucking, I'm lost.
Starting point is 01:09:29 Yeah. So basically these two mental health professionals found that Casey Anthony had no psychopathy, she had no sociopathy and that she only had a normal level of narcissism for her age, which at 25 would have been 22 at the time, but you know, they're assessing a person in their mid twenties. They're like like it's pretty normal the level of narcissism she has. They also pointed out that Casey Anthony had nothing in her history which indicated that she would be likely to commit a violent crime like this which again as we know is a pretty strong indicator. So where is Casey Anthony now? Well after the trial she moved in with one of her attorneys and
Starting point is 01:10:05 now it seems that she lives in Palm Beach with a guy called Patrick McKenna. He was the 73 year old lead investigator for her defense. We actually talked about this on in the news a few months ago. Apparently Patrick McKenna is helping Casey with her photography business and becoming a PI. I'm sure that's all he's helping her with. Yep I'm sure she's not helping him out at all PI. I'm sure that's all he's helping her with. Yep, I'm sure she's not helping him out at all. No, I'm sure she's not trading any favors for anything. With his dick. I mean, it's despicable when she gets interviewed about becoming a PI stuff. She's like, I'm just gonna do what they did to me, but in a good way.
Starting point is 01:10:41 Show me the person who would hire Casey Anthony. Because what do PIs do? They find people and they watch people. Yeah, no, you're right. And that's the two things Casey Anthony can't do. She can't do it. In her first ever interview as a free woman, which she gave in 2017,
Starting point is 01:10:59 this is what Casey had to say for herself. I don't give a shit about what anybody thinks about me. I don't care about that. I never will. I'm okay with myself. I sleep pretty good at night. Yeah, it's pretty disgusting. And there's a documentary where after she gives this interview, they play it to George and Cindy where she's saying, I sleep okay at night. George just looks heartbroken. He's like, we haven't slept in years. And also she compares her case
Starting point is 01:11:30 or murdering her child. She compares it to the case of OJ Simpson, even going so far as to say that she sees many parallels between the two cases, which Casey maybe pick a case where the popular opinion of the globe isn't that they did it, and their autobiography is called If I Did It. Try harder. Even Amanda Knox would be better than that. I don't know what she's thinking. I don't know what she's saying. There's no way there's
Starting point is 01:11:58 not something incredibly wrong with her. I'm sorry. I know. I don't know what it is though, because the MMPI were like, no, she's fine. Maybe she's got some new fucking hybrid personality disorder that no one else has. She's got the Dennis Nilsons is what she's got. She's got a touch of the Dennis Nilsons. So as for the Anthony's, what's going on with them? Well, George says now, thankfully, that he wants nothing to do with Casey anymore. He says he's done. Lee also has nothing to do with Casey.
Starting point is 01:12:24 He has his own child and he's like, Lee also has nothing to do with Casey. He has his own child and he's like, I don't want her anywhere near us. But Cindy seems a little bit weaker on it. In these interviews, I've watched so many, it's all just like blurred into one. And they're all from like quite a similar time period, like recent, like as in 2015 to 2017, 2018. Sometimes in the same breath, she'll say that she thinks Casey did it. And then she'll pause and be like, I don't know. And I'm just like, ugh. So as we reach the end of 2021, dragging ourselves into the new year,
Starting point is 01:12:54 kicking and screaming, kicking and screaming, at least we can look forward to it not being fucking nighttime at four o'clock in the afternoon. Anyway, what do we think? Your loyal hosts, what have we decided? Well, probably we think that Casey gave Kayleigh something like Xanax, which we know Casey had access to and she probably used it to knock the little girl out for long stretches of time so she could do what she wanted. And there is some corroboration for this. Again, it's not solid. We can't test Kayleigh's toxicology. We can't test anything to see. But people like Tony and his housemate and
Starting point is 01:13:33 other people that were friends with her did say that Kayleigh would just sleep for a really long time sometimes and wake up and still look really tired. She was fucking... I know sometimes we call her two and sometimes we call her three. It's like she's like two and three quarters. You're just giving a child that young fucking Xanax. Again, it just speaks to the immaturity and irresponsibility of Casey Anthony. So was this an accidental killing or was it a calculated murder? The duct tape seems to suggest that it was premeditated. Once Kayleigh was dead, Kayleigh moved her body into the boot of her car and then we think, and
Starting point is 01:14:12 this is just our opinion, so don't be afraid of a differing opinion, it won't bite you. We think that Kayleigh then put Kayleigh in the car and just tried to forget about it for a bit because she's incredibly immature. That was how she would have dealt with it. Then when Casey couldn't ignore the smell anymore, that's when she dumped Kayleigh's body in the woods. And then she ditched the car after trying to clean the boot out and filling it with rubbish to try to mask the smell of her decomposing daughter. And I think that, you know, how could she do all of this?
Starting point is 01:14:45 How could she do all of this? Well, I think there's one thing that we have learned about Casey Anthony. She's very, very good at compartmentalizing and rationalizing her way out of situations. From her past, things like with the graduation, her pregnancy, the lies that she told police, like walking them around Universal Studios, we know that she's the kind of person to just ignore things as long as she humanly, possibly, physically can. and then she is like, oh, okay, fine. The whole crime is so immature as well. It really reflects Casey's personality and behavior, I think.
Starting point is 01:15:15 And that is also the fact that Kayleigh's body is dumped a quarter of a mile from her own fucking front door is what makes me think no one else was involved in this. And also just going back to the calls that we listened to at the start, the jail visits where the parents are like you don't need to protect anybody, you don't need to protect me, you don't need to protect your dad, you don't need to protect, just tell the truth. Why would the parents say that if Kayleigh had drowned in the fucking pool and they'd all covered it up? And you think Kayleigh is the kind of person that would be protecting her dad in prison after what she watched happen to him in court? I don't know. Did she do it on purpose? Did she not?
Starting point is 01:15:46 I don't know. I think the duct tape, if we believe that the duct tape was on the face, then I think it was on purpose because why is there duct tape on a child's face? If we believe on a spits and the idea that there's no proof or that the duct tape wasn't attached to the face and the mandible and the teeth isn't good enough evidence and it just maybe was part of the rubbish of the scene, then I could believe that it was an accident. Yeah. And that Casey basically kills Kayleigh and then just tries to get on with it.
Starting point is 01:16:14 I think a problem for the prosecution in court, a reason that they didn't win, they blame the jury, not in the sense of like, oh, this jury was stupid, they blame the jury for being like, well, we could only pick the people who didn't confess to the fact when they were being vetted for the jury that they had already made up their minds. So because of Florida sunshine laws, they had already seen all the evidence that was there. So if they still weren't convinced of her guilt, there was nothing we could say to convince them. But as a cop out man. Yeah, it is your job. And also most people either thought she was fucking guilty as fuck.
Starting point is 01:16:44 Yeah, you had a pretty easy run of it actually. So I don't know, I don't think that's good enough really. I don't know, I think the problem for the prosecution was that they repeatedly tried to say, and this is interesting because the prosecution don't have to prove a motive, they don't have to prove a motive, but I feel like they repeatedly tried to say that Casey had wanted to be free and that the reason she killed Kayleigh was that reason. I think they didn't paint a good enough picture of the situation like, you know, like Baez did. And I think the problem with them trying to point to this as the motive was that Baez and the defense
Starting point is 01:17:16 were quite easily able, pointing at Cindy and George, her loyal parents who were in court every day, to say that motherhood wasn't really that hard for Casey. She had a place to live. She had parents look after her. Their parents would even have taken Kayleigh away from her and happily raised her as their own, which I think is true. Yes, I agree. So then it became hard, I think, for people to believe that Casey's only way out of this situation where she was trapped with a child was to kill this child.
Starting point is 01:17:41 And I think that was maybe the downfall. I don't know I think there's also something interesting to be said in why then did if we say that she did it on purpose if we say it wasn't an accident she did it on purpose why then did Casey Anthony kill Kayleigh because like I said Cindy would have taken that child. Part of me does wonder given the relationship between that mother and daughter whether Casey Anthony didn't do it in some way to punish Cindy and to decouple
Starting point is 01:18:06 herself from her mum. You have a baby with somebody and no it's not Cindy's baby. You're tied to that person forever. And the way in which Cindy overreaches her responsibility as a grandmother, I'm not blaming her, I just think Casey clearly was very irresponsible. I think it was a way for Casey to punish her and also to find a way to try and cut that tie a bit, maybe. Yeah, I mean I also think she's, you know, immature enough to have seen it in that light. I mean like, I've got a problem, how do I get rid of it? I'll never be free
Starting point is 01:18:36 as long as Kayleigh is here because you'll always be on my back. Yeah. But that is assuming she's is on purpose, I don't know. But whatever happened, the way in which she deals with it after is absolutely fucking bonkers. Do you think... Hmm. Here's my theory about Zanny the nanny. So Zannex is referred to by the kids on the street as Zanny. So could it be that Casey would make a little joke about it? Because she didn't have a real in life person nanny, but she did have a pharmaceutical nanny.
Starting point is 01:19:06 Oh, absolutely. So she probably called it Zanny the nanny. She's gone off to Zanny. Yeah. I do think that that is a very, very likely possibility. Yes, I agree. That is also, again, this is one of those cases where I feel like how much do we have to add to it?
Starting point is 01:19:20 A lot of this is out there already. It's a case that is very old. It's very well covered, but it's one that you guys have requested. And I'll be honest, I have enjoyed the right word. I found it very interesting to dig into. Yeah. And you probably feel like you've liberated yourself from the chains that have been holding you down for years, all of the years that people have been asking for this. Absolutely. It was a beast. It was a beast of a case, but there you go, guys. That is the mammoth story of Casey Anthony.
Starting point is 01:19:46 And Kayleigh Anthony. I think again, Kayleigh gets quite lost in this case. There's loads of pictures and videos and she is a fucking adorable little kid actually. I'll give her that. I'll give you that Kayleigh. And it's just heartbreaking. She'd be 16 years old now if she was alive. So on that big fat bummer, Merry Christmas. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Good will to all men. Joy to the world The Lord is come. Oh Just really know off silent night. Holy night round yon virgin mother and child Have an amazing Christmas guys
Starting point is 01:20:15 It's been a tough year and an amazing year at the same time and you've been there for us every step of the way and we Couldn't be more grateful. So make sure you look after yourselves this Christmas Have a wicked new year and we'll see you in 2022. Yeah bloody hell stay safe and hopefully next year we'll bring more positive things. We'll see you then. Goodbye. Bye.

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