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Recommended: Casey anthony case
Everyone is ashamed of something that have done in their life. Some people are ashamed of maybe cheating on a test or yelling at a friend, but Casey Anthony really is a monster who deserves to live a life of shame and punishment.
On July 15,2008 Casey Anthony’s two year old daughter Caylee Anthony was reported missing by Casey Anthony’s mother who had not seen her granddaughter for thirty-one days. Meanwhile Casey Anthony was partying at clubs and hanging out with her boyfriend. When the authorities asked Casey Anthony why she failed to report her daughter missing she stated that she was taken by a nanny and she was too afraid to alert the authorities. On July 16, 2008 Casey Anthony was arrested with four charges first degree murder, aggravated
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child abuse, aggravated manslaughter of a child, and four counts of providing false information to the police. On July 5,2011 Casey Anthony was found not guilty of murder, but she was found guilty of providing four counts of false information to the authorities. She was sentenced to a year in prison and she has to pay $1,000 for each false information count. On July 17 when Casey was released from jail she was described by a Department of Corrections spokeswoman as “one of the most hated women in America” (Living in Fear 1).
Casey Anthony has to pay $217,499.23. Split up between the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the Metropolitan Bureau of Investigation, the Orange County Sheriffs Office, the office of the State Attorney, and the sheriffs office costs. Casey Anthony is also on probation. The terms of her probation are finding a job, not doing illegal drugs, and reporting to a probation officer monthly. Casey Anthony remains in hiding, she knows she may have to leave the country so she is attempting to learn a new language. An Orange County police source states that “anything bad that happens to her she brought it upon herself, I’m not going to shed any tears for Casey Anthony” (Living in Fear 1). Casey Anthony is estranged from family and friends and shunned by strangers some of whom have issued threats. For example last August 9, when Caylee would have turned six Anthony received a batch of birthday cards, featuring colorful balloons and cute kittens on the front. Inside were hand-scratched messages including one that read “Caylee will never be six because of you, you horrible b!*@h” (Living in Fear
1). Casey Anthony is a lot like Chillingworth from The Scarlet Letter. Chillingworth and Casey Anthony have the same gross, ugly , terrible personality. Casey Anthony is a terrible monster who was accused of murdering her two year old daughter Caylee Anthony, but Casey Anthony plead not guilty of murder and only a year in prison. Shunning her has made her remain in hiding so nobody has to see or hear about her again. Shunning Casey Anthony has definitely served its purpose. Casey Anthony truly is a monster who deserves to stay in hiding for the rest of her life. Casey Anthony may have been trialed not guilty, but most people believe that she did in fact murder her two year old daughter Caylee and will probably continue to shun her for the rest of her life.
On July 15th 2008, Caylee Anthony was reported missing by her grandmother, Cindy, who claimed that she had not seen her granddaughter in 31 days. Cindy called the police after picking up her daughter Casey’s impounded vehicle, which smelled strongly of a decomposing body. Cindy found a bag of garbage in the trunk of Casey’s car but no trace of a body. Cindy had attempted to contact and visit Caylee over the past month, but Casey Anthony refused visitation, claiming that Caylee was with a nanny named Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, or at the beach or parks. Casey had given Cindy various explanations as to Caylee’s whereabouts before finally telling her mother that she had not seen Caylee for multiple weeks.
The smell of death and decay, emanated inside the trunk of a Pontiac Sunfire. A missing child; only to be reported 31 days after she went missing, found dead in a forest close to her home. And a mother who was accused of murder, who got off with no charges, even with evidence stacking against her. This all started with one 9-1-1 phone call from a concerned grandmother who has not seen her grandchild in a month. Casey Anthony was the main headline in all the newspapers, cable television, and social media. Over more than 140 million people sat and watched as the trial played on, and a verdict was reached. This case was the largest and most polarizing case that America has ever seen.
I chose to explain Casey Anthony’s behavior using the eight stage theory of identity and psychosocial development by Erik Erikson. If Casey claim against her father and brother is true about them sexually molesting her throughout her childhood, then that would have played a big role in her life and also the fact that she and her mother had a terrible relationship with a lot fighting and abuse toward one another didn’t help her case. If we take a look at Erik’s fourth stage industry vs. inferiority, it states that during this stage school aged children are very social stage of development and if they experience unresolved feelings of inadequacy and inferiority among our peers, we can have serious problems in terms of competence and self-esteem.
A horrific murder happened in tiny Skidmore on December of 2004. Lisa Montgomery and Bobbi Jo Stinnett met and found out that they had much in common and became good friends (Nunes 85-86). Surprisingly, Bobbi and Lisa met in an internet chat room. Bobbi was into puppy breeding and she occasionally served as a judge. Lisa lived in Kansas where her close friends were shocked about what she was talking about. Of course, Lisa shrugged it off and she sent an email to Bobbi saying that she wanted to see the puppies (Nunes 85-86). When Lisa met Bobbi Jo she had a fake name which was Darlene Fisher because she didn’t want Bobbi to know her real identity. When Lisa sent Bobbi the email she had a criminal intent on her mind. She was planning to choke Bobbi into unconsciousness and then cut open her womb and steal Bobbi’s unborn baby. When Lisa arrived at the house she threw a rope around Bobbi’s neck and choked her until she was unconscious. That is when Lisa took a knife and started to cut open Bobbi’s stomach. Lisa had to cut through skin, fat, and muscle to get to Bobbi’s uterus. Bobbi’s baby was in eight-month gestation; Lisa cut and tied the baby’s cord. Lisa stole the baby and fled to her house in Kansas. Unfort...
There is no doubt in my mind that Casey Anthony fascinated people much more than she would have if she had not been an attractive, young woman. While everyone had an opinion on the case, that they felt obliged to talk about, and give the same recycled, regurgitated opinions on, at the end of the day you can't really blame them. The media is really just an extension of the masses. What gets reported is based upon what interests people, and this case sure did interest people. I think this level of exposure oftentimes benefits the defendants because evidence becomes over saturated to a point where it blinds the jury from seeing the basic points of the case, and the foundation for a guilty verdict. Casey Anthony's trial is often compare to the O.J. Simpson trial for reasons similar to this. The trials are among the most high profile cases to take place during the new media era, and the not guilty verdict created public outrage and calls for Anthony to be punished. Media figures discussed why prosecutors failed to convict in what seemed to be a can't-miss trial. One reason the guilty verdict fell through could be the lack of Casey Anthony's DNA or fingerprint evidence at the scene of where the body was recovered. This is known as the CSI effect, and involves a jury's desire for forensic evidence, even when a clear picture of the crime is created, and a logical motive is present (English). Many criticized
The Casey Anthony trial has been arguably the most controversial case since the trial of O.J. Simpson and has been speculated over ever since the verdict had been given in July of 2011. It was decided by a jury of her peers that Anthony was not guilty of murder, for the death of her daughter Caylee. Many believe that Anthony should have been found guilty however, very little Americans actually comprehend the justice system.
On July 15th, 2008, Caylee Anthony was reported missing by her grandmother Cindy Anthony. Cindy Anthony in the report stated that she hadn’t seen her grand-daughter Caylee for a month and that she and her husband were suspicious because their daughter Casey’s car reeked of decay, as if a dead body had been stored inside the vehicle for days. Caylee and her mother resided with Casey Anthony’s parents. However, Cindy Anthony claimed that Casey had given different explanations about Caylee's whereabouts before telling Cindy that she hadn’t seen her own daughter for several weeks. When questioned by authorities, Casey told the detectives several lies: stating the child had been kidnapped by her nanny on June 9, and that Casey had been trying to contact the nanny to find her daughter. Preceding this information, Casey Anthony was convicted and charged with first degree murder in 2008, but pleaded not guilty ...
Richey, Warren. "Casey Anthony trial: Records undercut mother's testimony on Internet search." Christian Science Monitor
In chapter 3 of the Crime and Justice in America textbook, Joycelyn Pollock provides information about the three theories of crime. These theories help us to explain the motivation behind different criminal acts. The reasons why one would commit a crime may be due to biological, psychological, or sociological influences. This paper will explore the high profile cases of The State vs. Casey Anthony and The United States vs. Enron, and link them to one the theories of crime causation detailed by Pollock in chapter 3. We will explore the evidence of what motivated these people to commit the crimes they were charged with.
To begin, I will provide a summary of what happened prior-to and throughout the duration of the trial. Caylee Marie Anthony was a two-year-old American girl who lived in Orlando, Florida with her mother, Casey Marie Anthony, and her maternal grandparents, George and Cindy Anthony. On July 15, 2008, she was reported missing to 9-1-1 by Cindy, who said she h...
When viewed from a strictly medical, psychological aspect, Andrea Yates medical history indicates that after the birth of her first child, she began to suffer from various forms of depression and suicide attempts. If one only examines the paper trail and doesn’t think beyond what the medical history does or does not indicate, then perhaps, Andrea would be innocent by reason of mental insanity as the 2006 acquittal suggest. However, when viewed form a legal aspect there are several inconstancies that challenge if this former nurse was insane or if she in fact premeditated the murder of her children as well as her acquittal.
A girl was abducted from her home when she was doing homework outside who later was found deceased near a creek. Eight months later, two girls, one that was twelve, and the other fifteen, were also abducted and found deceased near a creek. All three girls had a blue colored fiber on them, which determined that there was a serial killer on the loose.
An abused child who later earned her living as a sex worker, Aileen Wuornos was found guilty of killing six men and was later executed in a Florida prison by lethal injection in 2002. Having been involved in previous incidents with the law, she made a living as a sex worker on Florida's highways, and in 1989 she killed a man who had picked her up. She went on to kill at least five other men and was eventually caught, convicted and placed on death row.
with news and debates about Steven Avery's innocents or guilt. Avery had more than just twenty minutes of fame, but a whole documentary series on Netflix called “How to Make a Murderer”. Avery was convicted for a sexual assault in 1985, but found wrongfully committed after serving 18 years in 2003. He was found innocent by DNA evidence discovered from another sexually assault case matching a man that looked similar to Avery.
They say justice is blind. Or at least they used to. The true role of the judicial system is true justice, and in some cases the system has failed in the past. We do learn, though, and thanks to the latest scientific breakthroughs we now have genomic testing and DNA fingerprinting as widely accepted methods of looking at a crime scene. What was left up to conjecture before can now be verified with great confidence.