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| Yes | 29% | 197 votes | Total: 690 votes | |
| No | 71% | 493 votes |
Yes
Created on: July 09, 2011
Although it’s unpopular, the verdict handed down by the Casey Anthony jury was correct. Simply stated, the prosecution failed to prove their case against her. First, the cause of the 2-year-olds death was undetermined. Second, the prosecution offered no DNA, fingerprint or other direct evidence linking Ms. Anthony to the crime. Without such evidence a prosecutors’ contention of guilt was mere conjecture.
Evidence plays a crucial role in the determination of guilt or innocence. There are two types, circumstantial and direct. Circumstantial evidence does not expressly prove that a person on trial is guilty. It requires the person(s) making the decision to accept one fact as proof of another, i.e. infer one thing is true since another is. For example, suppose the exact make, model and color of a popular car is seen fleeing a crime scene seconds after the crime occurred. The defendant has such a car and he knew and was seen arguing with the victim just a few days before. No one saw the license plate or the driver. One could infer that it was the defendant and his car leaving the scene. This would be the prosecutions’ offer of circumstantial evidence proving guilt. But, what if the car seen actually belonged to someone else. After all, the car is popular and no one definitively said that it was the defendant and his car that were involved. This, in turn, would be the defendants’ counter argument as to innocence. With a he said/she said argument like this, who’s to know for sure? Do you believe the prosecution because they put criminals away everyday and, of course, would know. Or do you believe the defendant who may or may not have been there and has an overwhelming interest to lie if he was?
In contrast, direct evidence is independent of the prosecution and defense and ties the accused directly to the crime. In this example, direct evidence would include an eye witness who got the fleeing cars’ license plate and saw and could identify the defendant as the person driving. Here, there would be no reason to believe anything other than the defendant was involved. Thus, without direct evidence a criminal case basically comes down to the prosecutors’ speculated theory against the defendants’ motivation to either (a) prove his or her innocence or (b) to escape detection.
In the Casey Anthony case the prosecution had no direct evidence so the jury was left to decide who was telling the truth. Was it the heartless prosecution whose only interest was to close the case and get a conviction? Or was it the grieving single mother of a two-year-old child found dead in the woods of unknown causes? Add to that the reluctance to find a mother guilty of killing her own child and disposing of the body in such a cruel and inhumane way. Irrespective of the prosecutions’ half-baked theories, the decision of the jury in this case was clear. Only the person who had a personal and biological bond to the child could be telling the truth. As a result, reasonable doubt set in and Casey was acquitted.
So where does the jury verdict leave us. Well, the prosecutions’ credibility has been shot. They were so intent on convicting Casey. Now that she has been acquitted the prosecution will be hard-pressed to show that someone else did it unless, of course, they have some solid direct evidence to the contrary. And we will never know whether or not Casey did it. Hey, she did tell a few fibs to the police. Therefore, little Caylees’ death may forever go unpunished. But let’s face it, in this society truth and justice aren’t the same thing.
Learn more about this author, April Johnson.
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No
Created on: July 18, 2011
Despite all the sensationalism by individuals like Nancy Grace and being convicted in the court of popular opinion, Casey Anthony is a free woman. Our Constitution grants every citizen the right of due process, to a fair trial by a jury of our peers, that one can't ever be tried for the same crime twice if one is found not guilty. The jury of twelve in Florida acquitted her because, in their minds, there was reasonable doubt.
While it is commendable that the jury showed that, for all its faults, the American legal system works it is deplorable that a possible murderer walked free. This is just one person's opinion, of course. People's faces would have been red with guilt had Casey Anthony been found guilty, executed and then twenty years later the real killer was found. But just as in the OJ trial, it is mind chilling and mind numbing to think that the real killer walked. Let's consider the “facts.”
First, she waited weeks to report that her child was missing. Second, she lied about having a nanny named Zanny who supposedly kidnapped her daughter. Third, she lied about having a job at Universal Studios. Then she said Caylee drowned. And let's not forget the foul stench coming from her trunk. Nor, let's not forget the duct tape, the traces of chloroform, or the hair left behind in the trunk. Oh, and the evidence showing that a body had started to decompose in the trunk.
Yes, the jury should never have taken circumstantial evidence into account when reaching their verdict. But it is a severe miscarriage of justice to ignore evidence showing that she either had something to do with the murder or at least was complacent. It wasn't just the fingers of Nancy Grace and those who wanted to see old time justice served, but the evidence pointing at Casey Anthony. Why did she lie so much if she didn't do it? What was she hiding or who was she trying to protect? It's all too clear that she was trying to hide her guilt and was looking out for number one. She can now dance and party it up thanks to a jury that was blind to the real evidence.
But where do we go from here to ensure that murderers don't walk? While suggested legislation like “Caylee Laws” may have good intentions (or at least in some way alleviate the anger some people feel), are they really going to work? Or do people start taking the law into their own hands in a misguided sense of vigilante justice (like the woman who was attacked for looking like the acquitted). The answer is simple. We need to put an an end to media sensationalism by getting the Nancy Graces of the world off the air because they have shown to have no integrity as prosecutors nor as journalists. They sensationalize, get people riled up and watch the ratings go up and collect their big paydays regardless of a case's outcome. Prosecutors also need to act within the law and make sure they build solid cases based on hard evidence.
Learn more about this author, Alexander Bleddyn.
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