tv Greta Van Susteren FOX News July 8, 2011 1:00am-2:00am EDT
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>> sean: that's all the time we have left. to greta. >> greta: juror number 3 is here she one of the 12 who signed on to the casey anthony not guilty verdict. hear from jennifer ford in minutes. >> casey anthony is given the toughest sentence judge perry can give on four counts of lying. how much more jail time will casey serve? here's judge perry: >> there being no legal cause shown why this court should not impose sentence. and the court having previously adjudged you to be guilty of the crimes contained in counts four, five, six and seven. i will sentence you to one year in the orange county jail. imposing a $1,000 fine on each
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count. all four counts to run consecutive to each other. giving you credit for the time that you have previously served. >> greta: casey is fined $4,000 and sentenced to four years in jail. with credit for time served, how does that add up? >> the defendant was given credit for 1,043 days. and at this time, her release date has been calculated as july 13th, 2011. >> greta: that's six days away that's how much longer casey anthony will spend in her jail cell. next wednesday the 25-year-old will walk out the front door a free woman. >> no doubt about it, casey's possible future has changed in the last two days. it from the possibility of
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excuse by lethal injection to a release date of next wednesday. as you know casey was found not guilty of first degree murder, aggravated manslaughter and aggravated child abuse. the jury was unanimous. saying the state did not prove, beyond a reasonable doubt that casey committed murder. judge per very refusing to release the -- judge perry is refusing to release the names of the jurors. but one is here tonight, jennifer good evening. have you ever served on a jury before? >> this was my first. >> greta: was it what you expected? >> absolutely not. i think it was kind of a big one. some people served on a lot of juries but never for six weeks. and with basically no freedoms. i think it was a pretty unique situation. >> greta: how were you treated? many people have served as
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jurors but not sequestered? >> they treated us well. orange county sheriff's office they were a bunch of wonderful people who tried very hard. there's a delicate balance between giving us some freedoms and also preserving the integrity of the jury. they don't want us to be exposed to anything that might sway us. at the same time they don't want to treat us like prisoners. they did a good job balancing the two. they did everything they could for us. >> greta: during this period of time, were you able to contact friends or family or co-workers or were you totally isolated? >> we could use our cell phones and speak to people in a community area where there was always a deputy earshot away we could, we logged all our calls and someone was always listening. >> greta: i have an enormous amount of respect for anyone who serves on a jury.
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there has been some disagreement or criticism of the jury's verdict. they didn't sit through the trial, nonetheless the criticism exists. what do you say to those who criticize this jury's verdict? >> they can criticize it, i understand some people might have more of an emotional involvement. that's understandable they would criticize it, it affects them personally. fortunately, they picked people who had no bias, which equates to a fair trial, which everyone in this country deserves. i had no bias. i was not emotionally involved. i know it upsets people. those are the rights granded in this country. like her, hate her, she -- der s a fair trial. if there was anything stronger we could have used to convict, we would have. we did the best with what we had.
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>> greta: was there one thing persuasive to you that the state failed to meet its burden? something you thought they didn't prove that to me? >> they didn't prove the cause of death. if you don't know what the crime was, you can punish someone for that crime. that makes sense to me. i'm sorry go ahead. >> greta: i didn't mean to cut you off. i'm curious, when you began to deliberate was that the first discussion among the jurors as you began talking the case? >> absolutely. it was never discussed among us until we were given the okay to deliberate with all the deputies out of the room. until then nothing had been discussed. which is probably why a lot of us loss sleep because we had no way to everything we were trying to process, everybody we saw everyday. it want easy. >> greta: i hear jurors have several rounds of vote, sometimes only one vote. what happened when the door closed and all of you were in that room?
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take me through the deliberation process. >> after the foreperson was elected, we wanted to gauge if people were on one side or another, we started there. there were two people initially who thought definitely first degree. at the same time they did admit they felt it. and they just felt like it wasn't substantiated. they wanted to convict. but also admitted, there's not enough evidence to prove that even though i strongly believe it. it started there and went pretty much half and half, manslaughter and not guilty. that was based solely on the evidence we had to use to -- anything with any weight to go one way or another. it was very split initially. >> greta: you went through it methodically, start with murder one and go through the other charges and take votes down the dim is that how you did it? >> -- the indictment, is that how you did it? >> correct and we read through
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to see the language. to see certain things involved her being actually committing a crime at the time her acts causing. different language for each charge. we went through all that together to make sure everyone in the group understood it. and we discussed if it qualified or could be fit into that category. we went through each charge until we could either prove something or not. >> greta: did people discuss or were they concerned with the fact she didn't take the stand? she didn't have to, was that missed by the jury, that you wanted that? >> it wasn't brought up. we were told initially, we can't hold that her. we were very aware of what the laws were. judge perry made them very clear. he's a very upstanding man it made us a jury, a little more upstanding knowing who -- pretty much represented. he's a very good upstanding
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man and wanted to do the best we could according to what instructions he gave us. >> greta: were the prosecutors likeable? >> they were. they are excellent at their jobs. they are great as far as questioning witnesses. they have strong arguments, there was strong circumstantial evidence and they presented it well. we needed something solid to say it couldn't have been an accident. there's still that question i am they didn't o'did a fantastic job, all three -- but they did a fantastic job, all three of them. >> greta: i didn't have the awesome responsibility that you had. the behavior of casey anthony between june 16th, and mid july, partying, tattoos, it is appalling to me. was there any discussion about that in the jury room? >> of course, of course. behavior was appalling. i was hard to understand. bad behavior doesn't show that
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a murder was committed. it is hard to understand how someone -- i'm sorry go ahead. >> greta: i understand that. we discussed that on the show as to the prosecution had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt murder. and the cause of death was mur not an accident. and her horrible behavior that doesn't supply that answer, as bad as it was. they still scientifically needed to have someone say definitively this is murder. >> correct. that's the way our system works. >> greta: i found it interesting that the jury seized upon that. i wonder if i was being hyper technical about the law. >> no. we tried to consider everything we can. big part of the prosecution's case was chloroform. it was easy in my opinion, to discredit and give it no value
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and no weight. once you got rid of that. i'm not saying there wasn't some sort of -- i don't know -- nobody knows what happened to caylee. i don't think chloroform was involved. i think they tried the best they could to make a strong case the chloroform seemed easy enough to disqualify that and move it an sigh. once that is gone you don't have much to work with. >> greta: what do you think was the purpose of the chloroform? >> the chloroform, i think maybe they had a feeling that there was some sort of you know, like trying to keep caylee quiet to something to that effect. they found the chloroform searches. they went with that. they didn't have much to use. there's nothing else they could find maybe. they were trying to substantiate that and go in that direction. but it wasn't strong enough to say, okay there was chloroform involved. >> greta: there were allegations in the opening statement that her father
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molested her and her brother. two questions, did you believe it happened? secondly, did you think it had any bearing on the question before you, the indictment before you? >> it had absolutely no bearing. it didn't come into play. because, i mean it was brought up. it want pleasant to hear there. was nothing to prove it in any way, shape or form. we were very -- we needed facts. we are not with the gonna -- it is shocking and it is hard to hear. just because it is unpleasant doesn't moon we are going to automatically believe it. you have to prove things before we -- use it as evidence in making a determination in the case. >> greta: sitting 20 feet from casey anthony for those number of days, what were your impressions about her? what did you think about her? >> for the most part, she tried to be nonresponse i have an. -- nonresponsive.
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she did what the jury did we tried not to show too much, you don't want people reading you. and was trying to be neutral and not show too much. so people couldn't speculate how she feeling. >> greta: did you have some sort of reaction to her whether you liked her, didn't like her, thought she was a did you walk out of the courtroom with some impression of her, separate from your duty as a juror? >> not really. i didn't know about the case prior to. i was there to see the facts, render a verdict that's what i did. >> greta: do you want to serve on another jury? >> i think i should get a lifetime pass now. i think i should be done. >> greta: i interrupted you i'm sorry. >> i was saying, that is such
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a hard decision to make. you want to make the right decision. you don't want to let someone go free if they did something like that to an innocent, beautiful child. at the same time you have to prove it. it is a hard decision to make especially when you know you are going to get so much backlash. that was hard, stressful, a long grueling six weeks. i don't want to have to make those kinds of decisions. it is draining emotionally. >> greta: jennifer, whether the verdict is guilty or not, everybody who works in the system is much appreciative of citizens who serve as jurors. i realize we draft you. more importantly in these trials where you are questions ared and have the responsibility like in this case. jennifer, thank you for -- for joining us as well tonight. >> thank you so much. >> greta: casey anthony has been in jail since october 2008. on wednesday she free. earlier today judge perry imposed a fine of $1,000 on
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each of the four counts she was convicted of for lying. he has sentenced her to a year each for a total of four years. how is her release date calculated? holly bristow joins. a lot of unhappy people wanted to see her do a full four years that is not happening, i guess she has done the number of years -- she got the maximum from the judge. tell me why she is leaving wednesday? >> take four years -- excuse me take 365 days if a year multiply that by four, take 85% of that of the time, because she was a good prisoner, model prisoner they didn't need to keep her in the fulltime. then they took the 1,0423 days she has already spent in detail and they came up with six that gets her out wednesday. to the surprise of some. -- >> greta: what in the world is she going to do, if you know?
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she has not distinguished herself to put it poe heightly. she walks -- politely. she walks out of there as a demon to many. >> now everybody in america knows who she is and would recognize her in a heartbeat many to my understanding i've her different stories from different people. sounds like they are going to whisk her away to an undisclosed location and keep her in hiding for a while. i'm told she will likely resurface when she does her first and only exclusive tv interview. then she will go back into hiding until some of this chaos dies down there. are a lot of people, especially if in area, that are not happy she is out of -- especially in this area, that are not happy she is out of jail. >> greta: she is a mother who when her child disappeared or had an accident looked the other way and went partying
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that's the best casein their yo. i can understand why people have dim views of her. -- she walks out into a very unhappy audience. >> very hostile environment. i got here around 6:30 this morning the first three people here were casey anthony supporters. two drove down from west virginia. a third guy hemmed up a sign saying casey will you marry me? i claimed to be dead serious. the rest of the people out here today were screaming baby killer. they had nasty things written about the jury. basically saying they didn't have any guts to convict her. saying casey anthony needs to stay in jail. and doesn't need to be anywhere around here. some of the supporters and protesters were getting into arguments. it was ugly. >> greta: i've seen jurors go
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through so much in so many cases and it bothers me, listen to these jurors whether you agree with them or not, they saw a different trial and they had the responsibility and stepped up and assumed it and get criticized. any way, where are george and cindy and any? >> i'm told that they are at their home. i was in touch with their attorney late this afternoon. he was relieved that this afternoon the time i had spoken with him, they hadn't gotten death threats today. it has been a tough road for them since the trial has started. they've got ten several death threats via e-mail -- even their attorney. people drive-by the house and gawk and many other people that drive-by 20 homes down from where the anthony's house is that wooded area where caylee's remains were found. they want to make sure the neighborhood is safe that they keep traffic moving and nobody is bothering the anthonys and
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trying to pull protests like we saw three years ago. >> greta: holly, thank you. we sit down with the prosecutor in casey anthony's murder trial. jeff ashton is here. what does he have to say about the verdict? was he prepared for casey to take the stand? hear from jeff ashton, next. >> a very sensitive and tricky situation, george and cindy anthony testified multiple times for the defense and prosecution. did casey's parents help or hurt her case? our legal panel is here, stay tuned. [ male announcer ] this...is the network --
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was suffocated by her mother and she lied to the police to cover-up her crime. after 11 hours of deliberations the jury was not convinced beyond a reasonable. what happened? was the prosecution prepared for casey to testify? we asked prosecutor jeff ashton. he took us behind the scenes of the trial. jeff, thank you for joining us. >> my pleasure. >> greta: i've won and also cases. it is tough to loss a case -- to lose a case and when you should lose a case isn't it? >> it is tough. >> greta: i don't think people realize it is around the clock work. and when you are driving home you are thinking about it, working until midnight, weekends. they only see the trial, never the build-up. it is extraordinarily hard work. i think it is noble work for prosecutors and defense attorneys. >> thank you. >> greta: i think you ought to be proud of the hard work you and your office did. >> we are proud of everything
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we did, yes. >> greta: in looking at the case and dissecting it, we have the pleasure of being on the sidelines. i'm curious, if the remains had been found in august, did any of your experts say that they would have been any more powerful or potent position to give awe opinion as to the cause of death --? >> most of the experts told us in all likelihood, pardon me, by the beginning of july, the body was completely skeletonized. there might have been difference in the evidence. essentially her body was in the form we saw it in december back in like late july, august. it would have still been a skeleton at that point. >> greta: what about in terms of the placement of the duct tape? was was that moved by the elements, water retreating, the sun, animals? it seemed that cause of death
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was so critical to your case. >> it is possible. we don't know. there was a huge tropical storm that came in late august, tropical storm fay which flooded the area. on august 11th, roy kronk's original statement was the area was underwater somewhat. certainly, two weeks after it was completely flooded. you never know. >> greta: casey anthony didn't testify. i guess it is not a huge surprise. were you ready for her testimony? did you expect she might? >> we did. after the opening statement, we expected her to, as the trial wore on we became more and more convinced she wouldn't. linda burdick was prepared to cross examiner her effectively. she never got the chance. >> greta: in terms of the
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opening statement of jose baez. he made the allegation george anthony, which he has denied, about abuse, sexual abuse as well as lee the brother. was there ever any evidence, not impeachment evidence, but substantive evidence which you may have disagreed with, to support that? >> the only evidence on that issue in any way was some statements that casey had made to boyfriends about lee perhaps touching her inappropriately. that was it. there was nothing to suggest george had done anything to her. >> greta: i don't know whether it happened or didn't happen. i'm curious if that way had substantive value many let's assume it happened. did that have any impact on whether this was a murder or not? was it totally collateral?
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>> my opinion i was totally collateral. it didn't explain her conduct after caylee died, in my opinion, it didn't explain anything. since it didn't come into evidence it was even less helpful. >> greta: did you get any instruction? did you ask the judge to struck in any way that what jose baez said in opening statement about the abuse there had been no evidence to prove it and it was collateral to the issue of the charge to the indictment? >> judge had made a ruling before closing arguments, on his own motion, saying the defense would not be permitted to argue that because there had been no evidence of it. there's standard instruction what the attorneys say isn't evidence. we relied on that to get the jury to disregard that. obviously, it would not be proper for us to bring it up, since the judge said they couldn't. that was how that was handled by the judge. >> greta: before george and cindy anthony took the stand, they may in some way perceived as what we call a hostile witness, witness for the other
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side, did you work with them? >> we met with both george and cindy before they testified, as we do with most witnesses to go through what they were going to be asked. prepare them for the various things. prepare george for the allegations against him and how he would be able to respond to those. yeah, we did that with them. >> greta: what an extraordinary dynamic. their granddaughter missing, murdered, whatever. and their daughter is on trial, facing the possibility the state will execute her. i'm trying to think what it is like working with the parents. >> it was -- over the three year period it changed from time to time. there were times when both were not very cooperative with us. not to the point of refusing to testify or anything of that sort just emotionally difficult. i think when they learned of the allegations against george, that they were a little more
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willing to talk to us. still, were emotionally torn between their daughter and their grand daughter. >> greta: this is a fox news alert, casey anthony will not be leaving her jail cell next wednesday julyócom 13th, as was announced today. the date was just changed. casey is now scheduled to leave the orange county jail sunday july 17th. projected re the project the release date is now july 17, 2011.
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>> greta: casey anthony's release date was changed moments ago. she will not be leaving next wednesday as announced today. casey is now scheduled to leave the orange county jail sunday, july 17th. keep it here on fox news channel for further developments in this case. >> now here's more of our interview with jeff ashton. i know you have discovery in florida which is unusual in a criminal case we are not used to it in every other state. did you have interaction with casey? >> no, that would never be
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permitted in a criminal case in florida either. >> greta: did she appear at the depositions or not? >> no. generally defendants done. by our rule defendants are not entitled to attend depositions, particularly not when they in jail. >> greta: you never had any interaction with her? >> she attempted to engage lynn that in conversation one day during the trial. and linda appropriately said, i can't talk to you because it wouldn't be appropriate. that was the -- casey i don't think likes me very much. so i wasn't expecting a chitchat with her. >> greta: why do you think that? >> i don't know. probably because i was the one early in the case who made a particular argument about request the death penalty might be appropriate that she didn't like. i'm sure generally prosecuting her was not her favorite thing for me to do. >> greta: in the event this would have been guilty on
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murder one. we would have gone into the death penalty phase. were you going to be the prosecutor to ask to have her executed? >> yes, i would have been the person that did the penalty phase argument and handled most of the witnesses. >> greta: how do you do that? that is the ultimate penalty. i'm wondering, especially this is a young woman. i realize there's a dead child. i realize always the elements. how do you brace yourself to do that? is it something that comes easy for you? >> i've done it a couple dozen times in my career. in some cases you argue aggressively in favor of a particular penalty in other cases you argue what the aggravate fors are and let the -- aggrevators are and let the jury decide. in this case the state attorney's position was that this was a case that the jury needed to decide, not us.
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that was what we said from the beginning and throughout. whatever penalty the jury found, if we got there, which we didn't, was up to them. >> greta: how do you make the decision which case you are going to seek the death penalty? >> that is the state attorney's decision, based upon advice from his assistants, us. and that decision is for him to speak about or not. i've always declined to talk about that, because that is his decision to talk about or not. >> greta: i've got in a lot of trouble with judges over my career. you got in trouble for smirking or smiling. believe me, i've been yelled at, told to sit down, -- what happened there? >> basically, it was the end of a six week trial and as you said, everybody is exhausted. jose's performance was just --
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eight mused me. unfortunately, i let that -- it amused me. unfortunately, i let that out by smiling, i shouldn't have. sometimes it is hard not to smile when something amuses you. >> greta: lawyers down there have a lot of respect for you. i'm curious, why are you hanging it up? i realize it has been 30 years. you must love it and must have mixed emotions about this? >> i do love it. i love prosecuting cases. i've been doing it over 30 years. i stayed to finish this case. it was time for me to move on. part of it was that this case had everything that a prosecutor could want to have in a case to challenge him. it was so challenging. every case after this would have been less of a challenge. i was ready for something new. >> greta: do you have something new planned? what are you gonna do? >> don't know. i'm kind of gonna go home try
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and take my family to the beach or maybe on a cruise and spend time with them that i want able to spend the last two months and relax and figure it out from there. >> greta: have you figured out why this case got so much attention? there's so many horrible murders and deaths across this country and missing children. why this one? >> i think part of this one was though there had been other child murder cases in the past, i think the 31 days just captured people's imagination. and they just wanted to try and find out some explanation for what seemed so inexplicable. i think that's part of what captured it. they wanted to find the truth of that issue and never really did. >> greta: [ unintelligible ] when i tried a case i was
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doing the postmortem in my mind. any strategy you wish you would have employed or not? >> no, i think we presented every shed of evidence that we could in the best manner we could. we got all the evidence in that we should have gotten in. if that wasn't enough for the jury we sleep well. linda, and the investigators did a fabulous job. if it wasn't good enough for the jury, so be it. >> greta: i think you all should sleep well. as a bystander, i saw the most difficult parts not being able to establish once accident was injected into the case, as to the cause of death, the murder that of course is the jury's determination. i think you all should sleep well. the jury didn't say she was , they said they weren't convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, which is a big difference. congratulations to a hard
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fought case and good work and good luck in whatever you do. >> thank you very much. >> greta: we haven't heard from casey's parents. i was a rough trial for both of them. their daughter accused of murdering their granddaughter. then their daughter doing some accusing of their own. george got asked on the stand if he sexually assaulted casey? do you think casey's parents' testimony helped or hurt her testimony helped or hurt her case?ananananannouncer ] this...is the network. a living, breathing intelligence
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from america's news headquarters, i'm marianne rafferty. we could learn any moment if nasa will begin fueling the space shuttle atlantis. the shuttle is scheduled to blastoff at 11:26 a.m. friday morning but forecasters say there is only a 30% chance of acceptable weather. nasa has until sunday or monday to get at lantis and its four astronauts in orbit. if they don't, the shuttle will be grounded until the following weekend, due to an air force rocket launch.
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a tense hostage standoff in grand rapids, michigan, is over after the suspect in a mass shooting commits suicide. two hostages with the suspect are said to be unharmed. before taking three people hostage, police say he shot seven people to death. two of them were children. they say he shot two bystanders in a chase with police. they didn't suffer life-threatening injuries. now back to "on the record." >> greta: you just her the prosecutor talking about working with george and cindy anthony. they took the stand several times. whose case did george and cindy help, if anybody's? joining us jim hammer, diana 10 miss and bernie grimm and ted williams. ted represents brandon sparks the son of the man who found
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caylee's remains. jim, who did george and cindy help or hurt? >> i think it cut both ways a little bit. i think the problem for the prosecution beyond how did this girl die, if she died at someone's hands, who? you get three people involved. then the possible scenarios start multiplying. was it something in the pool? did the girl drown? did the father have something to do with it? the jury begins to say who did it, what happened? i don't know. i gotta vote not guilty. >> greta: ted and be candid. >> i will be candid. let me give you a ted williams news alert, i believe and i think it will come out in some stage in the future, that cindy and george were gonna do anything and any means necessary to save their daughter from having a needle in her arm.
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as a result of that, cindy came out with the chloroform and i believe that was part and parcel to help -- >> greta: i don't buy that. i relistened to an interview i did with cindy two years ago. the fact she has said things like the smell in the car. >> that was a spontaneous reaction at the time. >> greta: i don't think she wants to see her daughter executed, it also was her grand child. >> when you try murder cases, hammer will know this, the stakes can't get higher. i haven't had a homicide case. i've had hundreds where family members don't come out of the woodwork saying what can i do? the danger is what can i say to help? you have to double check. someone's mother, dad will say anything, anything to get them acquitted. this's the danger. -- that's the danger. >> greta: cindy said things that hurt the defense case and the other thing.
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what is unique is it is not just a family home who is the defendant, there's a family member who is the victim in this case. it is a little bit different. diana, are you going to join these men in which i will never talk to you again -- >> i love those men. we would not be talking this in terms of what went wrong if there were a conviction, number one. number two, i think it is complicated. i at the front end was looking out for this family coming together and suspiciously trying to join together to help their daughter. did not see that they said lots of things, both of them that looked like very harmful for the defense case. i think it was enough of a total mess in this family that it keyed into that grassy knoll that -- the thing that the jurors like to latch on to, which is george knows more than he's saying, we
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don't trust him. something more is going on. it was conspiracy theory they totally bought into it. they ended up helping the defense, and though i don't believe they flat out meant to. >> greta: diana, you can stay i'll get rid of the men for the next statement. diana tennis will be staying the machine we are going to get rid of. they will all be here. the verdict has ignited a firestorm of criticism. hundreds gathered outside the courthouse today only to learn casey is going to walk. was justice served? the legal panel, next. ♪
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if you want to hear our old interviews from the summer of 2008 with the parents they will be posted on gretawire.com over the next few days. jim, book deal do you think any publisher is going to do that? >> sure. people will publish anything. i think it is disgusting. i wouldn't believe she had anything to say. like o.j.'s book, if i did it, we i did it or something like that. i wouldn't believe anything she had to say. disgusting that she is loud to profit. she gets to keep the money i guess. >> greta: apparently in florida she -- there is going to be costs in connection with the investigation for the misdemeanors [ unintelligible ] the prosecution is going to submit a bill that is going to be outstanding lodged against her, right? >> yeah and pretty large. the judge indicated that he
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believes that everything that took place between july and december when the remains were found, that had to do with the investigation and remember, there were thousands and thousands of leads that came in, law enforcement had to go after, lots"od?kpñ of time spen. the judge basically today said all of those resources were spent because you lied. i believe when the final bill comes in it will top quarter million dollars. she is going to have a judgment against her. whether or not they get it, who knows. >> greta: i bet it is going to be higher. the minute she tries to make money on a book that judgment is going to seize that money and go to the florida taxpayers, as it should. >> whether she was involved in a homicide or not of her daughter or some freak accident, i'm with hammer, it is blood money and should go to a missing children's fund if she gets any money. >> greta: the taxpayers paid
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for this the county. [ talking over each other ] >> there's a lawsuit she has out there. -- [ talking over each other ] >> you are right this would be blood money, no doubt about it. i think she should not be allowed to state. we were chasing universal studios, all over the place. law enforcement was all over the place also. >> greta: pay for ted's expenses. [ laughing ] >> you ought to see his spence account. that is going to bankrupt her. >> greta: i think she should pay for all of it. tim, the jurors since you are the prosecutor. what do you think? >> i'm such a huge fan of juries. again, the prosecutor is heartbroken. this is the kind of people we rely on total strangers coming
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to the courtroom honestly doing their job. prosecutors have a tough high burden and we should. in this case maybe it was 85, 90, 50, want high enough. this honest person said, i have to vote this way, i don't want to, i have to. i have nothing but respect for her. >> greta: speaking to jeff ashton the prosecutor -- >> what a classy guy. >> what a classy guy. very disappointed but enormous respect for the jury system that ought to be the instruction to every person watching and every nasty comment made bay every nasty person on the networks. those jurors were drafted. they did their jobs and saw a trial very different. >> it makes bernie want to be a d.a. is what he told me. >> the jury system works. >> greta: to be very candid i've got to thank all of you. >> coming up, not guilty verdict sparking criticism across the nation. in florida people surrounding
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>> they don't have a heart. >> this is caylee's side. [chanting "caylee!" ]. >> i got the verdict, i tell you, i thought i was going to have a stroke, seriously. yeah. this is another very sad day in u.s. history. it really is. it should never come to this. >> they should have just thrown away the key for her is what i think. >> justice for caylee! >> thank you for being with us tonit. weil see you next time. go to gretawire. let us know what you thought about tonight's show. we will be posting video of old interviews from 2008 with the
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