<p>
</p>
<p>Wow, that doesn’t make sense because even Casey’s defense attorneys stated in court that she had lied! And it is factual that she lied (the nanny story as one example).</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Wow, that doesn’t make sense because even Casey’s defense attorneys stated in court that she had lied! And it is factual that she lied (the nanny story as one example).</p>
<p>And the fruitloops are coming out rapidly.
[Okla</a>. woman says she was attacked for looking like Casey Anthony -](<a href=“Okla. woman says she was attacked for looking like Casey Anthony”>Okla. woman says she was attacked for looking like Casey Anthony)</p>
<p>now that is just stupid…why especially as soozievt says, they admitted she lied.</p>
<p>Here you go…</p>
<p>[Casey</a> Anthony will appeal conviction for lying - UPI.com](<a href=“Casey Anthony conviction appealed - UPI.com”>Casey Anthony conviction appealed - UPI.com)</p>
<p>Well, didn’t the lying convictions include a $4,000 fine? Perhaps she wants to get that back to pay for the State of Florida investigative fees and to settle with the search group and “the Nanny?”</p>
<p>i guess if she does that…then she cant say anything in the civil case with zanny as that would still be an open criminal case and could “take the 5th” instead of doing the depo…( keeps her book deal open as the depo wont be out there being leaked)</p>
<p>If the gun purchased in Aug. 2008 by George to get answers about Caylee’s whereabouts at gunpoint hadn’t been taken by authorities, I wonder if events might have been radically different–like George being locked up in jail now. Too, George was a retired cop–don’t most retired cops have handguns already from work days? How come he didn’t already own a handgun?</p>
<p>parent56–I was joking about getting the $4000.00 back.</p>
<p>I think you have the probable reason. (I’m not saying that it is so beyond a reasonable doubt).</p>
<p>If the appeal is taken, there is a possibility that if the conviction is overturned in that appeal she would be retried, so she could take the 5thh in the civil cases and this might have been what got the Nanny judge to recuse himself rather than rule on the emergency motion to force Casey to give her depo. From the elected official point of view anything involving Casey is a hot potato.</p>
<p>Besides, she cannot be sentenced for more than the 4 years and $4000 even if retried. There isn’t much downside except the appellate attorneys fees and she is trying to get the state to pay for those. Baez may be a genius defense attorney.</p>
<p>Here is one more suing Casey.</p>
<p>[Bounty</a> hunter who posted bail for Casey Anthony announces plans to sue - Tampa Bay Crime | Examiner.com](<a href=“http://www.examiner.com/crime-in-tampa-bay/bounty-hunter-who-posted-bail-for-casey-anthony-announces-plans-to-sue]Bounty”>http://www.examiner.com/crime-in-tampa-bay/bounty-hunter-who-posted-bail-for-casey-anthony-announces-plans-to-sue)</p>
<p>I don’t think they will argue she didn’t lie - just that it was one big lie - not 4 separate lies. They made the double jeopardy argument along those lines in court.</p>
<p>I heard the police interview with Casey about why she didn’t call police about her missing child. The detail she gave about the nanny is absolutely stunning and she was making every bit of it up. She talked about her family, where she was from, her birthday, her upbringing, on and on. She is an unbelievably talented liar.</p>
<p>Well, this appeal keeps Casey closely tethered to Baez and the defense team; which means she cant go off saying something that could place their licenses and careers in jeopardy.</p>
<p>In most cases defendants have a different attorney on appeal than the trial attorney. The fact that an attorney files the notice of appeal for the client does not mean that he will be continuing the representation.</p>
<p>I’m wondering how long Baez and the defense team will be responsible for feeding and hiding and keeping Casey “safe.” Will they do this as long as they see the prospect for getting an agent’s cut off of any earnings she makes with a book deal or interview rights? I would see a conflict between those kinds of activities and keeping Casey safe; she’s going to stay a lot safer if she keeps a low profile and stays out of of the public eye. And if the attorneys aren’t incurring these housing/security costs for the earnings they hope to make off her, Casey would be a giant, bottomless money pit. I saw an article in which Cheney Mason said that he is concerned about Casey’s safety and warns that he is armed. As an additional security precaution, I would advise him not to leave his checkbook or any cash laying around once Casey is released.</p>
<p>
Haha, so true, so true</p>
<p>Cheney warns that he is armed, imagine the next trial, after Cheney shoots someone he “thought” was going to harm poor victim Casey. Cheney looks like he may have an impulse control problem, as in his shooting the bird after the trial. how do they do it, pretend that she’s a poor innocent thing? even if they believe she didn’t harm Caylee, she certainly is no innocent. but then as other posters have said, neither is Baez, they may be cut from the same sociopathic cloth.</p>
<p>parent56–</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Whether the appeal of the lying convictions was part of the reason the new civil judge pushed Casey’s depo into October was not disclosed.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>One of the people who sent Casey money for her jail account has offered her a place in one of the houses on his ranch in Texas.</p>
<p>Casey—Howdie! Come on down to Texas.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Curm, say it ain’t so! ;)</p>
<p>GA2012MOM–you arrived yet?</p>
<p>Don’t worry, Casey will be OK in Tejas. Hey, the mom of a cheerleader who was convicted of an attempt to hire someone to kill the mother of another cheerleader so her duaghter would have a better chance was released on probation after serving 6 months of a ten year sentence.</p>