The Young Mother Accused of Killing her 2-year-Old Daughter

Casey Anthony

Born     March 19, 1986 (age 25)
Warren, Ohio, U.S.
Charge(s)     First degree murder, et al.
Status     Incarcerated in Orange County Jail
Parents     George and Cindy Anthony
Children     Caylee Anthony (2005-2008)


"Casey Anthony" the mother, who accused of first-degree c In 2008 death of her 2-year-old daughter "Caylee Anthony"


Caylee Anthony

Born     August 9, 2005
Orlando, Florida, United States
Died     c. June 16, 2008 (aged 2)
Orlando, Florida, United States




                                           Casey Anthony didn't Want to See this photos




The trial of Casey Anthony, the young mother accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter Caylee, is begins Monday with jury selection in Pinellas County.Because the trial of intense media interest in the case of the young woman accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, the location wasn't announced until early Monday.


A lawyer for Casey Anthony said
Thursday in a court filing that he
doesn't want the parents of the
accused child killer in the courtroom
during her first-degree murder trial.In
a reversal of their December 5, 2008
decision, a notice of intent was filed
by prosecutors to seek the death
penalty for Anthony.
The filing took place
on April 13, 2009, by
prosecutors who stated,
"sufficient aggravating
circumstances exist to
justify the imposition
of the death penalty."In
July of 2008, photos
surfaced showing
Anthony partying in a
club right around the
time of her daughter's
disappearance.

The courts have yet to determine whether or not these images will be admissible as evidence against her. On March 6, 2009, a different group of disturbing photos that had been found on Casey Anthony's computer were released to the public, including numerous drawings featuring skeletons in a variety of positions.On January 12, 2009, a video tape was released that showed the private investigator hired by the Anthony family at the site where Caylee was found a few weeks later.
"The pretrial publicity I've seen
in this case is unprecedented in
the state of Florida," said Circuit
Judge Belvin Perry."If you can't
say how she died you're kind
of hamstrung on saying what the
defendant's intent was," said
David Hill, an Orlando criminal
defense attorney.

 "What the state has going for
them is the emotional, visceral
appeal that the jury digs but if
the jury is doing their job, and
the defense attorneys are doing
their jobs, I would predict a
conviction on the third-degree
felony of neglect."



"Failure to show exactly what
is the cause of death is a challenge,
but it's not necessarily a fatal
challenge," Pernell said."I'm not
naïve enough to think we'll encounter
no one who has heard of this case,"
Perry said recently in court. "But the
goal is to find people who have
not been oversaturated with media.