Caylee Anthony is Dead!!!

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phil

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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The death was ruled a homicide by medical examiners...people who are PROFESSIONALS at determining such things.

Oh, and eyewitness testimony is the LEAST RELIABLE testimony in a murder case. You don't need an eyewitness...they are wrong more often than they are right.

It's people like you who let guilty people walk...then they turn around and do some shit more fucked up than the first time. Eventually they end up in prison, but now more than 1 life/family is affected. It's people like me who want answers and see through the bullshit like what we saw Baez do during this trial. He took the attention off Casey and put it on her father and brother...because he KNEW he didn't have any chance in hell otherwise.

Do you have kids? If so, would your stance be different if your child's mother did what Casey did?

If you don't have kids, you don't understand the anger we feel when shit like this happens. She's a sociopath...her mother said so herself. For the sake of argument, even if she DIDN'T kill her daughter, how would you feel if your child's mother put your dead child in the trunk of a car and dumped him/her in the woods to rot and be devoured by animals?
you keep bringing emotion into this. thats why people are wrongly convicted every day. get your head out of your ass.

the autopsy provider also revealed that its possible the death wasnt a homicide, but thats what their ruling was.
 

phil

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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everyone is worked up on the emotional angle but look at it like this. from a LEGAL perspective the right thing got done.

for instance, those bitch asses that go protest at military funerals saying those deaths are punishment from god for america allowing homosexuality are protected by free speech. are we willing to give up free speech to shut up a few voices we dont like?

are you ready to give the law unlimited powers just to do what you think is "the right thing"? im not but you go on and put your big government jersey and pom poms on and cheer on people getting convicted without being proven guilty of a crime.

the justice system actually worked right yesterday. will i be mad if dexter finds casey anthony? hell no she's a piece of shit. but thats no reason to allow the government to extend their powers beyond their reach. i find it baffling how none of you lynch mobbers can grasp the simple concept..
 
May 9, 2006
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^i get your point and i agree with you, but in this case its just blatantly obvious that the bitch has mental issues and that she was guilty. i kno wut youre saying, everyone that goes to a court room cant be locked up. but every murderer cant walk the streets either....

guess its a matter of opinion.
 

:ab:

blunt_hogg559
Jul 6, 2005
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although the facts of the case grate against our sense of right and wrong. phil is right, 100%.

prosecution has to.prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt. the defense only has to show that there is reasonable doubt.

karma's a bitch tho.
 

Sydal

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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www.idealsentertainment.com
you call me little boy and say youre not going to stoop to that level.

youre telling me all the wrongly convicted white people are in there because theyre white.

STFU YOU STUPID FAGGOT im the one who shouldnt be stooping to your level of idiocy
Calling you a little boy offensive to you? Is it the same as calling somebody a faggot? Calling somebody a faggot 'cause they don't agree with you is some childish shit. If you could debate something without getting hot and bothered enough to spew offensive shit at somebody, I wouldn't have called you a little boy. And yet here you are, saying you shouldn't stoop to MY level...right after you say STFU YOU STUPID FAGGOT! Yea, you're a GENIUS!

And I'm not talking about wrongly convicted white people! The majority of wrongly convicted people in prison aren't white.
 

Sydal

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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www.idealsentertainment.com
you keep bringing emotion into this. thats why people are wrongly convicted every day. get your head out of your ass.

the autopsy provider also revealed that its possible the death wasnt a homicide, but thats what their ruling was.
Really? Dr. G said everything in the case was consistent with homicide. She said the only thing was the body was left to rot for so long that there was no scientific evidence to prove the cause of death.

Experts also said the way the plants were growing through the bone structures, Caylee was in that same spot for about as long as she was missing...a good 6 months.
 
Apr 2, 2010
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If you could debate something without getting hot and bothered enough to spew offensive shit at somebody, I wouldn't have called you a little boy. And yet here you are, saying you shouldn't stoop to MY level...right after you say STFU YOU STUPID FAGGOT! Yea, you're a GENIUS!
Anyone having debates over this is on some child shit tbh
 
Nov 18, 2010
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I don't understand how she can't at least be charged with criminal negligence resulting in death or SOME shit because even if they only have circumstantial evidence the child died in her care, right? The timeline indicates that, the matter in which Caylee dies indicates that, her lies indicate that. It seems as if she proved her own guilt with her actions AND beyond a reasonable doubt. If you're looking at this and saying "she did do it but they don't have a guaranteed murder weapon or motive" then YOU'RE what is wrong with the legal system not us.

The prosecution is stupid though if Biaz goes out of his way to take the onus they should have then examined Casey and asked her to prove her innocence (as Biaz wanted) against all the circumstantial evidence. She would look like a fool trying to concoct a story as to why her trunk smells like Caylee's decomposing corpse, why duct tapes are the same, why she didn't report her daughter missing for a month. HOW could she explain any of that? Can any of you defend that?

No, the system is SHIT because technicalities and loopholes are the only cracks and while they're good for those wrongly convicted or facing ludicrous convictions usually the ones getting off from these are actually guilty. Like I said, if not murder, criminal negligence/recklessness, one month police report alone should have her convicted of that.

Honestly, like I said she'll be judged by God, the only judge mattering.

And this bitch reminds me of the one who tried to get her husband killed then was crying faking it n shit when cops pulled a lil sting pretending the hit was done. Cuz they both fake crying to the cops and like begging for person to come back when they killed them.

SHADY BITCHESSS
 

Legman

پراید آش
Nov 5, 2002
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welcome to the justice system people

the real ones on this board have known how bad the justice system is...this isnt anything new

i hope someone knocks this bitches noodles out
 
May 13, 2002
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www.socialistworld.net
Read this story if you really want to fall back in love with our legal system



Dewey Rader Bozella, winner of the 2011 Arthur Ashe Award for Courage, was sent to prison in 1983 for a murder he did not commit. But Bozella never stopped fighting and won his release in 2009.

Nobody has ever bought a jersey with the name Dewey Rader Bozella on it. There are no sneakers embossed with a DRB logo. Few people in the world of sports have ever heard of Dewey Rader Bozella.

But a week from today, Dewey will step on stage at the ESPYs to speak.

Naturally, he's a little nervous about it. Millions of people will be watching on television. And he'll be at the podium for three to four minutes. That's a long time for an awards ceremony -- though nowhere near long enough to tell all that needs to be told. Maybe it's simply enough that Dewey speaks and is heard.

For many years after he was first suspected of murder in 1977, it was hard for Dewey to talk about it. Murder is actually a kind way of describing what happened.

Dewey was suspected of entering the home of a 92-year-old woman who had just returned from playing bingo at St. Joseph's Church in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., binding her with electrical cord and stuffing 5 feet of cloth down her throat with a tool resembling a chisel until she suffocated.

There were no fingerprints of Dewey's at the scene of the crime. In fact, there was no physical evidence at all to suggest he had ever entered the home. That's because Dewey was bicycling alone miles away when the murder took place.

But Dewey was arrested. If prosecutors were looking for a suspect with a troubled past, they certainly had a good candidate. When he was 9 years old, Dewey saw his father batter his pregnant mother. His mother died from the beating, and his father ran away and never came back. Dewey and his nine siblings grew up in a series of foster homes.

One of his older brothers had a knife stabbed through his heart and out his back. Another brother would be shot dead through the head. A third would die of AIDS. As a teen, Dewey had a reputation for running the streets, fighting, getting high and committing petty crime. He'll be the first to admit he was no saint.

It was a blessing, then, when the case against him was dropped for lack of evidence. It made Dewey realize he needed to turn his life around. He was 18 years old. He enrolled in community college and got a job at an institution caring for people who back then were called "retarded."

In 1983, six years after the murder, two inmates told prosecutors that it was Dewey who'd murdered the old woman. They lied because it enabled them to cut deals that would get them released. The brother of one of those inmates also pointed a finger at Dewey for support. In 1983, Dewey was charged with murder.

There's no evidence, Dewey's lawyer told him. The prosecutors have no case. It's your call, but you'd be wiser not to testify.

It was sound advice. That way, Dewey's past on the streets couldn't be brought up to sway the jury. And there was no way he could be tripped up under questioning. Dewey decided not to take the stand. He sat stunned while the three "witnesses" turned on him and the jury's verdict was announced: Guilty.

Dewey was sent to Sing Sing. He had a right to be bitter, and he was. The hardest part was he had to stuff his bitterness inside. There was no way to let it out. Ask him what he was in for, and he refused to say. He knew that even people who've done horrible things don't like a man who has suffocated a 92-year-old woman after she's come home from a night of bingo at church.

Once Dewey did tell an inmate about the case. The inmate spread it around as a way of softening the sound of his own crime. Dewey felt shamed, and he resolved never again to say a word about why he was in prison.

It was "The Death House" that saved Dewey. "The Death House" is the nickname for that building at Sing Sing where electrocutions once took place. The electric chair had been removed and a boxing ring was set up over the same space.

Dewey stepped between the ropes. He proved to be a good fighter and eventually became the light heavyweight champ of Sing Sing. A Golden Gloves champ named Lou Del Valle was brought in to fight him. Del Valle would later knock down Roy Jones Jr. when Jones was the best fighter on the planet. Dewey gave Del Valle all he could handle until the fight was stopped on cuts. But that wasn't the point.

Boxing gave Dewey balance. It gave him a sense of release, of discipline and focus. It structured his time. The heavy bag, speed bag and sit-ups led to educational classes that filled Dewey's days as he awaited his appeal. Seven years after his conviction, Dewey got a retrial.

By 1990, the brother of one of the witnesses against Dewey admitted that he'd made up the story. The other two witnesses continued to testify against Dewey to maintain the deals they'd secured for their release. But those deals were made clear to the jury. The case had no merit the first time. Now, with the brother's admission, it was absurd.

You don't need to go on the stand, Dewey was advised. It's a clear-cut case. Dewey didn't testify.

The case unfolded. It appeared to be so lopsided that the district attorney came to Dewey's lawyer and offered a deal. If Dewey will admit his guilt, he can walk out a free man. Oh, if Dewey could've spoken to the jurors at that point. If he could've told them that he'd been offered his freedom in exchange for his integrity, he could've told them what he told the district attorney: No way! It didn't matter what he was offered. He'd never admit to committing that murder.

But Dewey didn't have the chance to tell the jury. The system doesn't work that way. Dewey waited silently for the verdict. Words cannot describe what it felt like when the jury once again called him guilty.

The sentence was 20 years to life.

Dewey Rader Bozella had learned one thing by the time he returned to prison. He could find himself in a terrible situation, or he could simply find himself.

He punched all of his bitterness into the heavy bag and taught himself to smile. He earned a bachelor's degree from Mercy College. Then a master's from New York Theological Seminary. He became a model prisoner. He met an inmate who had murdered his older brother. But Dewey forgave him. He proposed to a woman named Trena whom he met while she was visiting another inmate. Not only did Trena say yes to the proposal months after they'd met; her father said yes.

They were married. Prison guards wrote letters recommending that Dewey be released on parole. Four times parole hearings came up.

His application should've sailed through with a rubber stamp. There was one problem. A simple step in the procedure called for Dewey to appreciate the nature and seriousness of the crime. In his case, that meant admitting that he'd stuffed 5 feet of cloth down the throat of a 92-year-old woman. Dewey's decision was final. He'd rather die in prison than say those words and go free. Each time, his application for parole was turned down.

One rejection burned so badly that he felt he needed to be placed in solitary confinement. That way, the bitterness boiling inside him would not touch anyone around him. There is no way to request solitary confinement. But Dewey knew how to get there. He howled until he was thrown into the hole.

He wrote the Innocence Project every week for years. The organization uses DNA evidence to exonerate those wrongfully convicted. The Innocence Project finally accepted his case. Then had to drop it because all the physical evidence had been destroyed. Dewey seemed out of options, but his perseverance paid off. The legal firm of WilmerHale was alerted and jumped in to help pro bono. The lawyers tracked down the arresting officer, who had since retired. After 22 years on the job, the officer took home only one file: the case of Dewey Rader Bozella. Something just didn't smell right about it.

The lawyers quickly found that evidence had been withheld during the trials. They put in nearly a million dollars' worth of work and found evidence that proved Dewey had nothing to do with the murder and that another suspect had confessed to the crime.

In 2009, 26 years after first being sent to Sing Sing, the chains were taken off Dewey in a courtroom and he was set free. He was 50 years old.

He had never even had a chance to learn to drive. But he started his new life with a smile. He got a job in Newburgh assisting people recently released from prison. After work, he'd walk across the street to a boxing gym where he could hit the heavy bag and train young fighters. The gym was the one place where he could keep fighting off what haunted him the most.



He was jailed because he'd put himself in the position to be jailed. He was jailed because as a teen he'd been out running the streets. He didn't want to see another kid in the same position. A part of Dewey longed to have one professional fight, yes. But helping get kids off the streets and into the gym was where he found peace.

Then the bills at the gym couldn't be paid and its doors were shut. Now, Dewey wants to open a gym with his own unique name on it. And maybe he'll be able to have that opportunity now that millions of people will get to know who he really is. They'll get to know Dewey Rader Bozella when he receives the Arthur Ashe Award for Courage at The ESPYs on July 13.

It's impossible to know how promising the future is for Dewey, now that he can finally speak.
 
Sep 15, 2009
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Dewey is a living saint. I can't imagine going through everything he did from having 3 brothers die at a young age to being falsely imprisoned for 26 years
 

prodigy91

@jordvnxsf
Mar 20, 2008
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i find it interesting that just as soon as the fireworks have finished, most of you star-spangled banner waving nerf bats are taking to the streets to decry the very legal system that makes this country everything that was celebrated monday.