5 Motions To Be Discussed At Upcoming Casey Hearing
Thursday, October 08, 2009 6:30:14 AM
<snipped> The hearing is set for Oct. 16. at 9:30 a.m. in courtroom 10-A.
Strickland will also have a status hearing on the check fraud case.
Also Wednesday, Casey's defense team got another 42 pages from prosecutors detailing forensic entomology reports from August 28 and December 11 of 2008. Those reports talked about the insects experts analyzed from the trunk of Casey's car and the scene where Caylee's remains were found.
Prosecutors: Casey’s Defense Filed Bogus Motion
Posted: 4:13 pm EDT October 8, 2009
<snipped> In a new document filed Thursday, prosecutors are accusing Casey Anthony’s defense team of filing yet another bogus motion, this time over the death penalty.
The defense wants the judge to take the death penalty off the table, but prosecutors say judges don't have that authority.
John Morgan, the attorney representing Zenaida Gonzalez in a defamation suit against Casey Anthony, will be appearing on 48 Hours Mystery on October 17, 2009. Mr. Morgan will be sharing insight into the investigation he has conducted on Zenaida Gonzalezs behalf. He is seeking to clear her name from the false allegations made by Casey Anthony that she was responsible for the disappearance and death of Caseys daughter, Caylee Anthony.
While gathering evidence to support Zenaida Gonzalezs innocence, he has interviewed several people close to Casey Anthony, including George and Cindy Anthony. He will discuss his knowledge of the case and the individuals involved on the upcoming episode of 48 Hours Mystery
Casey Anthony, Misty Croslin-Cummings, Bob Ward dominate TV news
posted by halboedeker on Oct 8, 2009 6:35:46 PM
<snipped> *** Casey Anthony. The prosecution is ripping the defense's motion asking the judge to drop the death penalty in the murder case. "Prosecutors say judges don't have that authority, and went so far as to say either the defense doesn't understand the law or is purposely misstating it to grandstand," WFTV-Channel 9 anchor Bob Opsahl said. "Prosecutors say a hearing on the issue would be a waste of the court's time."
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