Anthony takes ill, judge recesses trial for day
ORLANDO, FL
Judge Belvin Perry announced the news after sending the jury
home for the day, asking them not to speculate about why court was
ending early.
Casey Anthony cried, dabbed her eyes with a tissue and looked
away as pictures of Caylee Anthony's remains were displayed in the
courtroom Thursday morning. By afternoon, she looked to be getting
progressively more emotional, keeping her head down to avoid seeing
the pictures. At one point during a break she had to briefly step
out of the courtroom.
She was returned to Orange County jail and treated by medical
staff there.
Earlier in the day, a few jurors could be seen wiping their
faces and others glanced away as photos were shown of the December
2008 discovery of the toddler's remains.
Perry warned people in the courtroom that graphic photos would
be shown. He asked anyone who might become queasy to leave during a
short break before prosecutors called a crime scene investigator
from the Orange County Sheriff's Office.
Jurors then viewed a series of photos depicting the wooded area
near the home of Anthony's parents where Caylee's remains were
found. Duct tape was visible on her skull.
Anthony is charged with first-degree murder. Prosecutors say she
used duct tape to suffocate her daughter in the summer of 2008. The
defense contends the little girl drowned in her grandparents' pool.
The child's remains were found about six months later.
Before any photos were shown, jurors first heard a 911 tape from
December 11, 2008, when a utility worker said he found a human
skull in the woods near the Anthony home.
A crime scene investigator who photographed the scene guided
jurors through it via the pictures she took. She identified several
items that were also found with the remains, including a strip of
duct tape found across the front of the skull. Other items included
a white laundry bag, a black plastic bag, a red plastic Disney bag
and a pair of child's shorts.
The judge asked that all photos depicting the girl's skull be
blurred over the courtroom video feed that is being broadcast on
multiple local and national news stations.
Casey Anthony's parents, George and Cindy Anthony, were not in
the courtroom Thursday, the first time they have missed a full day
of testimony since the trial started.
A deputy medical examiner also detailed a series of photos taken
of evidence collected from the scene.
He said an examination of the duct tape covering Caylee's skull
showed multiple pieces still affixed to it.
"The pieces of tape were attached to each other," Dr. Gary Utz
said. "They were not separated. ... It appeared to be more than
one (piece)."
Casey Anthony's brother, Lee, also testified Thursday that his
sister told him a nanny took her daughter in June 2008 because she
didn't believe the Orlando woman was being a good mother. It was
his second time on the stand.
Lee Anthony testified that his sister told him about the nanny
while she was free on bond in August 2008. According to his
testimony, Casey Anthony told him the nanny, called Zanny, met her
in an Orlando park and held her down with the help of her sister.
He said his sister told him "it was Zanny's opinion that Casey
was not being a good mother for Caylee and that she was taking
Caylee from her to teach her a lesson."
Lee Anthony said his sister told him the nanny told her not to
go to police. According to testimony, Casey Anthony told her
brother she didn't try to stop the nanny from taking the child
because she was scared and "didn't know what to do."
He said Casey Anthony told him the nanny had taken control of
her MySpace account and was sending her messages that instructed
her where to go as she searched for Caylee. He said his sister told
him she had to "fulfill obligations" in order to see the child
again.
According to Lee Anthony's testimony, she said the nanny changed
the password for her MySpace account to "timer55." He said Casey
Anthony told him the password had something to do with the number
of days between the date Caylee was taken and Aug. 9, 2008, when
the child would have turned 3.
"It was her hope she would get her back on that day," Lee
Anthony said.