US News

Casey Anthony acquitted of murder, convicted only of lying to cops

Casey Anthony was found not guilty today in a Florida courtroom of killing her adorable two-year-old daughter and tossing the toddler’s rotting body in a swamp near her parent’s home.

She cried and hugged her lawyer Jose Baez after learning she had been acquitted of the most serious charges against her.

The stunning verdict was handed down by a jury of five men and seven women who also declined to convict her of either first degree murder or manslaughter.

“While we’re happy for Casey, there are no winners in this case,” Baez said at a news conference afterward. “Caylee has passed on far, far too soon. And what my driving force has been for the last three years has been always to make sure that there has been justice for Caylee and Casey, because Casey did not murder Caylee. It’s that simple.”

CASEY ANTHONY VERDICT BREAKDOWN

Anthony was found guilty of four counts of providing false information to cops investigating Caylee’s disappearance and eventual death in 2008.

Caylee’s body was found in the woods six months later and a medical examiner was never able to determine how she died.

She faces up to five years behind bars, but could be free much sooner because she’s already been in custody on charges related to the case for the last three years.

Anthony is scheduled to be sentenced by the judge on Thursday.

Orange Osceola State Attorney Lawson Lamar thanked the jury for its service, but did not elaborate on the details of the case or take questions from reporters.

“It has always been about seeking justice for Caylee and speaking on her behalf,” he told reporters.

Jurors told the judge that they didn’t want to talk to the media at the courthouse.

Before the shocking verdict, Prosecutor Jeff Ashton walked in to roaring applause, as spectators outside the courtroom cheered and screamed “way to go.”

Anthony, 25, wept as the judge read the verdict, which jurors reached after less than 11 hours of deliberation over two days. She was charged with first-degree murder, which could have brought the death penalty if she had been convicted.

Anthony’s attorneys claimed that the toddler drowned accidentally in the family swimming pool, and that her seemingly carefree mother in fact was hiding emotional distress caused by sexual abuse from her father.

Prosecutors contended that Caylee was suffocated with duct tape by a mother who loved to party, tattooed herself with the Italian words for “beautiful life” in the month her daughter was missing and crafted elaborate lies to mislead everyone from investigators to her own parents.

Captivated observers camped outside the courthouse to jockey for coveted seats in the courtroom gallery, which occasionally led to fights among those desperate to watch the drama unfold.

Anthony did not take the stand during the trial, which started in mid-May. Because the case got so much media attention in Orlando, jurors were brought in from the Tampa Bay area and sequestered for the entire trial.

Baez had conceded that his client had told elaborate lies and invented imaginary friends and even a fake father for Caylee, but he said that doesn’t mean she killed her daughter.

“They throw enough against the wall and see what sticks,” Baez said of prosecutors during closing arguments. “That is what they’re doing … right down to the cause of death.”

He tried to convince jurors that the toddler accidentally drowned in the family swimming pool and that when Anthony panicked, her father, a former police officer, decided to make the death look like a murder by putting duct tape on the girl’s mouth and dumping the body in woods about a quarter-mile away. They said that Anthony’s apparent carefree life hid emotional distress caused by sexual abuse from her father. Her father firmly denied both the cover-up and abuse claims.

The prosecution called those claims “absurd,” saying that no one makes an accident look like a murder.

Lead prosecutor Linda Drane Burdick concluded the state’s case by showing the jury two side-by-side images. One showed Casey Anthony smiling and partying in a nightclub during the month Caylee was missing. The other was the tattoo she got a day before her family and law enforcement first learned of the child’s disappearance.

“At the end of this case, all you have to ask yourself is whose life was better without Caylee?” Burdick asked. “This is your answer.”

Prosecutors hammered on the lies Anthony, then 22, told from June 16, 2008, when her daughter was last seen, and a month later when sheriff’s investigators were notified. Those include the single mother telling her parents she couldn’t produce Caylee because the girl was with a nanny named Zanny, a woman who doesn’t exist; that she and her daughter were spending time in Jacksonville, Fla., with a rich boyfriend who doesn’t exist; and that Zanny had been hospitalized after an out-of-town traffic crash and that they were spending time with her.

With AP