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She just isn't responsible -- for anything
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Apparently the legal giants who have once again shown that justice is blind, deaf and dumb in America have come to believe their own publicity and really think that  Casey Anthony is a legal untouchable in our system.
Now they are claiming that a civil suit that was brought against her should be dropped because, well, because she just shouldn’t be held responsible for much of anything.
She certainly should not be responsible for putting people in harm’s way because she could not be bothered to tell the world that her daughter was dead when people were going into dangerous locations to search for the poor little girl.
According to the Associated Press report this week, “an attorney representing Casey Anthony has asked for a civil lawsuit in Florida filed against her to be dismissed.”
It was reported that the attorney “argues a lawsuit filed by a diver who helped search for 25-year-old Anthony’s daughter, Caylee, in 2008 lacks merit and seeks to profit from the tragedy.”
Who’s trying to profit from the murder of the little girl?
The diver “is seeking more than $15,000 in damages. The lawsuit claims he risked his safety searching for 2-year-old Caylee in alligator-infested water while Anthony knew the child was already dead.”
Anthony should count herself lucky that there aren’t a lot more bills. She is the one who allowed all this effort to go on when she could have stopped it all by admitting the little girl was already dead.
While Anthony was acquitted of killing Caylee in July, she was convicted of lying to police.
In a stretch that is almost impossible to believe, what she was convicted of lying to the cops about was the fact that her child was dead and she knew it.
So everyone who was trying to help, who was rushing to try to save a little girl, who was, in this case, diving into dangerous water, was doing so for no reason.
And Anthony knew that and allowed it all to go on anyway.
It certainly seems like the court should allow the case to go on, that Anthony ought to be held accountable for something.
On the other hand, based on the previous decisions in this case, it may well be that she has absolutely no responsibility in life at all.
— Chuck Smith