News

Investigators Of Missing Girl Sharing Information With FBI

Air samples show car once held decomposing body

Published: Thursday, August 28, 2008 at 7:27 a.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, August 28, 2008 at 3:09 p.m.

Investigators in the Casey Anthony case are sharing the FBI's forensic lab results with state prosecutors today -- a day after air-sample tests from her car showed it once held a decomposing human body.

Authorities investigating the disappearance of Anthony's 3-year-old daughter have offered the woman a limited-immunity deal if she will lead them to the child, Caylee Marie, the Orlando Sentinel learned. If she takes the deal, the specific information Anthony provides could not be used against her by prosecutors.

The Orange-Osceola State Attorney's Office would not discuss details of the inquiry Wednesday, but spokeswoman Danielle Tavernier said Anthony has been "invited to our office to shed light on the disappearance of the victim in this case."

During a bail hearing in July, investigators said they had found strands of hair, a stain and dirt in the trunk of Anthony's white Pontiac, which had been left in a parking lot. That evidence led investigators to suggest that Caylee could be dead and that her mother might be involved.

Family members publicly dismissed the strong odor in the car, saying it must have come from a spoiled pizza. But during the July 15 phone call in which Cindy Anthony -- the missing girl's grandmother -- reported the disappearance, she said it "smelled like there's been a dead body in the damn car."

Samples of air from the car were sent to the University of Tennessee Forensic Anthropology Center near Knoxville, where researchers gather data on how bodies decay and other information to help law-enforcement agencies determine time of death.

A police dog trained to detect human decomposition also indicated the presence of a body in the trunk, sheriff's investigators have disclosed.

Casey Anthony's attorney, Jose Baez of Kissimmee, said detectives had not given him information about the anthropology center's findings. He said the information leaked to reporters and the resulting speculation "was very disappointing and shocking to us."

About 2:45 p.m., sheriff's Sgt. John Allen, the supervisor on the case, and three FBI agents arrived at Baez's office, where the lawyer was meeting with Casey and Cindy Anthony.

Casey Anthony -- wearing big sunglasses and a T-shirt with Caylee's picture on the front -- left about 20 minutes later. She rode alone in the back of a vehicle driven by a bounty hunter associated with the man who helped bail Anthony out of jail earlier this month. She has been charged with child neglect and giving false information in the case.

At 4:45 p.m., Cindy Anthony walked out with Baez, giving no comment to reporters. The two climbed into Baez's car, and he drove her home. She left her Toyota sport utility vehicle, which has "Missing" posters about Caylee on the doors.

Allen and three men with him left without commenting.

Baez would not give any details about the meeting but said no plea deal was discussed.

When asked how Casey Anthony was doing, the lawyer replied: "This doesn't help any. . . . We are doing the best we can."

Earlier in the day -- before news of the air samples and the possible legal deal -- the California bounty hunter who secured Casey Anthony's release said she has made no effort to help him find Caylee.

"She has not communicated with us at all," Leonard Padilla said. "She has no interest in communicating with us."

Padilla, whose nephew posted Anthony's $500,200 bail last week, said that if he knew then what he knew now about the case -- and that the 22-year-old wouldn't cooperate with him -- he probably would not have helped get her out of jail.

Padilla said he still thinks Caylee is alive and that Anthony handed her off to someone. But he dismissed the story that the toddler disappeared in mid-June after being dropped off with a baby sitter named Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez, which is what Anthony has told detectives.

"We don't believe [Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez] exists," Padilla said. Anthony's "got an invisible friend that's called Zenaida," he said. "She's got a world that she lives in that's apart from ours."


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  1. Florida cracker JA says...
    August 28, 2008 6:21:25 am

    RE: http://www.theledger.com/artic...80828/NEWS/808280242

    That is because this little girl is dead, and the mother knows it.

  2. Country Bumpkin says...
    August 28, 2008 6:53:51 am

    Yeah Cracker I feel the same way! How she could act the way that she's acting is beyond me. I don't think that she is even worth the bullet that it would take to put her out of her misery!

  3. wrg1948 says...
    August 28, 2008 7:13:57 am

    I wonder how many days she carried that poor child around in her trunk. Her own mother said in her 911 call the car smelled like a dead body. Now she changes her story to say she was wrong that it was a pizza with maggots in it... Sorry but an old stale pizza even with maggots in it does not smell like a decomposing body.

  4. nightmare11 says...
    August 28, 2008 7:31:47 am

    She knows where that baby is buried and figures if she acts crazy enough long enough she will get off with temporary insanity. I hope she fries.