1986-present
Latest News: Casey Anthony Joins TikTok As a Legal Advocate
Casey Anthony, who was accused and acquitted of killing her 2-year-old child, has joined TikTok and reintroduced herself as a legal advocate. The Florida mother gained notoriety in 2008 after the death of her daughter, Caylee.
Anthony failed to report her daughter's suspicious disappearance and later claimed that Caylee had been kidnapped. In July 2011, she was found not guilty of first-degree murder but was convicted of providing false information to the police. While she was sentenced to four years in prison, she was released after only 10 days for time served and good behavior.
In a TikTok video on March 1, Anthony announced that she will be regularly posting about legal issues on the platform. “I’ve been in the legal field since 2011 and in this capacity, I feel that it’s necessary, if I’m going to continue to operate appropriately as a legal advocate, that I start to advocate for myself and also advocate for my daughter,” she said. The 38-year-old has reportedly been working as a legal assistant since 2022.
According to Anthony, she felt moved to use her platform after people close to her were targeted. Describing herself as a proponent of women's rights and the LGBTQ community, she explained that her “goal is to continue to help give a voice to people, to give people tools and resources that they can utilize.”
Who Is Casey Anthony?
Casey Anthony stepped into the national spotlight after the suspicious disappearance of her daughter, Caylee Anthony, in June 2008. As her story unfolded, which included a tumultuous family life, an array of deceptions and criminal conduct, many believed she was unquestionably guilty. The jury, however, felt differently due to evidence considered by them to be circumstantial. Anthony was acquitted of the murder charge in 2011, but she found herself loathed by the general public.
Quick Facts
FULL NAME: Casey Marie Anthony
BORN: March 19, 1986
BIRTHPLACE: Warren, Ohio
CHILD: Caylee
ASTROLOGICAL SIGN: Pisces
Early Years and Family
Born on March 19, 1986, in Warren, Ohio, Anthony was one of two children of Cindy and George Anthony, with George having worked in law enforcement. Anthony was a bright, personable young girl with friends and what many thought was an ordinary American family. However, friends say that a pattern of lying began when Anthony was in high school. Cindy and George attended Anthony's graduation, along with Anthony's grandparents — only to discover that she was several credits short of graduating. Anthony had stopped attending classes toward the end of the school year but led her family to believe she would walk with the graduating class.
When she was 19, Anthony gave her family yet another shock. She had put on weight, and her parents suspected she was pregnant. Anthony denied it, claiming she was a virgin. Months into her pregnancy, she told her parents the truth. The identity of the baby's father, however, remained a mystery. Anthony pointed to different men, including her fiancé, Jesse Grund, as well as a young man she had dated previously, who had died in a car crash. On August 9, 2005, Caylee Anthony was born.
A friend of Anthony's said that she had discussed giving the baby up for adoption but was discouraged by her mother. For the next few years, Anthony and Caylee lived with her parents, and Grund acted as the baby's father. Grund even believed Caylee might be his baby, despite knowing that the timing of her conception made it improbable. A DNA test would later find that Grund was not Caylee's father. The identity of Caylee's father remained unknown.
In mid-June 2008, with her suitability as a mother called into question by Cindy, Anthony left her parents' home after a major argument, taking Caylee with her.
Caylee's Disappearance
Over the ensuing weeks, Cindy called her daughter to check on Caylee. Each time, Anthony told her the little girl was out with a babysitter, Zenaida "Zanny" Fernandez-Gonzalez.
On July 13, 2008, Cindy and George received a letter saying that Anthony's car was in a tow yard. When George went to pick the car up, he found Anthony's purse, along with Caylee's car seat and toys. George noticed a strong smell, like that of organic matter decomposing, coming from the trunk. Alarmed, Cindy found Anthony at the home of her boyfriend, Tony Lazaro, and brought her home. Anthony broke down, telling her mother and brother Lee that she had left Caylee with nanny Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez in Orlando on June 16 and that Gonzalez had kidnapped the toddler.
Deceptions and Arrests
On July 15, 31 days after two-year-old Caylee's disappearance, Cindy reported her missing to the Orange County Sheriff's Office. After questioning Anthony, detectives found discrepancies in a signed statement she made about Caylee's disappearance. Anthony’s friends and family had never heard of Gonzales, and detectives later discovered that, in fact, there was no nanny. The investigators caught Anthony in another lie when she told them she worked at Universal Studios, even leading them around the theme park. Anthony finally admitted she had never returned to work for Universal. She was arrested on July 16.
As the search for Caylee intensified, Anthony came under increasing scrutiny for her actions in the days before Caylee was reported missing—including partying and, in early July, getting a tattoo that reads "Bella Vita," or "beautiful life" in Italian.
Anthony returned home on August 21, when bounty hunter/reality-TV figure Leonard Padilla posted $500,000 in bail. Padilla hoped Anthony would lead detectives to find Caylee, but he was disappointed when she failed to provide additional clues. Padilla labeled Anthony narcissistic and promiscuous, fueling the fires of public sentiment against the young woman. The case became a national media sensation, and many in the public and the press were outraged at Anthony's behavior.
Anthony was back in jail only eight days after being released, this time charged with forging checks and identity theft.
Widely Followed Trial
On December 11, 2008, meter reader Roy Kronk found a plastic bag of human remains in a wooded area near the Anthonys' home. The skull had duct tape on it. On December 19, the remains were confirmed to be those of Caylee Anthony.
With prosecutors seeking the death penalty, the trial of Anthony began in June 2011, three years after the disappearance of her daughter, Caylee. Cable news channels broadcast the trial live, and Anthony, Caylee and the rest of the family dominated the news.
The prosecution painted a picture of Anthony as a promiscuous party girl, unconcerned with her missing daughter, and responsible for her murder. A website about the toxic chemical chloroform had been searched on the Anthonys' home computer (a search that Cindy took responsibility for on the stand) and chloroform was found in the trunk of Anthony's car.
Anthony's defense, led by Jose Baez, with co-attorney Cheney Mason working pro bono, told a very different story. According to the defense, Caylee had drowned in the family’s pool on June 16, 2008 — and George Anthony had covered up the death so that Anthony wouldn't be charged with child neglect. Baez shocked the courtroom when he said during his opening statements that George had in fact sexually abused Anthony, beginning when she was 8 years old — and that her brother Lee had made sexual advances towards her as well. (A paternity test showed that neither Lee nor George Anthony was Caylee's father.) Anthony was used to covering up her hurt, Baez said. George denied the allegations. On June 30, the defense rested. Anthony herself did not take the stand.
Found Not Guilty of Murder
On July 5, the jury found Anthony not guilty of first-degree murder, aggravated manslaughter and aggravated child abuse, citing the mostly circumstantial evidence presented. She was found guilty on four counts of providing false information to law enforcement authorities, and thus sentenced to four years in jail and $4,000 in fines. (Two of the false information counts would later be thrown out in appeals court.) Anthony ultimately received credit for time served and good behavior. Having been imprisoned for three years and one day, she was released on July 17. Anthony was also required to be on probation for a year due to check fraud charges and was ultimately billed with more than $200,000 owed to law enforcement related to the search for Caylee.
Life After Trial
Many in the public and the media were outraged at the not guilty verdict, bringing comparisons to the trial of O.J. Simpson in 1995. The aftermath of the trial brought about a slew of bills in several states for "Caylee's Law," which would make it a felony for a parent or legal guardian not to report a missing child. In 2012, Florida governor Rick Scott signed a Caylee's Law bill.
According to Mason, Anthony herself has lived a life of seclusion in her Florida home, wary of venturing into public due to festering reactions to the case. Having filed bankruptcy, she is estranged from her parents and keeps in contact with her former legal team.
In the spring of 2017, Anthony gave a series of exclusive interviews to The Associated Press, claiming to this day, she doesn't know how Caylee died and adding: "I don't give a sh*t about what anybody thinks of me; I don't care about that. I never will. I'm OK with myself. I sleep pretty good at night."
The Associated Press described its interview with Anthony as “revealing, bizarre and often contradictory, and … ultimately raised more questions than answers about the case.”
Anthony currently lives and works with Patrick McKenna, the private detective who led the investigation for her defense team.
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