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'Caylee's Law' Weighed By States Following Casey Anthony Trial Verdict

BRENT KALLESTAD   07/ 8/11 10:09 PM ET   AP

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Lawmakers outraged over Casey Anthony's acquittal have responded by proposing so-called Caylee's laws that would allow prosecutors to bring felony charges against parents who do not quickly report missing children.

The new measures were triggered, at least in part, by an online petition that had more than 700,000 signatures Friday. Some questioned whether a new law would do any good because the circumstances of the Anthony case were so rare, but lawmakers in at least a dozen or so states have already floated proposals reacting to the verdict.

"Casey Anthony broke new ground in brazenness," said Florida state Rep. Scott Plakon, who is sponsoring the proposal in his state. "It's very sad that we even need a law like this, but Casey Anthony just proved that we do as unfortunate as that is."

In June 2008, Anthony's 2-year-old daughter Caylee was last seen at the Orlando home she shared with her mom and her maternal grandparents. For the next month, Casey Anthony, then 22, left her parents' house and spent most of her time with friends, shopping and partying, telling her family and others that Caylee was with an imaginary nanny.

Anthony's mother called detectives when Anthony could not produce her child. Anthony told investigators she hadn't called them because the nanny had kidnapped the child and she had been conducting her own search, two of the numerous lies she told investigators.

Anthony was acquitted of murder in Caylee's death, but convicted of four misdemeanor counts of lying to investigators. She was sentenced to the maximum of four years, but after serving nearly three years in jail awaiting trial, coupled with good behavior credits, she is set to go free next Sunday.

Florida's proposal would make it a felony for a parent or other caregiver to not report a child under the age of 12 missing after 48 hours. It also makes it a felony to not report a child's death or "location of a child's corpse" to police within two hours of the death.

Had Florida's measure been in place and Anthony been convicted, she could have faced another 15 years behind bars.

Other states are considering similar measures and the online petition at Change.org, started by an Oklahoma woman, calls for a federal law.

"It's certainly something that we want to look into, because right now looking at the Maryland state law we're not seeing anything that would fit the circumstances to the degree that we want to," said Joseph Cassilly, a prosecutor in Harford County, Md., which is one of the state's considering a Caylee's law.

But others think it's unnecessary.

"It only applies to people like her and fortunately those are not common everyday occurrences," said Willie Meggs, who served as a state attorney in Florida for more than three decades. "I don't think it changes anything."

When Caylee was reported missing, the sheriff's office launched a massive search, but her remains weren't discovered until six months later, near the Anthony family home. The bones were in such bad shape, prosecutors said they had difficulty collecting forensic evidence from them, making it harder to present their case to the jury.

Anthony's attorneys argued that Caylee drowned in the family pool. They said Anthony panicked and her father decided to cover up the death by making it look like murder. Anthony's lies and conduct during the month her child was missing were caused by the sexual abuse she had suffered herself as a child by her father, her attorney said.

Anthony's father vehemently denied the allegations on the witness stand and said he would have done anything to save his granddaughter.

In Alabama, a bill would make it a felony for a parent, legal guardian or caretaker to not notify law enforcement authorities within an hour after the death of a child and also require parents to report a missing child within 24 hours. In Kentucky, the proposal would make failing to report a child under 12 who has been missing for 12 hours or more punishable by one to five years in prison.

"God forbid we ever run into a mother like Casey Anthony again," said Plakon, the Florida legislator. "If we do, that mother will be a felon."

___

Associated Press writers Brian Witte in Annapolis, Teresa Wasson in Nashville, Jim Van Anglen in Montgomery contributed to this report.

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Lawmakers outraged over Casey Anthony's acquittal have responded by proposing so-called Caylee's laws that would allow prosecutors to bring felony charges against parents who...
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Lawmakers outraged over Casey Anthony's acquittal have responded by proposing so-called Caylee's laws that would allow prosecutors to bring felony charges against parents who...
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12:39 AM on 07/31/2011
I hope there is plenty of wet T-shirts and alcohol to keep her sober and unaware of the crime she has committed. There is going to come a time when her looks will wither and she is not as attractive... then Kaboom! the nightmares will begin...
08:08 PM on 07/14/2011
If George and Cindy wise up one day, could they file a wrongful death suit against Casey like the Goldmans did OJ?
04:04 PM on 07/12/2011
How sweet....Jose and Casey are moving to Puerto Rico. *gag*
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JestMe
Just a man with an opinion.
09:12 AM on 07/11/2011
We should not waste time on laws for this when we can concentrate on making it unlawful to speak Venucian in a public place, while wearing the American flag. Where is the GOP on that one??
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porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
07:05 AM on 07/11/2011
Stop the exploitation of this childs photo.

Media outlets that use it should be contributing to some fund that helps neglected and abused children every time they use it.
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Elecktra001
PC assassin
04:01 AM on 07/11/2011
We don't need a law here. Parents who don't report their child missing will be viewed as persons of interest.
01:08 AM on 07/11/2011
This is a "knee jerk" reaction of public figures trying to appease the outraged public. This type of law will not do anything to get justice for Caylee Anthony. That justice will now have to come from God Almighty.
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NonCon
Musician and gonzo coder
12:48 AM on 07/11/2011
I'm very leery of creating these kinds of laws based on the outcome of one court case that was way outside the statistical norm.
A reasonable person can immediately come up with exceptions to any of these proposed laws that could cause great hardship and further suffering for families that have experienced a horrible loss.
Lets all take a breath and think about this for a while lest we do more harm than good.
11:43 PM on 07/10/2011
... This is ridiculous. Passing felony-level laws on the drop of a hat because the public is upset over one over-hyped court case is terrible policy.
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parnelbogard
11:41 PM on 07/10/2011
I think people need to calm down and really think this through. I fear that laws like these will have unintended consequences that will harm innocent parents who find that themselves in extraordinary circumstances. I do also fear that this law will be abused by the overzealous and bring more harm than good.
09:17 PM on 07/10/2011
This law is sincerely felt I am sure but what is the definition of a child. Teens skip home unfortunately rather often and return in a couple of days. Police are aware of this.
Many of these kids should be saved by better use of the failsafes already in place and are not being enforced. This law will not encourage already bad parents to act any differently.a Families need support from already available services who and that are in danger of being defunded, as we worry about innocent children, by the GOP Congress.
01:10 AM on 07/11/2011
You were doing so well at making a very good point, up until you decided to go political.
08:52 AM on 07/11/2011
I read it just before I posted and thought the same thing. Decided to leave the political comment as I am from a ,"red " state that does not give support to social workers who are over worked. Teen preganancy, single, and working moms are above 50%; children remain or are given back to their bad situations. Children are neglected in all social levels. Programs that are on the books should be revamped and supported and kids and families need help from the start in our messed up society.
Since the gop Congress does not care about anything except obstruction and their own personal power to spout platitudes and line their own personal pockets and power I left it in.
07:26 PM on 07/10/2011
For the sake of justice, we should pass a law that allows a disgruntled prosecutor to vacate the jury's verdict, and have Rush Limbaugh's verdict to be used instead. If Rush is to busy-- then Nancy Grace's verdict could be duly substituted.
06:57 PM on 07/10/2011
My Theory on what happened. (For what it’s worth)

I was never convinced that Casey planned to kill Caylee. I do believe that she was drugging her to keep her out of the way. One reason I believe this is why did she make up a “nanny” a year and a half before this? I think she was drugging her all alone, when she was with her boyfriends or at parties and telling everyone Caylee was with the “nanny”….but she was in the car passed out.
Now, as far as how she drugged her…she could have used Nyquil, benedryl, xanax or just about anything. Probably did at different times. I think she did decide to experiment with chloroform and used to much and it killed her.

I think she then freaked out and left her in the truck for a few days then tried to bury her in the yard by the playhouse. When that didn't work out she decided to make it look like the nanny had kidnapped her so duct taped her nose and mouth and bagged her and tossed her in the swamp. Then went on her merry way.
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06:55 PM on 07/10/2011
Instead of re-litigating this case and passing new laws that do nothing to protect kids before the fact, let's think of laws that proactively keep kids from this sad fate.
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kiksadi50
03:55 PM on 07/10/2011
This is one of the saddest cases that I have read about,since the OJ trial. My heart breaks for this precious little girl.
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Jabs Holt
06:12 PM on 07/10/2011
HEART BREAKING ! Look into that little girls eyes ! ! !