law. there wasn't enough evidence, there wasn't anything strong enough to say exactly -- i don't think anyone in america could tell us exactly how she died. if you put even just the 12 jurors in one room with a piece of paper, write down how caylee died, nobody knows. we would all be guessing. we have no idea. >> what do we say about justice in america, susan, when the jurors say prosecutors didn't make their case, they didn't see the connection between the person they may think is a killer but they can't see the evidence of them killing and yet nobody is ever going to be punished for this? what does that say about our system if no one will ever be punish for the killing of this baby? >> what it is says is that the rule of law lives in this country. we don't have vigileante justice. we don't have mob justice. while it's not the verdict that i would have reached, i was shocked and stunned by it, and i disagree with it, i respect it. i respect that jury that was in that courtroom every day, and decided this case on the evidence presented before it. not on emotion, and not on television. and that's what you and i would