telling the truth. we heard testimony that well, i don t have a mistress. then we heard that perhaps in fact, he did have a mistress. we also saw a suicide note, which i believe was a litigation suicide note, not worthy of belief. so we have on one side a pattern of lies, proven absolute, pathological, by the defendant casey anthony. but we also see, deception after deception, in my view, by critical family witnesses in this case. so the prosecution says, if you believe that casey anthony is in fact a liar, then you must execute her. in the absence of a lot of evidence. judge jeanine: what do you think anna, do you agree? i don t see it that way. that s a lesser i m sorry judge jeanine: anna sigga. the way i see it, he was put under an incredibly large
bagging her and dis her like trash. and then pre pretending like he s searching for his granddaughter. it doesn t fit. judge jeanine: anna sigga, awe grey? absolutely. it makes no sense. on its face jose baez did a better job in summation than i expected. both prosecutors did a phenomenal job to remind the jury let s look at the evidence. none of jose baez s assertions make any sense and you can pick them apart, one by one. anyone in this family had anything to do with casey s disappearance it is none sense i don t see anywhere way the injure [ unintelligible ] i believe it is only going to come back to one person, casey anthony.
bagging her and dis her like trash. and then pre pretending like he s searching for his granddaughter. it doesn t fit. judge jeanine: anna sigga, awe grey? absolutely. it makes no sense. on its face jose baez did a better job in summation than i expected. both prosecutors did a phenomenal job to remind the jury let s look at the evidence. none of jose baez s assertions make any sense and you can pick them apart, one by one. anyone in this family had anything to do with casey s disappearance it is none sense i don t see anywhere way the injure [ unintelligible ] i believe it is only going to come back to one person, casey anthony.
telling the truth. we heard testimony that well, i don t have a mistress. then we heard that perhaps in fact, he did have a mistress. we also saw a suicide note, which i believe was a litigation suicide note, not worthy of belief. so we have on one side a pattern of lies, proven absolute, pathological, by the defendant casey anthony. but we also see, deception after deception, in my view, by critical family witnesses in this case. so the prosecution says, if you believe that casey anthony is in fact a liar, then you must execute her. in the absence of a lot of evidence. judge jeanine: what do you think anna, do you agree? i don t see it that way. that s a lesser i m sorry judge jeanine: anna sigga. the way i see it, he was put under an incredibly large
you cannot read this letter and not see that this man was in pain. judge jeanine: that was more from the prosecution s closing arguments. we are joined by prosecutor anna sigga and peter johnson and ann bremner. peter there is no question that george anthony was the accused. what we saw, was for the first time the prosecution basically coming out and saying, george anthony s suicide note was real. this guy is not someone who has committed any of the acts that he s been accused of. do you think the jury is going to buy that? in the end they probably will. although there was no evidence for anything they said many what they heard in this trial was, a pattern of deception and a pattern allegedly of not