important relative to the duct tape, right? yes, absolutely. because what s happened, and it brings up the point that in the six months the body was there, water, storms, animal activity, as well as roy cronk, has changed that scene around and there s a lot of other debris in the area. where did the duct tape come and the fact that there s some duct tape next to the hair or something has less significance. it isn t a virgin scene, obviously and things have been moved around in many ways. gregg: so it sort of ruins the prosecution s argument that chlorophyll chloroform killed you re shaking your head. i think that the bottom time there was a duct tape over a baby s skull attached to her hair. right there, there s no other
it s from the father, from the brother, against casey. i think jose is going to try to tie those strings together. gregg: didn t he deny it? i mean. deny it, but seems to me pure orchestrated theaterics, i think that s what they were going for, although we can t talk about it, but because it was so odd and casey at the same time had the tears going, and they had she tear when they talked about the meter reader s stick in her daughter s skull and i think it was orchestrated. gregg: he cried, she cried, mom cried, dad cried. and talked about the instances in the beginning of the hour and jurors and viewers have to draw their reasonable inferences from what they saw. gregg: from tears. almost the untoward, reaction, he was not included somehow, which raises the question, why did he have a right to be included as if he
forward now to what happened on june 28th, inside the courtroom. remember the opening statement by the defense attorney, jose baez, who referred to the meter reader, roy cronk, as morally bankrupt? well, cronk took the witness stand and here is what he said. i still didn t think it was real. so, i very gently took it and put it into the right eye socket and i gently pivoted up and looked down and realized what it was and i set it down as gently as i could and went up and called my area supervisor. and it s your testimony that you put that stick in the eye socket of the skull and lifted it up to be sure what it was. yes, sir, i apologize for doing so, but like i said i did not know what it was. the defense tried to argue that this fellow, moved the body and manipulated the body and in some ways relative to forensics, dr. bodden, that s
when we come back, the one question we were wondering a week ago today, why was the trial halted so mysteriously? well, we re going to show you why and what happened. it surprised, i think, everybody. hello i m here at camp leather neck, afghanistan, want to say happy 4th of july especially to my grandpa, elmer swenson and go twins! plus, don t miss our free family summer camp. find out more at. carol. fiber makes me sad. oh common. and how can you talk to me about fiber while you are eating a candbar? you enjoy that. i am. [ male announcer ] fiber beyond recnition. fiber one. neil: welcome back to our coverage of the casey anthony trial. they re in recess just for today. closing arguments will be tomorrow and we ll be covering it live here on the fox news channel and then jurors will begin deliberating the fate of the accused casey anthony. but it was a week ago today, we were expecting a slew of seven or eight witnesses and suddenly, the judge mysteriously called a ha
laura: joining us from new york to analyze is anna, a in brooklyn s homicide division and criminal defense attorney joey jackson. okay. well, today, kind of a head scratcher because the defense puts on this guy, roy cronk and anna sega how did this play out? did this in any way help the defense case. i don t think it did. the defense was hoping for ah-ha moment today. they absolutely did not get it the longer they kept him on he got much better for the prosecution. because what they let him do was tell his story his way and people were thinking interesting suspect bizarre behavior on his part by calling august in september makes sense the way he was able to in long form his version tell it today. he was able to corroborate the prosecution s case about the type of area which i think is very important about why this body was not found until it was. it was boggy. it was wet. and it makes sense.