grandfather. the cop in him wants to know the answers and he wants to know now and cindy is saying we can t do that, don t push her. let her come out whenever she does. judge jeanine: shoe he ibuta grand mother. they knew from the day they picked up at the wrecking yard. ask mark fuhrman, he has spelled it before? judge jeanine: mark? i smelled it i don t know how many times it would be ridiculous to speculate. only need to smell it once. you never forget it. it is on your clothes and in your nose hairs and your n. your shoes. you strip down in the garage before you even go in the house. believe me, george knows it. judge jeanine: i m sorry. go ahead. there is no question in your mind that cindy is a nurse, george is an ex-cop, they know the smell of death as we all do from your jobs so they knew from the begining that is what you are saying leonard? absolutely. ask mark right now. he has that smell in his nose
grandfather. the cop in him wants to know the answers and he wants to know now and cindy is saying we can t do that, don t push her. let her come out whenever she does. judge jeanine: shoe he ibuta grand mother. they knew from the day they picked up at the wrecking yard. ask mark fuhrman, he has spelled it before? judge jeanine: mark? i smelled it i don t know how many times it would be ridiculous to speculate. only need to smell it once. you never forget it. it is on your clothes and in your nose hairs and your n. your shoes. you strip down in the garage before you even go in the house. believe me, george knows it. judge jeanine: i m sorry. go ahead. there is no question in your mind that cindy is a nurse, george is an ex-cop, they know the smell of death as we all do from your jobs so they knew from the begining that is what you are saying leonard? absolutely. ask mark right now. he has that smell in his nose
houserybody in that hughes walking on egg shells, don t do this, don t do that. judge jeanine: and so nobody is asking where is little caylee and nobody knows she is dead? here is the other thing, let me interrupt here. we didn t know at that time. we were looking for a live child. we didn t know about the smell in the car at the wrecking yard and they never told us any of that stuff when we first got there. judge jeanine: what about tim miller from ec equisearch t is my understanding you tried to connect her with tim miller. what was her response? they met for maybe five seconds. casey and i walked out to the kitchen and i introduced him and she kind of waved and we went back in the bedroom and that was it. that was all of the conversation she had with tim. she just said it would be a waste. judge jeanine: those are her words, it would be a waste to talk to tim mill fre miller frm
hearing today for toyota, they re going to be deciding whether to combine more than 100 lawsuits facing the auto giant. toyota has recalled more than 8 million vehicles because of the sudden acceleration problems. the feds have received more than 3000 complaints from owners and there are reports of at least 52 deaths tied to toyota cars since 2000. now, a closer look at whether high voltage power lines could actually play a role in these issues. brian wilson is in birmingham, alabama to explain what s going on. brian, where are you? jane, we re in a wrecking yard and this car that you see before me was involved in a fatal accident near ufala, oklahoma, just three years ago. the story is one you ve heard before, the story of a toyota that somehow malfunctioned and unexpectedly sped away. reverend milton allen remembers arriving on the scene moments after an 05 camry veered off u.s. highway 69.
birmingham, alabama. hey, brian. hey, trace. we are at a wrecking yard where law firms store cars that have involved in litigation. this particular car was involved in a fatal accident just three years ago. and you follow oklahoma. it s one of those cases you have been hearing about where a toyota suddenly and unexpectedly sped away. she didn t deserve to die like that. reverend milton allen remembers arriving on the scene moments after 2005 camry veertd off highway 169 high rate of speed. allen comforted the passenger 70-year-old barbara schwartz. she talked about how she kept yelling at her friend to slow down. and and try to get it to stop. her friend kept telling her it won t stop. it won t stop. schwartz later died of her injuries. her family believes the fatal crash was caused by a flaw in the camry s electronic throttle system. a lawsuit is pending. we don t know exactly where that camry started to malfunction.