The author SPECIFICALLY said this: "Casey Anthony may or may not have killed her child but we know she committed several crimes afterward."
Are you drunk? Or do you just have an extremely short attention span?
This statement was thrown in as an afterthought. It seems to be out of context from the rest of the article. The entire article makes one assumption after another. All the charges in this article have never been proven; at least in the court room of Orange County Superior Court Chief Judge Belvin Perry Jr.
The failure to notify officials after a child's death has never been a crime in Florida. That is why State Rep. Bill Hager, R-Boca Raton, drafted "Caylee's Law" which would make it a felony in the state of Florida for a legal guardian to fail to report a missing child in a timely manner. So what "several crimes" does the author have proof of being committed?
The stench in the car? The smell was first noticed by the manager of the towing yard where the car was being kept. "In my opinion and experience, the smell of decomposition is unique in comparison to rotten food or rotting garbage," Simon Birch said. So, the idea of the dead body of Caylee being held in the trunk of the car until it began to stink was disputed by Birch who spent two years in waste management.
Finally, the article borders on slander. If I were the Anthony family, I would go after the author for slander with these statements: "Are we a great society because a young, damaged single mother who claimed her own father molested her left her daughter with him to go drinking?" And, "Casey Anthony got off because she worked the system." All such statements ignore the necesity of supporting your conclusions with facts. There was no proof of molestation. Casey Anthony did not work the system. She benefited from the same system that all citizens enjoy because of the Constitution.
The article stinks about as bad as a bag of garbage left in a hot car trunk in Florida for a month.