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Software designer says Casey Anthony prosecution data was wrong
The Orlando Sentinal ^ | Jul 19, 2011 | Jeff Weiner

Posted on 07/19/2011 6:27:00 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued

Prosecutors cited a report prepared by a software program called CacheBack, which the state argued showed 84 web searches for chloroform being made on the Anthony computer.

The defense would later contradict the CacheBack report with a separate report generated by another program, NetAnalysis. That report returned only one search result for chloroform.

Last week, CacheBack CEO John Bradley posted a statement on his website, acknowledging that the 84-search result was an error, and criticizing the state for its use of flawed data.

It was Bradley who introduced those results as a witness for the defense. On the stand, he was asked to testify about a CacheBack report "that I had never seen before," he wrote on his website.

He was not told, he claims, that a NetAnalysis search had returned a different result, and did not hear about the other search until it was referenced by the defense under direct examination.

He realized that the CacheBack data was incorrect, and produced a corrected report, Bradley's statement said. However, he says his attempts to return to Florida to correct his testimony were rebuffed.

"Since the fate of woman's life could lay in this critical piece of information, I did everything in my power to remedy the situation, or at least mitigate the issue — once I became aware of it," he wrote.

In his lengthy statement, Bradley, who could not be reached Tuesday evening, criticized sheriff's investigators who he said "selectively omitted" information about the NetAnalysis report.

(Excerpt) Read more at orlandosentinel.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: cacheback; caseyanthony; computerforensics; computersecurity; forensics; johnbradley; software
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To: hobbes1

>> and took much $#it for pointing this out

I hope you learned your lesson.


21 posted on 07/19/2011 9:03:29 PM PDT by Gene Eric (*** Jesus ***)
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To: CharlesWayneCT
According to the defense, the child drowned in the pool, George “took care of it”, and told Casey to keep quiet.

There is not one shred of evidence to support that theory.

22 posted on 07/19/2011 9:16:26 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

That is true, although technically the fact that the child is dead does support the theory that she drowned. I’m not saying that the story is true, just that their story does, if true, answer the objections given here about why the mother didn’t report the child missing.

It is the story the defense told, so to the jurors, if they accepted the defense claim of drowning, they would not have any issue about why Casey didn’t report the child missing.

And apparently the body decomposed for so long that the medical examiner couldn’t rule out drowning as the original cause of death, just as he couldn’t prove there was chloriform, which was the Prosecution argument, backed up by a faulty web search analysis, as we now know from this article, and which the Prosecution knew before the trial ended but never mentioned.

Again, I’m not saying the defense wasn’t lying.


23 posted on 07/19/2011 9:29:35 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: CharlesWayneCT
although technically the fact that the child is dead does support the theory that she drowned.

There is no evidence whatsoever to support that theory.

24 posted on 07/19/2011 9:41:54 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: CharlesWayneCT
I’m not taking the defense’s side on this, just saying that their story is consistant and would answer your particular objection

Which certainly explains the sick bitch partying hardy while her baby lay rotting in the swamp.

25 posted on 07/19/2011 9:49:55 PM PDT by jwalsh07
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To: CharlesWayneCT
I’m not taking the defense’s side on this, just saying that their story is consistant and would answer your particular objection

Which certainly explains the sick bitch partying hardy while her baby lay rotting in the swamp.

26 posted on 07/19/2011 9:49:57 PM PDT by jwalsh07
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To: CharlesWayneCT
Charles, why does a drowned baby end up in the swamp in glad bags with duct tape wrapped around her mandible? Occams razor almost invariably obtains. There is no reasonable explanation for a drowned baby being wrapped in duct tape and thrown in a swamp.

That proposition is laughable and believing it is evidence of a disordered mind.

BTW Charles, Cindy Anthony testilied that she searched chloroform multiple times. I suppose we should take that at face value since the jury has spoken and justice has been done.

27 posted on 07/19/2011 9:56:41 PM PDT by jwalsh07
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

Yes, I was being snarky; she is dead, therefore we know she died, therefore there is evidence that she died, and drowning is a type of death, therefore there is evidence that she could have drowned.

We have no idea how she died. The coroner could not determine the cause of death. So there is no evidence to support any particular theory of how she died. Traces of what was alleged to be chloroform, a heart-shaped-image on duct tape that nobody took a picture of and couldn’t be found later, a web search report now known to be false.

But they did own a pool, there was testimony about a drowning, and about how the child could get out of the house on her own. So you could also say that there was no evidence that she didn’t drown (meaning the prosecution didn’t have a good refutation of the drowning story).

It’s easy enough to lie, especially if you already killed. We’ll never “know” how the girl died. All we know is that 12 people who heard of a horrific death that shocked the country decided in the end that Casey had not be proven to have murdered her child.


28 posted on 07/19/2011 10:04:51 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: jwalsh07

Yes, although Cindy Anthony was not the one being charged with using chloroform, and the prosecution argued that she couldn’t have done the search because she was at work. Could she have been lying because she believed the prosecution evidence about the searches and was trying to cover for her daughter? Would she have claimed she did the searches if the prosecution hadn’t presented the apparently false evidence about searches?

I’m not going to argue the case — it seems clear people were lying, and there was no real evidence for the defense story. The problem was that apparently the prosecution didn’t have enough real evidence either.

My point was quite specific. The defense didn’t claim that the child was missing for 30 days. The defense claimed that the child was dead, and that Casey knew the child was dead.

That is “an” answer to the arguemnt that she must be guilty because she didn’t report the missing girl, when the story they tell is that the child wasn’t missing.

Of course, she did get convicted of lying to the police. As I said, there was a lot of lying. But you don’t have to believe the story to understand that the story was internally consistant.


29 posted on 07/19/2011 10:17:45 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: jwalsh07

On your first point, if they were trying to hide the fact that they let the child drown, they might well have wrapped the body and taped it in order to transport it to a remote location where they could toss it.

On the other hand, if they were trying to make it look like a kidnap/murder, you’d expect them to report the child missing, and it seems the plan was to hope nobody noticed the child was gone. But obviously people would notice, so that plan would be stupid.

If they had planned to murder the child, and were good enough at it to research and keep it hidden, you’d have expected them to be smart enough to report the child missing so the story would make sense.

As it was, when the body was found, they had no plausible explanation that would cover a kidnap/murder. If you believe they were smart, that might lead you to believe their story, as it is more reasonable for a smart person; if you believe they were stupid, then the drowning story is just what you would expect once they backed themselves into a corner and had no way to explain it other than to admit they knew the child was dead.

I’m not going to get INTO the case because nothing about it makes sense, logic doesn’t seem to apply, and so I don’t know how to rationally judge it. I feel that’s OK because I can’t think like crazy people. I can’t fathom a mother killing her child, I can’t imagine a mother doing so and then partying for a month, or having her child kidnapped and partying and keeping it quiet for a month.

Maybe that is why the jury was swayed by the drowning story. I think they could at least imagine a mother screwing up, letting her child drown, and being so afraid of being arrested for it that a mother could go along with an abusive guy’s idea to hide the drowning and keep it quiet.

That isn’t a good logical argument, and there’s no evidence for the drowning, and I would guess that some better evidence by the prosecution could have overcome that inclination of the jury.


30 posted on 07/19/2011 10:28:48 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: Clintonfatigued
There are now charges that the prosecution kept Casey Anthony’s lawyers in the dark about evidence that could have damaged their case.

It's called exculpatory evidence and prosecutors are legally required to disclose it to the defense, though it seems like they frequently don't.

31 posted on 07/19/2011 10:37:07 PM PDT by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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To: CharlesWayneCT
A family member was part of the original search team ... I remember talking to him after some of those long - very long - stressful days looking for the child. If 'George' knew, then he also took advantage of the good people living in that community - the people who came out to help.

I live in Florida - kids drowned in pools here - no one tapes their mouths shut and dumps their little bodies in the woods. No one sends the community out to search snake infested swamps when they know the child is dead.

That said, I didn't watch the trial until it was almost over... so their story might have been 'consistent' within that one frame of reality...

32 posted on 07/20/2011 8:13:20 PM PDT by GOPJ (Honk if I'm paying for your car, your mortgage, and your big, fat Greek bailout - mewzilla)
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To: Clintonfatigued; fieldmarshaldj

I hate these cases where they probably did it but there isn’t enough evidence or the prosecution bungled. I doubt I would have convicted her either.


33 posted on 07/22/2011 5:05:57 PM PDT by Impy (Don't call me red.)
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To: Impy

I know the feeling. She’s clearly guilty of something, but I don’t know what she’s guilty of.


34 posted on 07/22/2011 5:09:43 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued (Illegal aliens collect welfare checks that Americans won't collect)
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

To me, the fact that 911 was not called after Caylee’s “drowning” is ample proof that it never occurred.


35 posted on 07/26/2011 8:49:23 PM PDT by luvbach1 (Stop Obamania in 2012)
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To: luvbach1
To me, the fact that 911 was not called after Caylee’s “drowning” is ample proof that it never occurred.

Exactly...

I would have convicted on the fact that she didn't ever report the death. Her mother did...

Not reporting the death and going out dancing is proof beyond a reasonable doubt...IMO.

36 posted on 07/27/2011 3:26:39 AM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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