CrazyFoodNews
Saturday, 14 January 2012
Friday, 13 January 2012
Wednesday, 11 January 2012
Casey Anthony Baby Killer
Newly released court documents detailing Casey Anthony's jailhouse conversations with two psychiatrists reveal Anthony's unusually calm demeanor as she spoke about her daughter's death and her accusation that she was molested by her father and brother.
In one deposition, psychiatrist Dr. Jeffery Danziger
recounted his "puzzlement" with Anthony's "nice, sweet and pleasant
demeanor" as she sat behind bars as the prime suspect in the death of
her 2-year-old daughter Caylee Marie Anthony. Anthony, 25, was acquitted last summer.
"Her demeanor, the best way to say it, is she was calm, cooperative and
pleasant as if we were discussing someone who had a parking ticket," Danziger said in an April 7, 2011 deposition.
He notes that she was in a good mood, reading books, sleeping fine and had a good appetite.
"No feeling of guilt, not hopeless," he said.
"This is someone who is sitting in jail. Her child is missing, presumed
dead," Danziger said. "While she had not yet been charged with murder,
obviously, she's charged with crimes and is being accused by the whole
world in the disappearance of the child. You would expect that that
would provoke some measure of distress."
Danziger was taken aback by her reactions and imagined himself in her position.
"If my child was missing and I was in jail and being accused of it, I
probably wouldn't eat or wouldn't be cheerful and wouldn't be able to
read," Danziger concluded.
The second psychiatrist who interviewed Anthony, Dr. William Weitz, also noticed her lack of emotion over Caylee disappearance.
He noted Anthony's "complete separation of emotion and affect from the various questions that she's asked to respond to."
"She seems detached from a lot of her feeling and emotion, even in
times that one might expect they'd be more reactive and intense," Weitz
said.
Weitz said that her reactions could be construed as defense mechanisms,
possibly related to her accusations of years of sexual abuse from her
father George Anthony and her brother Lee Anthony.
In her interviews with the doctors she detailed accusations of sex abuse that were mentioned during her murder trial.
She said her father molested her from age 8 to 11 which Danziger
recorded as "disgusting, demeaning, intercourse, oral, everything."
Although the father stopped when she was 11 or 12, she claimed her
brother Lee molested her from age 12 to 15. "Sometimes wake up to him or
wake up bro over my head or unclasped. Wake up once his hands on my
chest," the doctor read from his notes from the interview with Anthony.
She claimed that her father assaulted her again when she was 18. "Tried
to fight back when I was older. I'm not a big person," the doctor quoted
her as saying.
Referring to her calm during the jailhouse interviews, Weitz said in his
deposition, "Clearly, Miss Anthony has adopted survivor behavior as she
advanced into adulthood, and she exhibits extreme sensitivity in areas
related to her family interactions, most specifically with father and
brother."
Weitz said that Anthony's behavior could be the same in both the
scenario that she killed Caylee and in the scenario that she did not
harm her daughter.
Full article at Yahoo.com
Comments: I am absolutely certain that she killed her baby. I truly doubt she was molested and raped by her family members. Its a big injustice to the court system, but, apparently cases like these happen often and the verdict is usually the same. I hope her career is ruined and she lives among the rats.
Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman - Drug Kingpin
EXICO CITY (AP) — The U.S. Treasury Department called Mexican drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman "the world's most powerful drug trafficker" Tuesday. The fugitive Sinaloa cartel leader also got a boost from Mexican actress Kate Del Castillo, who said she believed in Guzman more than in the government.
It was the latest in an odd series of encomiums for Guzman, who was included this year on the Forbes list of the world's richest people, with an estimated fortune of $1 billion.
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City issued a statement saying three of Guzman's alleged associates had been hit with sanctions under the drug Kingpin Act, which prohibits people in the U.S. from conducting businesses with them and freezes their U.S. assets. The two Mexican men and a Colombian allegedly aided Guzman's trafficking operations.
[Related: Sinaloa gang ramping up meth in Guatemala]
The statement quoted Adam J. Szubin, director of the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, as saying the move "marks the fourth time in the past year that OFAC has targeted and exposed the support structures of the organization led by Chapo Guzman, the world's most powerful drug trafficker."
Guzman, who escaped from a Mexican prison in 2001 in a laundry truck and has a $7 million bounty on his head, has long been recognized as Mexico's most powerful drug capo. Authorities say his Sinaloa cartel has recently been expanding abroad, building international operations in Central and South America and the Pacific.
Comments: Pretty sweet title. I wonder how he lives his life, though he is a fugitive, I can only imagine that he lives like a king in Mexico and its corruption. I think the $1 billion net worth is underestimated, with all the drugs they traffic and other illegal business they run tax free, he has got to have more.
It was the latest in an odd series of encomiums for Guzman, who was included this year on the Forbes list of the world's richest people, with an estimated fortune of $1 billion.
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City issued a statement saying three of Guzman's alleged associates had been hit with sanctions under the drug Kingpin Act, which prohibits people in the U.S. from conducting businesses with them and freezes their U.S. assets. The two Mexican men and a Colombian allegedly aided Guzman's trafficking operations.
[Related: Sinaloa gang ramping up meth in Guatemala]
The statement quoted Adam J. Szubin, director of the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, as saying the move "marks the fourth time in the past year that OFAC has targeted and exposed the support structures of the organization led by Chapo Guzman, the world's most powerful drug trafficker."
Guzman, who escaped from a Mexican prison in 2001 in a laundry truck and has a $7 million bounty on his head, has long been recognized as Mexico's most powerful drug capo. Authorities say his Sinaloa cartel has recently been expanding abroad, building international operations in Central and South America and the Pacific.
Comments: Pretty sweet title. I wonder how he lives his life, though he is a fugitive, I can only imagine that he lives like a king in Mexico and its corruption. I think the $1 billion net worth is underestimated, with all the drugs they traffic and other illegal business they run tax free, he has got to have more.
Little Dog to Big Puppy
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