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Casey Anthony Trial - Psychic Gilda Joyce is CORRECT!

Started by anagrammy, June 29, 2011, 11:50:27 PM

anagrammy

I am into it.  I get up at 5:00 am and make coffee, get the station on my computer so I'm ready for the 6:00 am start (9:00am Florida time).  Apparently me and 90,000 other murder mystery fans are hooked on this convoluted story involving a young woman murdering a two year old and apparently carrying the decomposing body around in the trunk of her car before disposing of it.  This case has it all:  sex, lies, innocence violated, murder, intrique, incest, affairs, family members testifying and confliting testimony....and a psychic clue that turned out to be RIGHT ON!

Being a Coastee, this aspect fascinated me and I can't find much more about it.  The psychic tells the mother where the body is, the mother orders a couple of n'er do well detectives to go look for the body (one of them esp is a spitting imitation of Tommy Smothers--even down to the dimwit pause).  They don't find the body, but they are directed by the psychic Gilda Joyce to the correct area where the body was later found by the meter reader.

Anybody heard of her?

Anagrammy

Afixer

If anyone happens to turn on Fox news network today they've devoted all day programming to the Anthony trial. It certainly has taken on a carnival atmosphere.
That whole family that spawned Casey is screwed up. Little wonder why she doesn't have her head completely wound on right. If it were, and she really did what she's accused of doing, could any "normal" mom ever sleep another peaceful night on this earth? Poor girl ... I think she deserves the assistance of a competent shrink more than the assistance of an executioner. But given the bloodthirsty culture we live in it's apparent nobody can wait until they redeem their pound of flesh. Pity :(

Back on topic, never heard of Gilda Joyce. She has a pretty cool website though ...
http://www.gildajoyce.com/

anagrammy

Hey, Afixer, love your avatar--you designed it yourself?   

Of course I am doing a double-take any time there is anything paranormal mentioned anywhere.  Being of a rational, scientific bent I am even more intrigued when something suggests conduits of information/communication we usually don't use.  So this Gilda Joyce was right on the money and I have not seen ONE follow up story on her.

Ed Dames for all his self-glorifying has not been successful in what you would think would be some pretty simple Remote Viewing challenges --like Osama bin Laden in suburban Pakistan right by the MILITARY complex.  He worked for the MILITARY--why couldn't he or someone on his team see that?

So I want to follow up with this lady and see what gives.

If Premiere were interested in any new people besides their tiresome merry-go-round of the same guests, get HER on the show and let's hear how she did it.

Anagrammy

Afixer

Quote from: anagrammy on July 02, 2011, 05:28:17 PM
Hey, Afixer, love your avatar--you designed it yourself? 
Anagrammy

Nah, if I remember correctly I spotted it on the Coast website awhile back and just copied it to my albums. I thought it looked neat. It's got 2003 in the top middle. The ill-fated year George officially took the helm.

anagrammy

Heh, heh.  Since 2003!  We're like Premiere herpes, we just never go away...

Ana

EvB

I have to followed the details of this case - does anyone here know how on earth the woman got off?

I don't know if mental health treatment would be effective for her or not, and I'm not particularly "bloodthirsty" - but from what little I have read, it seemed like such a slam-dunk!

I understand "innocent until proven guilty" - but I also understand how defence lawyers  will turn themselves inside out to create "reasonable doubt" (as they should, it's their job).  Does anyone know what other possible scenarios were presented that could have possibly left doubt that this woman was, at least, complicit after the fact?

onan

Quote from: EvB on July 06, 2011, 02:28:48 PM
I have to followed the details of this case - does anyone here know how on earth the woman got off?

I don't know if mental health treatment would be effective for her or not, and I'm not particularly "bloodthirsty" - but from what little I have read, it seemed like such a slam-dunk!

I understand "innocent until proven guilty" - but I also understand how defence lawyers  will turn themselves inside out to create "reasonable doubt" (as they should, it's their job).  Does anyone know what other possible scenarios were presented that could have possibly left doubt that this woman was, at least, complicit after the fact?


The jury isn't talking at least to the press.


It seems to me she is as guilty as one could possibly be.


Criminal trials are not about finding the truth. Maybe they never have been. It seems to me the best applied argument may not be the "right" argument.


I didn't follow the trial. I merely watched Bill Oreily's talking points about it on Hulu. As the trial wrapped up the mother was giggling. Having a child missing for a month and not tell anyone is crazy. Lying to mislead officials about the child is sociopathic. No treatment for that.


Perhaps the jurors could use some mental health treatment... better yet behavior modification.

Eddie Coyle


    If Casey Anthony is 5'1" 240 pounds and 45 years old...well this story doesn't get beyond the Florida daily papers in 2008. Just another dead kid. God knows how many kids are killed by their parents each year.

   Gee, what makes THIS case so fucking special? The same thing that made Alice Crimmins,Dianne Downs.Laurie Bambenek and Pamela Smart "famous". A depraved,sex obsessed media that scrapes the bottom of the barrel each day.

     It takes one imbecile to hang a jury up...but sometimes you get 12 imbeciles. That appeared to be the case in Florida. A sunny place for shady people.

     

Camper

I followed the trial and agree with the jury's verdict. The State of Florida over charged her and didn't have the evidence to back up the charges. Everyone of those jurors may have thought she was guilty  but not proven guilty.

I think the occasional guilty person who gets away with it is a sign that our justice system isn't totally broken.

EvB

Quote from: Camper on July 06, 2011, 08:28:57 PM


I think the occasional guilty person who gets away with it is a sign that our justice system isn't totally broken.


That much I agree with.  It's what the "Jury of Peers" is about, after all. 

Seamus Capone

Quote from: Camper on July 06, 2011, 08:28:57 PM
I followed the trial and agree with the jury's verdict. The State of Florida over charged her and didn't have the evidence to back up the charges. Everyone of those jurors may have thought she was guilty  but not proven guilty.

Your second sentence is absolutely on the money. It could be that a charge of negligent homicide would have stuck. Still, the delay in finding the victim's corpse really gummed up the works. That kind of evidence, in addition to the chloroform and the duct tape, probably would have led to a conviction.

Marc.Knight

If it had been a MAN that was on trial, the jury would have determined a very different verdict.

anagrammy

As you know, I have become a muu-muu-wearing, sunshade-sporting, hyphen-overusing court rubberneck over this case.  Like Camper, I agree with the verdict.  Knowing the circumstances of the death is not possible when all you have is dry bones.  There are only possibilities and probabilities.  Without going into details TMI for most of you, here's my best guess speculation: (and you know how I love spec-you-LATING):

Caylee was on the computer and not watching Caylee.  She got out, the laddar was up, she climbed in the pool.  Casie found her and saw that she was, in her opinion, dead.  She covers it up as a first thought because this is what she's done all her live, cover up and lie.  She puts duct tape on her mouth and nose to make it look like a kidnapping/murder.  She throws the body in the trunk because she doesn't have the second part of a plan made up yet.  She is so detached from reality, she doesn't even think far enough ahead to think, "A dead body in a trunk in Florida will rot and stink to high heaven."  She lives in the narcissistic world, which says, "I can pull this off and no one will know.  I'm a great liar."  She dumps the body figuring the stink will make a crocodile eat it, or fish or wildlife of whatever---maggots maybe.  She deals with the guilt and sorrow by pumping up her self-esteem at a hot body contest--I'M HOT!  I'M COOL!  I'M NOT A BAD MOTHER!

Or, as Juror 3 said, it could have been anything else.  She could have stabbed or beaten her to death, lit her on fire, chloroformed her, or she could have died naturally of a blocked heart valve.  We don't know. 

The only thing proven was that Casey Anthony is an absolute horror of a person.  She will have to move to Argentina where they don't seem to mind the criminal mind amidst them.  Here in America, she needs to have a T-shirt with a target on it, because she will never truly be free of fear again that someone, somewhere will exact their own capital punishment.

OR....she may live like OJ did.  Everywhere he went a bubble of silent accusations and stares followed him.  Polite waiters asking him very regretfully if he would mind terribly just leaving the establishment?  Yeah, there's a sentence in that but for a person like Casey, maybe notoriety is better than not being a celebrity at all.

Anagrammy

Eddie Coyle



     Casey will do a porn within 3 years. It's inevitable and I'd be genuinely shocked if it didn't happen.

    The more positive side of my crystal ball does see her being "not of this Earth" by decade's end. OD,Car Crash...something will do her in.

Seamus Capone

That's a good theory, Anagrammy. The only problem is that Casey likely got the drowning story from a woman who was jailed at the same time that she was. The woman's child drowned, and Casey likely used the woman's account to concoct her own story. It could be a fairy tale, like the stuff about the nanny and her sister.

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