I have been pondering what Leonard Padilla said a few weeks ago. In a November 18, 2008 WESH.com article Padilla states that Casey said, "They haven't even found the clothes she was wearing". Padilla believes that statement was a Freudian slip on Casey's part. He believes Casey undressed Caylee before she disposed of the body somewhere.
I don't know that I necessarily translate it that way. I was thinking it wasn't a fruedian slip at all. I think Casey was trying to get a point across. What is the first thing a kidnapper does when they kidnap a child? They dispose of the clothes! A kidnapper wants to disguise a child as much as possible. I think that statement backfired on Casey. She wanted people to think that the child has actually been kidnapped. We may never know what Casey meant by those words. If Caylee is found with no clothes, then I will have to eat my words. But if Caylee is found with clothes and they're not the ones she was last seen in, then I have to believe she wanted to try and support her story that Zenaida took her.
Below is an excerpt from the 11/18/08 article from WESH.com.
"She would drop little statements like that when she was being driven to the attorney's office and when she was being driven back when she was with Tracy," Padilla said.
"In the first information released regarding the 10 days Padilla spent with Anthony, he said her remarks rebutted what was being said on TV. A lead investigator confirms that during one of those trips, Anthony blurted out "They haven't even found the clothes she was wearing" about those searching for Caylee.
That investigator called Anthony’s comment "an important statement." So does Padilla.
"Everything's been a game to her. That statement they haven't even found the clothes yet leads us to believe the clothing were somewhere but not in proximity of the body," Padilla said."
That investigator called Anthony’s comment "an important statement." So does Padilla.
"Everything's been a game to her. That statement they haven't even found the clothes yet leads us to believe the clothing were somewhere but not in proximity of the body," Padilla said."
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