Cindy Anthony Defends Daughter, Calls Her a 'Victim'
Cindy Anthony defends daughter charged with murder of toddler daughter Caylee.
Nov. 11, 2008 — -- Casey Anthony, who has been charged with murder in the disappearance of her toddler daughter, is also a victim in the tragic case, her mother, Cindy Anthony, said today.
Casey Anthony, 22, is in jail on charges of first-degree murder and manslaughter related to the disappearance of her daughter Caylee, who would now be 3 years old and has not been seen since June. Casey Anthony has pleaded not guilty to all of the charges.
"Casey's been a victim in this as well. Casey's been grieving for her daughter," Cindy Anthony said today on "Good Morning America," adding that she has not given up hope that her young granddaughter is still alive.
"You know, this child -- everybody in America, anybody that has seen videos of Caylee, just still pictures of her, Caylee has captured their hearts. So why is it so unbelievable that someone wouldn't want to take Caylee as their own?"
About 1,400 volunteers searched for Caylee near Orlando, Fla., this weekend, but found no sign of the missing girl.
"There is no evidence that proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that Caylee is dead," Cindy Anthony said.
She blamed law enforcement officials, who she said are not doing enough to find the girl.
"There's never been an Amber Alert put out on Caylee," she said. "You know, the bottom line is, we thought as a family, within a couple days, within a week, that no one was actually giving Caylee 100 percent effort in looking for her."
Documents recently released by Florida prosecutors suggest that at least some family members suspected Casey Anthony might have something to do with the girl's disappearance.
George Anthony, Caylee's grandfather, suspected foul play when he smelled a horrific odor coming from the trunk of his daughter's car after he picked it up from a wrecking yard, according to the documents.
"I believe that there's something dead back there," George Anthony, a former police officer, said to investigators.
"When I first went there to pick up that vehicle, I got within three feet of it I could smell something. You look up and you say, 'Please don't let this be. Please don't let this be.'"