Last Update on the Left - Episode 15 - Casey Anthony Revisited
Casey Anthony's Firefox history contained searches for "foolproof suffocation methods" — evidence that was never shown to the jury because cops only checked her Internet Explorer history.
Last Podcast On The Left
Last Update on the Left - Episode 15 - Casey Anthony Revisited
Casey Anthony's Firefox history contained searches for "foolproof suffocation methods" — evidence that was never shown to the jury because cops only checked her Internet Explorer history.
TL;DR
Casey Anthony's post-acquittal life gets a full autopsy from the Last Podcast on the Left crew. Marcus Parks, Henry Zebrowski, and Ed Larson cover her scrapped low-budget confessional film, the Peacock docuseries "Where the Truth Lies" and its shifting abuse allegations, the lie detector special with George and Cindy Anthony, multiple failed lawsuits, a bar fight with her "arch nemesis," and her shopping a reality show comparing herself to Kim Kardashian [1] — Marcus Parks "After Casey's acquittal, Florida's Department of Children and Families released a report concluding Casey failed to protect Caylee — either…" 22:22 . The single most useful takeaway: Casey Anthony's Firefox browser history contained searches for "foolproof suffocation methods" — evidence never introduced at trial [2] — Marcus Parks "Firefox history: 'foolproof suffocation methods': Casey Anthony's Firefox browser history contained searches including 'foolproof suffocati…" 33:00 .
Revisiting the Casey Anthony case — the 2011 murder trial that gripped the nation — with updates on her post-acquittal life including a scrapped confessional film, the Peacock docuseries, lawsuits, and her parents' lie detector special.
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The cold open drops listeners straight into the chaos with a cryptic cannibalism joke, followed by the show's signature absurdist riff. Henry Zebrowski and Ed Larson trade barbs about Casey Anthony's lifestyle in South Florida, debating whether motherhood enhances or detracts from the experience of partying in Broward County. There's a quick aside about Zebrowski's marriage and his admiration for 'strong Midwestern stock,' before Marcus Parks finally cuts through the noise to formally introduce the episode. The segment establishes the show's tone — irreverent, dark, and gleefully inappropriate — before settling into the actual update.
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Marcus Parks anchors the discussion by flagging that the last time LPOTL covered Casey Anthony was Episode 307, where they ended on the 'Xanny the Nanny' Firefox theory — police never checked Firefox and missed damning searches. Henry Zebrowski adds that Jose Baez's post-trial book revealed the attorney and Casey had a romantic relationship after the acquittal, noting with characteristic bluntness that 'nothing makes a lady wetter than getting acquitted of murder.' The hosts broadly agree that Casey's response to infamy — leaning into the spotlight rather than retreating — is genuinely unusual. Marcus Parks declares her 'a busier beaver than Casey Anthony since her acquittal,' with only John Hinckley giving her a run for her money.
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Marcus Parks details the most audacious item in Casey Anthony's post-acquittal media portfolio: a planned self-starring movie called 'As I Was Told.' The film's premise was that Casey was acting under instruction from an unnamed man who took Caylee's body and told her to live normally. An anonymous source 'close to Casey' (almost certainly Casey) told reporters the film would include racy scenes depicting how she became pregnant — essentially a Caylee origin story. Casey demanded full creative control, planned to film in North Carolina on a low budget, and told press it would be a low-grade production. The COVID-19 pandemic, alongside multiple other unnamed factors, derailed the project before filming ever began. [1] — Marcus Parks "In 2019, Casey Anthony planned to star as herself in a low-budget movie called 'As I Was Told' — a 'racy and explicit' film that would open…" 07:58 The hosts respond with mock outrage and barely contained delight.
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Marcus Parks walks through the legal aftermath of the acquittal, covering three significant defamation and restitution suits against Casey Anthony. First, Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez — the real woman who shared a name with Casey's fictional babysitter — sued after losing her job, her home, and receiving death threats. [1] — Marcus Parks "Zenaida Gonzalez lost job and home over false accusation: Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, falsely named by Casey as 'Zanny the Nanny' who kidna…" 15:06 The case was dismissed because a judge ruled Casey hadn't specifically named Fernandez Gonzalez as Caylee's murderer. Next, Texas EquiSearch, a volunteer search group, deployed 4,200 personnel and $112,000 in donated funds searching for Caylee across two years — and sued Casey for $100,000 after her trial revealed she'd known Caylee was dead the whole time. [2] — Marcus Parks "Texas EquiSearch sued for $100,000: Volunteer search group Texas EquiSearch sued Casey Anthony for $100,000 after investing $112,000 in don…" 17:57 Finally, utility worker Roy Cronk, whose accidental discovery of Caylee's skull kicked off a defamation claim after Casey's attorneys publicly branded him a killer and child snatcher. Cronk's case was stalled for five years by Casey's bankruptcy filing before being dismissed in 2020. The hosts note the grotesque irony that Fernandez Gonzalez was later arrested for credit card theft, stealing from a cancer patient at a Florida motel.
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Marcus Parks describes how Caylee Anthony's remains were found entirely by accident: utility worker Roy Cronk stepped off the job to urinate in a wooded area close to the Anthony home, kicked what he assumed was a garbage bag, and Caylee's skull rolled out. [1] — Marcus Parks "Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains were discovered by accident. A utility worker named Roy Cronk wandered off into a wooded area near the An…" 23:05 Cronk's name would later become entangled in Casey's defense strategy, with her attorneys publicly calling him a child snatcher and killer. Marcus Parks then turns to the Florida DCF's post-acquittal investigation, which produced the first official document to formally assign responsibility for Caylee's death to Casey Anthony. The report, while lacking legal teeth, verified three allegations of abuse, death, failure to protect, and threatened harm — and could be used in any future child custody proceedings if Casey were to have another child. The hosts note the dark irony of DCF beginning its review in 2008 only to be given the cold shoulder by the Anthonys after Caylee's remains were found.
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Marcus Parks and Henry Zebrowski dig into the Peacock docuseries, which represented a seismic shift in Casey's account of events. [1] — Henry Zebrowski "The Peacock docuseries 'Where the Truth Lies' marked Casey Anthony's most dramatic story revision yet. What started as the Xanny the Nanny …" 18:29 Where earlier tellings centered on a mysterious nanny or accidental drowning, 'Where the Truth Lies' introduced a far darker backstory: routine sexual abuse by both her father and her brother throughout her childhood, an experience the hosts compare to Elisabeth Fritzl's imprisonment. Casey also claimed that Caylee may have been the product of incest-based rape, and that George Anthony killed Caylee by smothering her during a molestation. The hosts are particularly skeptical of Casey's vocal affect during the serious portions of the interview — Zebrowski notes she drops into a specific solemn tone that they find unconvincing. The central question they raise: if this were true, why wasn't it front and center from day one?
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The episode briefly detours into the Menendez brothers case, with the hosts debating whether their potential resentencing is just. Henry Zebrowski takes the hardest position: murder should remain the uncrossable line, regardless of what abuse was suffered, because he knows many abuse survivors who never killed anyone. Ed Larson points out that even if the father's abuse was genuine, the brothers still shot their mother in the face — a woman who was arguably also a victim trapped in the same abusive dynamic. Marcus Parks says he fully believes the abuse occurred but isn't sure whether the brothers genuinely feared for their lives. The tangent circles back to Casey Anthony: unlike the Menendez case, Casey's parents are alive and able to challenge her accusations, which they did — by taking and passing polygraph tests.
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After the Peacock docuseries blindsided George and Cindy Anthony with abuse allegations they say they were never warned about, the couple appeared on an A&E special structured around lie detector tests administered by an FBI examiner. [1] — Marcus Parks "George and Cindy Anthony agreed to take an FBI-administered polygraph on their A&E special to refute Casey's abuse allegations. Cindy told …" 34:55 Marcus Parks describes the special as harrowing: two people in visible, unrelenting grief, surrounded by a home that has become a mausoleum to Caylee — pictures covering every surface. Both George and Cindy passed the polygraph. Henry Zebrowski, who generally distrusts polygraphs, notes that the added pressure of Cindy's pre-test ultimatum ('fail and we divorce') actually makes George's passing result more credible. The hosts unanimously conclude that George Anthony had nothing to do with Caylee's death, and that Casey's abuse allegations are fabrications designed to shift blame.
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Marcus Parks reconstructs the collapse of the Anthony family relationship. Cindy was surprisingly still in civil contact with Casey as late as 2016, when they met briefly after the death of Cindy's father. The final break came over Caylee's ashes: Casey demanded them, Cindy refused, and Casey threatened violence. In her final message to her daughter, Cindy sent a photograph of the garbage bag in which Caylee's skeletal remains were discovered, with the message 'You put her there.' [1] — Marcus Parks "The last contact between Cindy and Casey Anthony ended with Cindy sending Casey a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's skeletal remains were d…" 37:45 Cindy has also said she plans to scatter Caylee's ashes before she dies so Casey can never claim them. The hosts briefly debate the legal technicality of whether Casey, as Caylee's mother, could actually sue for the ashes — with Zebrowski reluctantly conceding she probably could legally. George Anthony's parting words about his daughter sum it up simply: 'You blew it.'
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Marcus Parks walks through Casey's more recent tabloid headlines. In 2021, she was involved in a drink-throwing altercation at O'Shea's Irish Pub in West Palm Beach with a woman named Thelma Moya, whom Casey described as her 'arch nemesis.' Their shared connection was an ex-boyfriend, though Moya told Fox News the dispute had nothing to do with him and there was 'more to it' she wished not to say. Most recently, Casey has been photographed moving boxes into a new home — the Daily Mail documented it extensively — as she apparently prepares to move in with a man named Tyson Rhodes, who left his wife and two daughters for her. The hosts note that there must be 'something about her' that attracts this kind of disruption, while acknowledging that Rhodes has what Ed Larson generously describes as 'that piece of shit face.'
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Marcus Parks reveals that Casey's ambitions for a media career predate the Peacock docuseries by years. Since 2018, she has been pitching 'Casey Moving Forward,' a reality show centered on her West Palm Beach dating life and strained parental relationship. On a private Twitter account, she boasted about meetings and compared herself to Kim Kardashian, saying if Kim's family succeeded despite public hatred, so could she. [1] — Marcus Parks "Since 2018, Casey Anthony has been pitching a reality show called 'Casey Moving Forward,' boasting about it on a private Twitter account an…" 45:20 An anonymous network executive told reporters the pitch was 'a losing bet' — the initial audience would be massive, but her life wasn't interesting enough to sustain it, and the backlash would be brutal. He admitted he'd watch it anyway. Henry Zebrowski and Marcus Parks close the segment by dissecting what makes Casey so distinctive among true crime figures: she hasn't hidden. She's built her public presence around keeping the question of her daughter's death alive as an entertainment product, making it a 'will they, won't they' franchise about a child's murder.
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Marcus Parks recalls an old LPOTL pitch: a Casey Anthony and OJ Simpson joint show called 'I Didn't Do It,' a concept that delighted the hosts. Ed Larson suggests Casey start a podcast with Bill Cosby, which spirals predictably. Henry Zebrowski signs off with 'Casey, call me' before Marcus Parks closes by directing listeners to Patreon, the Side Stories YouTube channel, TikTok and Instagram at @LPontheleft, and live shows including a King's Theatre date on December 7th. Marcus Parks gives a special plug to LPN Funhouse, which he got so sucked into watching post-Iceland that he stayed up until 2 AM despite a 6 AM flight. Zebrowski closes formally on behalf of The Last Podcast Network.
- Zanny the Nanny
- Casey Anthony's fabricated babysitter whose name was a coded reference to Xanax ('Xanny'), which Casey allegedly used to sedate Caylee before going out; the name was also falsely applied to a real woman, Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez.
- DCF
- Department of Children and Families — Florida's state agency responsible for child welfare investigations. The Florida DCF released a post-acquittal report placing responsibility for Caylee's death on Casey Anthony.
- Caylee's Law
- State legislation passed in various US states after the Casey Anthony acquittal, making it a criminal offense for a parent or guardian to fail to report a missing or dead child within a specified time period.
- Texas EquiSearch
- A Texas-based volunteer search and rescue organization that spent $112,000 of donor funds and deployed 4,200 personnel over two years searching for Caylee Anthony, later suing Casey for reimbursement.
- Jose Baez
- Casey Anthony's lead defense attorney, credited with securing her acquittal and later revealed to have had a personal relationship with Casey after the trial.
- polygraph
- A lie detector test that measures physiological responses like heart rate and blood pressure; considered scientifically unreliable but used as a publicity device in George and Cindy Anthony's A&E special.
- Where the Truth Lies
- The 2022 Peacock docuseries in which Casey Anthony presented a revised version of events, alleging systemic sexual abuse by her father and brother; titled with an intentional double meaning.
- MKUltra
- A covert CIA mind-control research program active in the 1950s–70s; referenced here as a fringe conspiracy theory claiming Casey Anthony's mother was an MKUltra sleeper agent.
- double indemnity
- Used loosely here to mean double jeopardy — the constitutional protection preventing a person from being tried twice for the same crime after acquittal. Henry Zebrowski invokes it to note Casey cannot be retried for Caylee's murder.
- sociopath
- Informal term for someone with antisocial personality disorder, characterized by persistent disregard for others, lack of empathy, and manipulative behavior; applied by Henry Zebrowski to Casey Anthony's craving for public attention.
- Roy Cronk
- The utility worker who accidentally discovered Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains in a wooded area near the Anthony home and later filed a defamation lawsuit against Casey Anthony and her attorneys.
- pathological liar
- A person who lies compulsively and habitually, often without clear motive; applied by the hosts to Casey Anthony to reject the theory that her dishonesty stems from childhood trauma.
- paramour
- An archaic or literary word for a romantic partner, especially an illicit one; used by Henry Zebrowski to describe bounty hunter Leonard Padilla's relationship with Casey Anthony.
- transmute
- To change or transform in form, nature, or substance; used by Henry Zebrowski to describe how Casey's defense narrative shifted and evolved over time from one story to another.
Chapter 2 · 01:10
Catching Up on Casey: Where We Last Left Off
Marcus Parks anchors the discussion by flagging that the last time LPOTL covered Casey Anthony was Episode 307, where they ended on the 'Xanny the Nanny' Firefox theory — police never checked Firefox and missed damning searches. Henry Zebrowski adds that Jose Baez's post-trial book revealed the attorney and Casey had a romantic relationship after the acquittal, noting with characteristic bluntness that 'nothing makes a lady wetter than getting acquitted of murder.' The hosts broadly agree that Casey's response to infamy — leaning into the spotlight rather than retreating — is genuinely unusual. Marcus Parks declares her 'a busier beaver than Casey Anthony since her acquittal,' with only John Hinckley giving her a run for her money.
Chapter 3 · 06:20
The Scrapped Sex Film: 'As I Was Told'
Marcus Parks details the most audacious item in Casey Anthony's post-acquittal media portfolio: a planned self-starring movie called 'As I Was Told.' The film's premise was that Casey was acting under instruction from an unnamed man who took Caylee's body and told her to live normally. An anonymous source 'close to Casey' (almost certainly Casey) told reporters the film would include racy scenes depicting how she became pregnant — essentially a Caylee origin story. Casey demanded full creative control, planned to film in North Carolina on a low budget, and told press it would be a low-grade production. The COVID-19 pandemic, alongside multiple other unnamed factors, derailed the project before filming ever began. [1] — Marcus Parks "In 2019, Casey Anthony planned to star as herself in a low-budget movie called 'As I Was Told' — a 'racy and explicit' film that would open…" 07:58 The hosts respond with mock outrage and barely contained delight.
Claims made here
Casey Anthony planned a low-budget confessional film called 'As I Was Told' in 2019, in which she would play herself and depict how she became pregnant with Caylee, but COVID-19 killed the project.
Casey Anthony was convicted of check fraud for stealing a friend's checkbook and writing checks totaling $605.
In 2019, Casey Anthony planned to star as herself in a low-budget movie called 'As I Was Told' — a 'racy and explicit' film that would open with scenes depicting how she became pregnant with Caylee. She demanded full editorial control. COVID killed it before it could be made.
Casey Anthony's planned low-budget confessional movie 'As I Was Told,' in which she would play herself and depict racy scenes, was effectively killed when the COVID-19 pandemic stopped production momentum.
Separate from the murder trial, Casey Anthony was convicted of check fraud for stealing her friend's checkbook and writing bad checks totaling $605.
Chapter 4 · 10:20
Lawsuits: Zanny the Nanny, Texas EquiSearch, and Roy Cronk
Marcus Parks walks through the legal aftermath of the acquittal, covering three significant defamation and restitution suits against Casey Anthony. First, Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez — the real woman who shared a name with Casey's fictional babysitter — sued after losing her job, her home, and receiving death threats. [1] — Marcus Parks "Zenaida Gonzalez lost job and home over false accusation: Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, falsely named by Casey as 'Zanny the Nanny' who kidna…" 15:06 The case was dismissed because a judge ruled Casey hadn't specifically named Fernandez Gonzalez as Caylee's murderer. Next, Texas EquiSearch, a volunteer search group, deployed 4,200 personnel and $112,000 in donated funds searching for Caylee across two years — and sued Casey for $100,000 after her trial revealed she'd known Caylee was dead the whole time. [2] — Marcus Parks "Texas EquiSearch sued for $100,000: Volunteer search group Texas EquiSearch sued Casey Anthony for $100,000 after investing $112,000 in don…" 17:57 Finally, utility worker Roy Cronk, whose accidental discovery of Caylee's skull kicked off a defamation claim after Casey's attorneys publicly branded him a killer and child snatcher. Cronk's case was stalled for five years by Casey's bankruptcy filing before being dismissed in 2020. The hosts note the grotesque irony that Fernandez Gonzalez was later arrested for credit card theft, stealing from a cancer patient at a Florida motel.
Claims made here
Casey Anthony did not report her daughter Caylee missing for 31 days.
Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, falsely named as 'Zanny the Nanny,' lost her job, lost her home, and received death threats as a result of Casey Anthony's accusation.
Texas EquiSearch invested $112,000 of donor-funded resources and deployed 4,200 personnel over two years searching for Caylee Anthony, then sued Casey Anthony for $100,000.
Zanny the Nanny wasn't a real person — it was Xanax. Casey Anthony allegedly sedated Caylee with the drug to keep her quiet while she went out partying. An innocent woman named Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, who shared a similar-sounding name, lost her job, her home, and received death threats as a result of Casey's fabrication.
Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, falsely named by Casey as 'Zanny the Nanny' who kidnapped Caylee, lost her job, lost her house, and received death threats as a result.
Texas EquiSearch, a volunteer search group, deployed 4,200 personnel and $112,000 in donor funds over two years hunting for Caylee Anthony — all while Casey reportedly knew her daughter was already dead. The group sued Casey for $100,000 to recoup those wasted resources.
Volunteer search group Texas EquiSearch sued Casey Anthony for $100,000 after investing $112,000 in donor-funded resources and 4,200 personnel over 2 years searching for Caylee, who Casey already knew was dead.
Texas EquiSearch invested $112,000 of donated resources in the search for Caylee Anthony, a search Casey knew was pointless because she knew Caylee was dead.
The Peacock docuseries 'Where the Truth Lies' marked Casey Anthony's most dramatic story revision yet. What started as the Xanny the Nanny kidnapping tale evolved into claims of a Joseph Fritzl-style house of horrors, with Casey alleging lifelong molestation by both her father and brother — and claiming Caylee was also possibly a product of incest. The hosts weren't buying it.
Chapter 5 · 18:30
Caylee's Body Discovery and the DCF Report
Marcus Parks describes how Caylee Anthony's remains were found entirely by accident: utility worker Roy Cronk stepped off the job to urinate in a wooded area close to the Anthony home, kicked what he assumed was a garbage bag, and Caylee's skull rolled out. [1] — Marcus Parks "Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains were discovered by accident. A utility worker named Roy Cronk wandered off into a wooded area near the An…" 23:05 Cronk's name would later become entangled in Casey's defense strategy, with her attorneys publicly calling him a child snatcher and killer. Marcus Parks then turns to the Florida DCF's post-acquittal investigation, which produced the first official document to formally assign responsibility for Caylee's death to Casey Anthony. The report, while lacking legal teeth, verified three allegations of abuse, death, failure to protect, and threatened harm — and could be used in any future child custody proceedings if Casey were to have another child. The hosts note the dark irony of DCF beginning its review in 2008 only to be given the cold shoulder by the Anthonys after Caylee's remains were found.
Claims made here
Florida's DCF released a report concluding that Casey Anthony failed to protect Caylee from harm, resulting in her death — the first official report to formally assign responsibility to Casey.
Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains were accidentally discovered by utility worker Roy Cronk, who kicked a garbage bag in a wooded area near the Anthony home.
After Casey's acquittal, Florida's Department of Children and Families released a report concluding Casey failed to protect Caylee — either through her actions or inaction — resulting in Caylee's death. It was the first official document to formally assign responsibility to Casey. While it carries no legal weight, it could be used in any future child custody proceedings.
Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains were discovered by accident. A utility worker named Roy Cronk wandered off into a wooded area near the Anthony home to urinate, kicked what he thought was a garbage bag, and Caylee's skull tumbled out.
Caylee Anthony's remains were discovered when a utility worker wandered off the job to urinate in a wooded area near the Anthony home, kicked a garbage bag, and Caylee's skull rolled out.
Chapter 6 · 23:20
The Peacock Docuseries: 'Where the Truth Lies'
Marcus Parks and Henry Zebrowski dig into the Peacock docuseries, which represented a seismic shift in Casey's account of events. [1] — Henry Zebrowski "The Peacock docuseries 'Where the Truth Lies' marked Casey Anthony's most dramatic story revision yet. What started as the Xanny the Nanny …" 18:29 Where earlier tellings centered on a mysterious nanny or accidental drowning, 'Where the Truth Lies' introduced a far darker backstory: routine sexual abuse by both her father and her brother throughout her childhood, an experience the hosts compare to Elisabeth Fritzl's imprisonment. Casey also claimed that Caylee may have been the product of incest-based rape, and that George Anthony killed Caylee by smothering her during a molestation. The hosts are particularly skeptical of Casey's vocal affect during the serious portions of the interview — Zebrowski notes she drops into a specific solemn tone that they find unconvincing. The central question they raise: if this were true, why wasn't it front and center from day one?
Claims made here
Roy Cronk's defamation lawsuit against Casey Anthony was stalled for five years due to Casey's bankruptcy filing, and was ultimately dismissed by Judge Virginia Hernandez Covington in 2020.
A brief Menendez brothers tangent turns into the episode's most substantive moral debate. Henry Zebrowski argued that murder should remain an uncrossable line regardless of abuse, while noting the key difference from Casey's case: Lyle and Erik's parents were alive and couldn't refute the accusations. Casey's parents, alive and fighting back, took and passed polygraph tests.
Utility worker Roy Cronk's defamation lawsuit against Casey Anthony was stalled for 5 years due to Casey's bankruptcy filing, and was ultimately dismissed in 2020.
Chapter 7 · 25:03
Menendez Brothers Sidebar
The episode briefly detours into the Menendez brothers case, with the hosts debating whether their potential resentencing is just. Henry Zebrowski takes the hardest position: murder should remain the uncrossable line, regardless of what abuse was suffered, because he knows many abuse survivors who never killed anyone. Ed Larson points out that even if the father's abuse was genuine, the brothers still shot their mother in the face — a woman who was arguably also a victim trapped in the same abusive dynamic. Marcus Parks says he fully believes the abuse occurred but isn't sure whether the brothers genuinely feared for their lives. The tangent circles back to Casey Anthony: unlike the Menendez case, Casey's parents are alive and able to challenge her accusations, which they did — by taking and passing polygraph tests.
Chapter 8 · 28:20
The Anthony Parents: The Lie Detector Test
After the Peacock docuseries blindsided George and Cindy Anthony with abuse allegations they say they were never warned about, the couple appeared on an A&E special structured around lie detector tests administered by an FBI examiner. [1] — Marcus Parks "George and Cindy Anthony agreed to take an FBI-administered polygraph on their A&E special to refute Casey's abuse allegations. Cindy told …" 34:55 Marcus Parks describes the special as harrowing: two people in visible, unrelenting grief, surrounded by a home that has become a mausoleum to Caylee — pictures covering every surface. Both George and Cindy passed the polygraph. Henry Zebrowski, who generally distrusts polygraphs, notes that the added pressure of Cindy's pre-test ultimatum ('fail and we divorce') actually makes George's passing result more credible. The hosts unanimously conclude that George Anthony had nothing to do with Caylee's death, and that Casey's abuse allegations are fabrications designed to shift blame.
Claims made here
Caylee Anthony's body was found with tape over her mouth and nose and was bound inside a bag; investigators believe she died from asphyxiation rather than drowning.
Police investigators checked Casey Anthony's Internet Explorer browser history but never examined her Firefox browser history, which contained searches for 'foolproof suffocation methods.'
Casey Anthony did not report her daughter Caylee missing for 31 days, which at the time was not itself a crime, but later prompted states to pass variations of Caylee's Law.
Following the Casey Anthony acquittal, multiple states passed variations of Caylee's Law, making it a crime not to report a missing child within a specified timeframe.
Casey Anthony's Firefox browser history contained searches for 'foolproof suffocation methods' and questions about how long asphyxiation takes to kill. None of it was ever shown to the jury because investigators only checked her Internet Explorer history — a catastrophic technological oversight that effectively handed her an acquittal.
Casey Anthony's Firefox browser history contained searches including 'foolproof suffocation methods,' but police only checked her Internet Explorer history, so this evidence was never introduced at trial.
Chapter 9 · 34:10
The Ashes, the Last Argument, and Cindy's Final Text
Marcus Parks reconstructs the collapse of the Anthony family relationship. Cindy was surprisingly still in civil contact with Casey as late as 2016, when they met briefly after the death of Cindy's father. The final break came over Caylee's ashes: Casey demanded them, Cindy refused, and Casey threatened violence. In her final message to her daughter, Cindy sent a photograph of the garbage bag in which Caylee's skeletal remains were discovered, with the message 'You put her there.' [1] — Marcus Parks "The last contact between Cindy and Casey Anthony ended with Cindy sending Casey a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's skeletal remains were d…" 37:45 Cindy has also said she plans to scatter Caylee's ashes before she dies so Casey can never claim them. The hosts briefly debate the legal technicality of whether Casey, as Caylee's mother, could actually sue for the ashes — with Zebrowski reluctantly conceding she probably could legally. George Anthony's parting words about his daughter sum it up simply: 'You blew it.'
Claims made here
Both George and Cindy Anthony passed an FBI-administered polygraph test on their A&E special, with Cindy having threatened to divorce George if he failed.
The last communication between Cindy and Casey Anthony was Cindy sending Casey a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's remains were found in with the message 'You put her there.'
George and Cindy Anthony agreed to take an FBI-administered polygraph on their A&E special to refute Casey's abuse allegations. Cindy told George beforehand she would divorce him if he failed. Both passed. Henry Zebrowski noted that passing while knowing everything was on the line actually made the result more convincing.
George and Cindy Anthony both passed an FBI-administered polygraph test on their A&E special, with Cindy having threatened divorce if George failed.
The last contact between Cindy and Casey Anthony ended with Cindy sending Casey a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's skeletal remains were discovered in, with the message: 'You put her there.' It came after Casey threatened to show up and take Caylee's ashes by force.
In their final communication, Cindy Anthony sent Casey a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's body was found in with the message 'You put her there.'
Chapter 10 · 40:00
The Bar Fight, Tyson Rhodes, and Moving to Tennessee
Marcus Parks walks through Casey's more recent tabloid headlines. In 2021, she was involved in a drink-throwing altercation at O'Shea's Irish Pub in West Palm Beach with a woman named Thelma Moya, whom Casey described as her 'arch nemesis.' Their shared connection was an ex-boyfriend, though Moya told Fox News the dispute had nothing to do with him and there was 'more to it' she wished not to say. Most recently, Casey has been photographed moving boxes into a new home — the Daily Mail documented it extensively — as she apparently prepares to move in with a man named Tyson Rhodes, who left his wife and two daughters for her. The hosts note that there must be 'something about her' that attracts this kind of disruption, while acknowledging that Rhodes has what Ed Larson generously describes as 'that piece of shit face.'
Chapter 11 · 43:20
Casey Moving Forward: The Reality Show Pitch
Marcus Parks reveals that Casey's ambitions for a media career predate the Peacock docuseries by years. Since 2018, she has been pitching 'Casey Moving Forward,' a reality show centered on her West Palm Beach dating life and strained parental relationship. On a private Twitter account, she boasted about meetings and compared herself to Kim Kardashian, saying if Kim's family succeeded despite public hatred, so could she. [1] — Marcus Parks "Since 2018, Casey Anthony has been pitching a reality show called 'Casey Moving Forward,' boasting about it on a private Twitter account an…" 45:20 An anonymous network executive told reporters the pitch was 'a losing bet' — the initial audience would be massive, but her life wasn't interesting enough to sustain it, and the backlash would be brutal. He admitted he'd watch it anyway. Henry Zebrowski and Marcus Parks close the segment by dissecting what makes Casey so distinctive among true crime figures: she hasn't hidden. She's built her public presence around keeping the question of her daughter's death alive as an entertainment product, making it a 'will they, won't they' franchise about a child's murder.
Claims made here
Since 2018, Casey Anthony has been shopping a reality show called 'Casey Moving Forward,' and on a private Twitter account compared herself to Kim Kardashian.
Since 2018, Casey Anthony has been pitching a reality show called 'Casey Moving Forward,' boasting about it on a private Twitter account and comparing herself to Kim Kardashian. One anonymous network executive said it was a losing bet — but admitted he'd watch it anyway.
Since 2018, Casey Anthony has been pitching a reality show called 'Casey Moving Forward' centered on her West Palm Beach dating life and strained relationship with her parents.
In a private Twitter account, Casey Anthony boasted about meetings for her planned reality show 'Casey Moving Forward,' comparing herself to Kim Kardashian and saying if Kim's family made it big despite hate, so could she.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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The central subject of the episode — acquitted in 2011 of murdering her daughter Caylee, and discussed in terms of her post-trial media activity, lawsuits, and documentary appearances.
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Casey Anthony's 2-year-old daughter whose death in 2008 and the subsequent trial became a national media sensation; her remains were found near the Anthony home.
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Casey Anthony's father, falsely accused by Casey of molesting her and covering up Caylee's death; appeared on A&E's lie detector special and passed the test.
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Casey Anthony's mother who appeared on the A&E lie detector special, passed a polygraph, and in her final communication with Casey sent a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's body was found in.
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Lyle and Erik Menendez, convicted of murdering their parents; discussed as a parallel case to Casey Anthony in terms of abuse defenses and the morality of murder in response to trauma.
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An innocent woman falsely named by Casey Anthony as 'Zanny the Nanny' who kidnapped Caylee; she lost her job, home, and received death threats, and later filed a defamation lawsuit against Casey.
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Casey Anthony's defense attorney credited with securing her acquittal; later revealed to have had a romantic relationship with Casey and wrote a book about the case.
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Utility worker who accidentally discovered Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains and subsequently filed a defamation lawsuit against Casey Anthony and her legal team.
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The man who shot President Reagan, mentioned briefly as a comparison case of a high-profile criminal who found post-notoriety public life, having uploaded songs to YouTube.
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NBCUniversal's streaming platform that produced the Casey Anthony docuseries 'Where the Truth Lies' in 2022.
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A Texas-based volunteer search group that spent $112,000 and 4,200 personnel searching for Caylee Anthony, then sued Casey Anthony for $100,000.
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Television network that aired 'Casey Anthony's Parents: The Lie Detector Test,' featuring George and Cindy Anthony responding to Casey's abuse allegations.
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The main show on The Last Podcast Network; referenced as the source of the original Casey Anthony series (Episode 307) that this update follows up on.
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The state where Casey Anthony lived, where Caylee's remains were found, and where the trial took place; repeatedly invoked as a cultural shorthand for Casey's lifestyle.
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This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Police investigators checked Casey Anthony's Internet Explorer browser history but never examined her Firefox browser history, which contained searches for 'foolproof suffocation methods.'
Casey Anthony did not report her daughter Caylee missing for 31 days.
Texas EquiSearch invested $112,000 of donor-funded resources and deployed 4,200 personnel over two years searching for Caylee Anthony, then sued Casey Anthony for $100,000.
Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, falsely named as 'Zanny the Nanny,' lost her job, lost her home, and received death threats as a result of Casey Anthony's accusation.
Casey Anthony was convicted of check fraud for stealing a friend's checkbook and writing checks totaling $605.
Florida's DCF released a report concluding that Casey Anthony failed to protect Caylee from harm, resulting in her death — the first official report to formally assign responsibility to Casey.
Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains were accidentally discovered by utility worker Roy Cronk, who kicked a garbage bag in a wooded area near the Anthony home.
Roy Cronk's defamation lawsuit against Casey Anthony was stalled for five years due to Casey's bankruptcy filing, and was ultimately dismissed by Judge Virginia Hernandez Covington in 2020.
Both George and Cindy Anthony passed an FBI-administered polygraph test on their A&E special, with Cindy having threatened to divorce George if he failed.
Casey Anthony planned a low-budget confessional film called 'As I Was Told' in 2019, in which she would play herself and depict how she became pregnant with Caylee, but COVID-19 killed the project.
Since 2018, Casey Anthony has been shopping a reality show called 'Casey Moving Forward,' and on a private Twitter account compared herself to Kim Kardashian.
The last communication between Cindy and Casey Anthony was Cindy sending Casey a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's remains were found in with the message 'You put her there.'
Caylee Anthony's body was found with tape over her mouth and nose and was bound inside a bag; investigators believe she died from asphyxiation rather than drowning.
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