by MiShel Wed Jun 01, 2011 1:29 pm
I FIGURED IT OUT. Casey was looking up "neck-breaking" and how to make chloroform....not to kill Caylee (who was already dead, probably from an overdose of something) but in order to kill her parents. She told her boyfriend that it wouldn't be long before he could come over to "her" house and stay there. In real life, this could only happen over Cindy's (and George's) dead bodies. They would be chloroformed and then have their necks broken. This is when Casey planned to go to police and tell them that Caylee has been kidnapped. In this fabrication, Casey, playing the good mother and daughter, would say she looked for Caylee on her own and did not tell the police or anyone else about the baby's disappearance BECAUSE the kidnappers threatened her family. Her comments when jailed were made to lead Cindy to believe that the family was in danger from the mysterious, non-existent kidnappers. Cindy said to forget it, she was not afraid for herself--only Caylee's safety mattered. In Casey's scenario, that she would have made to the cops IF SHE HAD ONLY HAD ONE MORE DAY (remember she begged her Mom for one more day and everyone wondered why...)...this is why: she would have killed her parents and then said that the kidnappers finally made good on their threats. Casey would inherit the house and some drug and booze money, be free of the family pressures and she could live the BEAUTIFUL LIFE with her new boyfriend Tony. Her brother was already off, living his own life and he would not be likely to interfere with her. Lee would be distraught and would want her to have a start (i.e.; the house). SInce Cindy messed up this plan (and probably saved her own and her husband's lives), Casey is EVEN MORE ANGRY at her than she already was. When she cries in court, it is for the death of the dream life she concocted and acted upon at great personal risk. When she displays anger, which is frequently, it is the utter rage at circumstances, at Cindy and the police--all of whom conspired to ruin her hopes for a future where she was in charge and without parental condemnation. Caylee was a lightening rod for criticism toward Casey. Even by saying that Caylee was "the best mistake" Casey ever made--Cindy rubs it in her face that she makes nothing but mistakes. How frustrating then, that Casey's final mistake may have been in waiting so long to move to phase 2 of her emancipation plan: killing her mother and father. I wonder what plans she may have had for more duct tape? It holds chloroform-soaked rags in place, you know. The irony is the name of the street they lived on: Hope Springs...... Hope springs eternal for this family--it's just that they each had strikingly different hopes for the future