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Ford, a 32-year-old nursing student, said the case was a troubling one. "I did not say she was innocent," Ford told the network. "I just said there was not enough evidence. If you cannot prove what the crime was, you cannot determine what the punishment should be." The prosecution didn't paint a clear enough picture of what happened to Caylee, Ford argued in a portion of the interview broadcast Wednesday night. "I have no idea what happened to that child," Ford said. Ford acknowledged that Anthony's behavior, including not reporting her daughter missing for about a month and partying during that time, "looks very bad ... but bad behavior is not enough to prove a crime." "I feel she had something to do with it," Ford said of Anthony. "I don't believe it's fair to speculate." Asked about the anger directed at jurors following the verdict, Ford said: "My reaction is, why be mad at me? The prosecution had to prove it. Why is it my fault if they didn't prove their case? If you give me the evidence, I'm happy to return a verdict accordingly." Ford said the fact that Anthony could have faced the death penalty was a consideration. "If they want to charge and they want me to take someone's life, they have to prove it. They have to prove it, or else I'm a murderer too." Alternate juror Russell Huekler said he feels compassion for Anthony and hopes she gets help because she can "no longer live a life of lies." Huekler told The Associated Press he was shocked to learn of the public's anger over the jury's acquittal of Anthony on a murder charge. "Those 12 jurors, they worked really, really hard," said Huekler, who did not vote on the verdict but sat through more than 33 days of testimony as an alternate. "I'm sure they looked at the law and the evidence that was presented and unfortunately, the prosecution didn't meet their burden of proof." Anthony's attorneys did not return calls from the AP for comment. But Baez said in the ABC interview that testimony showed his client was an "excellent mother," though he acknowledged that her month-long failure to report her missing daughter was wrong. Geneva Shiles of Orlando said she had trouble sleeping Tuesday night after witnessing the verdict from a seat in the courtroom. "I'm angry and anxious to see what Casey will do with her life now that she's free," Shile said. "My question is: If she didn't do it, who did?" That question is frustrating many who followed the trial, hoping for a neat ending to a made-for-television case. "None of us know what actually happened," said Roslyn Muraskin, a criminologist at Long Island University who co-authored "Crime and the Media: Headlines vs. Reality." "Maybe none of us will ever know." Much of that will depend on whether Anthony chooses to tell her story. "I believe she's already been bombarded as we speak by publishers and agents," said Linda Konner, president of the Linda Konner Literary Agency, based in New York. "I think there's a lot of interest when you're dealing with mother and dead child." Konner said a Casey Anthony memoir could fetch a half-million dollars or more, and she would be interested herself in securing the rights. The judge in the case could order that any such proceeds be used to repay the costs of the search for Caylee, said Karin Moore, a law professor at Florida A&M University.
[Associated
Press;
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