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Investigation Discovery

 
 

August 25 to September 29, 2009

 
August 25 — The state releases more than 2,000 pages of documents in the case, including photos from a picture-sharing Web site and aerial photos of where Caylee's remains were found.

September 8 — A judge in Orlando postpones making a decision on whether to dismiss a defamation lawsuit filed against Casey Anthony by Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez.

The plaintiff has claimed Anthony damaged her reputation when she told police that a nanny named Zenaida Gonzalez had kidnapped Caylee.

September 17 — Casey Anthony's defense team files a motion to dismiss the murder charges against her because the state allegedly failed to preserve evidence in the case.

"The State has prevented the Defense from observing the remains in the condition that they were discovered," the motion states. "Given the failure of the numerous searches prior to December 11, the arrangement of the remains in situ and the condition of the surrounding vegetation are evidence that is material to determining whether the remains were moved to the scene while Casey was in custody."

September 29 — The state releases additional discovery documents in the case, including forensic reports from the FBI lab in Quantico, Va., that confirmed Caylee's identity.

Among the documents is a report that states the Duct tape found on Caylee’s mouth had been contaminated by an FBI evidence examiner.

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