Eleven years after the monumental Florida vs. Casey Anthony trial captivated the world, Casey Anthony, the woman accused of murdering her 2-year-old daughter Caylee Anthony, speaks out for the first time after her acquittal. Casey teams up with producers Tamra Simmons and Ebony Porter-Ike, to speak out for the first time in Peacock‘s new true-crime documentary series Casey Anthony: Where the Truth Lies.
Casey isn’t known for being truthful, as she admitted to lying to investigators while they were trying to track down Caylee. So naturally, audiences are skeptical of her stories. Here’s what the body language experts had to say about Casey’s testimony.
Casey Anthony’s bombshell allegations
In the new Peacock docuseries, Casey Anthony: Where the Truth Lies, Casey finally reveals her version of the last time she saw her daughter, Caylee. She claims that after going to lie down with Caylee one morning, she woke to her father, George Anthony, shaking her and asking her where she went. After searching the house, Casey alleges that her father found her 2-year-old daughter “soaking wet” and lifeless in his arms.
Casey then alleges that her father held Caylee hostage for the 31 days she was supposedly missing and told her that her daughter was alive. She claims that her father told her what to do, how to act, and what to say, and he would keep Caylee safe.
Casey’s story doesn’t match her defense team’s winning story about Caylee falling in the pool and drowning. How truthful is Casey in this documentary? Three body language experts reveal why so many viewers don’t believe Casey’s story.
Casey Anthony’s facial expressions show she’s being ‘deceptive’
Jury consultant on the trial and human behavior expert Susan Constantine breaks down Casey’s facial expressions during her testimony.
“There is an enormous amount of anger, scorn, contempt. Disgust was the big one,” Constantine says to CourtTV. “When you see the nose crunching up like that. That triad of emotion is often linked to deception.” Check out the full video below: