So this is very interesting.. The two posts about the duke rapes and elizabeth smart ARE GONE! But the Nancy Grace one is still there, along with a new one! I have copied and pasted the following from think link (just in case!)
http://www.new.facebook.com/home.php#/notes.php?id=1467524931
Casey Marie Anthony's Facebook Notes
Casey Marie Anthony's Facebook Notes
This is a SUPPORT page therefore no negativity will be tolerated!
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 11:33 PM
If you sent an add request because you were wanting to support then let me first start by saying THANK YOU ALL FOR YOUR SUPPORT!!!!!!! I CAN'T express that enough.
To those of you who came here to snoop, please be my guest and report what you see! However do not be fake saying you are here for support and then I get emails upon emails about you and the things you are saying.
Do not contact other friends of mine in an effort to slander my name, or theirs. you will not be tolerated. If you wish to vent there are numerous websites and bog spots you can go to, in that respect you are not wanted nor welcomed.
Thanks again!!!!!!!!!!!!
Nancy part 2
Monday, September 29, 2008 6:33 PM
Suicide of interviewee
In 2006, Grace was involved in an incident, reported heavily in U.S. and international media, when a 21-year-old woman, Melinda Duckett, committed suicide following an interview conducted by Grace concerning the disappearance of Duckett's 2-year-old son.[10]
Grace interviewed Duckett less than two weeks after the child went missing, questioning her for her perceived lack of openness regarding her son's disappearance, asking Duckett "Where were you? Why aren't you telling us where you were that day?"[11] Duckett appeared confused and was unable to answer whether or not she had taken a polygraph test. When Grace asked her "why" she could not account for specific details, Duckett began to reply, "Because I was told not to," to which Grace responded, "Ms. Duckett, you are not telling us for a reason. What is the reason? You refuse to give even the simplest facts of where you were with your son before he went missing. It is day twelve." According to the CNN transcript, Duckett replied, "(INAUDIBLE) with all media. It's not just there, just all media. Period." Grace then moved on to a media psychologist who explained that Duckett was "skirting around the issue."[11][10]
The next day before the airing of the show, Duckett shot herself, a death which relatives claim was influenced by media scrutiny, particularly from Grace.[12][10] Speaking to the The Orlando Sentinel, Duckett's grandfather Bill Eubank said, "Nancy Grace and the others, they just bashed her to the end. She was not one anyone ever would have thought of to do something like this." CNN has also been criticized for allowing the show to air in the wake of Duckett's suicide. Police investigating the case had not named Melinda Duckett as a suspect in the case at the time, but after her suicide the police did say that she, as nearly all parents are in missing-child cases, was a suspect from the beginning.[10]
In an interview with Good Morning America, Nancy Grace said in reaction to events that "If anything, I would suggest that guilt made her commit suicide. To suggest that a 15- or 20-minute interview can cause someone to commit suicide is focusing on the wrong thing." She then said, while she sympathized with the family, she knew from her own experience as a victim of crime that such people look for somebody else to blame.[13]
While describing it as an "extremely sad development," Janine Iamunno, a spokeswoman for Grace,[10] said that her program would continue to follow the case as they had a "responsibility to bring attention to this case in the hopes of helping find Trenton Duckett." Grace herself however said, "I do not feel that our show is to blame for what happened to Melinda Duckett. The truth is not always nice or polite or easy to go down. Sometimes it's harsh, and it hurts."[10]
On November 21, 2006, thesmokinggun.com exposed pending litigation on behalf of the estate of Melinda Duckett, asserting a wrongful death claim against CNN and Grace. The attorney for the estate alleges that even if Duckett did kill her own son, Grace's aggressive questioning so traumatized Duckett that she committed suicide. She also argues that CNN's decision to air the interview after Duckett's suicide traumatized her family.[14][15]
Despite the events that unfolded after the Melinda Duckett affair, Grace continues her explosive interviewing techniques. Most recently regarding another Central Florida case - this time in Orlando - and the events surrounding missing toddler Caylee Anthony and her mother Casey Anthony and maternal grandmother Cindy Anthony.
Nancy has always over done it.......read carefully
Monday, September 29, 2008 2:02 AM
The Supreme Court of Georgia has twice commented on Grace's conduct as a prosecutor. First, in a 1994 heroin trafficking case, Bell v. State, the Court declared a mistrial, saying that Grace had "exceeded the wide latitude of closing argument" by drawing comparisons to unrelated murder and rape cases.[6]
In 1997, the court was more severe. Although its unanimous decision overturning the murder-arson conviction of businessman W. W. Carr in the death of his wife was caused primarily by other issues, the court made note of Grace's court actions, citing "inappropriate and illegal conduct in the course of the trial."
Her opening statement in the case promised the jury evidence of physical abuse that she had to know would never be admissible because that entire aspect of the case had already been excluded by the judge.
Subpoenas that contained hearing dates Grace knew to be false.
Failure to disclose a full witness list to the defense in a timely fashion.
Showing a chart during closing arguments that falsely stated a defense expert had not contradicted the state's case on a key issue.
Also, during closing argument, "vouching" for the case by telling the jury she herself believed Carr to be guilty.
And finally, performing two illegal searches of Carr's house, including one during which she was accompanied by a CNN camera crew.
While the court said its reversal was not due to these transgressions, since the case had turned primarily on circumstantial evidence, it nevertheless concluded "the conduct of the prosecuting attorney in this case demonstrated her disregard of the notions of due process and fairness, and was inexcusable."[7] Carr was freed in 2004 when The Georgia Supreme Court ruled unanimously that Fulton County had waited too long to retry him.
Other courts have criticized Grace's conduct even while upholding convictions in her cases. In a 2005 opinion, a panel of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals said Grace "played fast and loose" with her ethical duties and failed to "fulfill her responsibilities" as a prosecutor in the 1990 triple murder trial of Herbert Connell Stephens. She failed to turn over evidence that pointed to other suspects to his defense. The court noted that it was "difficult to conclude that Grace did not knowingly" elicit false testimony from a police investigator that there were no other suspects despite strong evidence to the contrary