Anthony said Stallworth has an alibi for the time frame in which police said Kamille was abducted. The attorney said his client does not know any of Kamille’s family members.

Anthony also said that Stallworth works near Tom Brown Village and was in the area that night for legitimate purposes.
“He’s just taken aback that he’s considered as a suspect in the disappearance of this lovely child,’’ said attorney Emory Anthony.
Anthony said Stallworth and his family have received threats.
“I want to make it known to the community, to the state, that Mr. Stallworth did not have anything to do with the missing child,’’ Anthony said. “Of course, we sympathize with the family members of little Miss McKinney and we hope that the Birmingham Police Department will do everything with the FBI to find the child. We hope the child is still alive and the child is doing well.”
Adam Danneman, a public defender whose office represents Brown, said the woman “adamantly denies” knowing anything about the abduction and is "horrified” by the girl’s disappearance.
“Like everyone in our community, Ms. Brown is horrified about the ongoing tragedy involving Kamille McKinney. However, she adamantly denies having any personal knowledge or playing any role, direct or indirect, in this child’s abduction,'' Danneman wrote in his statement.
"We understand that this is a sensitive and timely issue, and it is easy to rush to judgment upon seeing someone’s face plastered on a news story involving a missing child. However, no evidence has been presented to indicate that Ms. Brown had any involvement in Kamille’s abduction. Both Ms. Brown and our office hope and pray that this child is safely returned to her family.”
Pair questioned in Kamille McKinney abduction are innocent, attorneys say