They want the judge to allow them in for the entire trial.
Out to Dr. Bethany Marshal, psychoanalyst and author of "Dealbreakers."
You know, I don`t find their request uncommon. They want to be there. Their granddaughter was murdered. Their daughter is on trial for her life and they want to be in the courtroom. However, it does violate the rules of sequestration.
Weigh, in Bethany.
BETHANY MARSHALL, PSYCHOANALYST, AUTHOR OF "DEALBREAKERS": Well, of course it violate it is rules and what I`m seeing is that as long as Caylee was alive their primary loyalty was to the granddaughter. They were realistic about their daughter. They knew she was a pathological liar, they knew she was not maternally connected to her own child but once Caylee disappeared and it was clear that she was deceased and not coming back, their loyalty shifted to their child.
And that maternal and paternal instinct to protect one`s child at all costs is going to shade what they say in that courtroom. And also to the potential jurors it`s going to tell them that these parents sort of feel arrogant and above the law, and they`re not going to like that too much when the whole story starts to unfold.
GRACE: To the lawyers, Anne Bremner and Peter Odom, just give me a yes/no. I know it`s very hard for a lawyer to do.
To you, Anne Bremner, do you think Cindy and George Anthony are going to be allowed to sit in the trial for all the testimony? Remember, they`re witnesses for the state. And you can`t force the state to call them, say, at the beginning so then they can sit in.
BREMNER: Right.
GRACE: The state is going to call them, I believe, according to an elaborate plan that they have made out. We all do it when we go to trial. We stage our witnesses in the way we need to for the evidence to come in the way we want it to. It`s not just strategic. Sometimes you got to bring them in at a certain order.
For instance, if you want to show George and Cindy Anthony items from the burial scene that match items from their home, you`ve got to have in the crime scene tech first that found the items at the crime scene. Otherwise, you can`t show them to another witness until they`ve been admitted into evidence.
So you can`t force the state to put George and Cindy on first so they can then sit there and listen to the rest of the trial. So what do you think is going to happen, Anne?
BREMNER: They`re not going to be allowed to stay in, no.
GRACE: I don`t understand. What`s your question? I mean, what`s your answer? Are you saying the judge will allow them to come in --
BREMNER: I think the judge won`t -- well, Nancy. You asked for a yes/no. And I thought I did the no. But the judge will not allow them to stay. That`s what I predict.
GRACE: I think you may be right. What about it? What about it, Peter Odom?
ODOM: No, I agree with Anne. The judge would only violate this rule against sequestration for the utmost justification. The grandparents` emotional connection to the defendant and the victim will not be sufficient justification. Their testimony is too important, too much is at stake in this trial. They will be sequestered.