I don't agree that common sense says that Mr. Kronk had nothing to do with placing Caylee where she was found.
Well, I suppose your common sense could be less common and more refined than mine, LOL, but nonethless, my own common sense tells me that if Mr. Kronk had something to do with
placing Caylee where she was, then he should have been able to
find that spot and tell Cain exactly where it was. In fact, he should have been confident enough of the bag's contents and location to insist on escorting Cain to the spot when Cain balked.
The circumstances surrounding Mr. Kronk's discovery of Caylee are extremely strange and very puzzling.
His explanation of the circumstances is indeed very strange and puzzling, but I don't know the man or how he thinks, or what incidental personal matters he may have hoped to conceal, if any. However, as you said in another post, I'm sure the defense will "eviserate him," and in so doing, expose to all of us every embarrassing, incriminating, pitiful detail of his personal life. After he has been sufficiently stripped of all his dignity, the jury will have to decide whether or not anything they heard has any real bearing on the discovery at Suburban.
My notes have two other men being with Mr. Kronk when he first, allegedly, saw Caylee's skull (skulls are not black) in August. However, neither of those men say they saw anything or that they could see what Mr. Kronk thought he saw. Moreover, after calling in to the tip line on August 11, 12 and 13th, LE finally sent Mr. Cain out to investigate, and, like the men who were with Mr. Kronk and the searchers, Mr. Cain didn't find or see anything either.
Then in December, Mr. Kronk goes to relieve himself in those rattlesnake infested woods and, presto, he amazingly discovers a black plastic bag with what looks like a dome in it. He soon found that dome to be Caylee's skull. Obviously, finding her skull inside the black plastic bag does not at all reconcile with Mr. Kronk saying that he thinks what he saw in August was Caylee's skull.
I'm not saying that Mr. Kronk placed Caylee's remains where they were found. Still, the area is but a short distance from the Anthony home, and it had been previously searched. So Mr. Kronk is going to have a ton of explaining and reconciling to do when he's on the witness stand.
I'm sure many of the witnesses for the prosecution will end up feeling badly bruised and battered. Referring to the section of your last paragraph that I bolded... When you say the area had previously been searched, if you're referring to searches allegedly made by Dominic Casey or Joy W, I have nothing to say. However, if you're referring to searches by Texas Equuasearch, I can assure you that the specific area where Caylee's remains were found had
never been searched by TES, let alone "cleared" as some here have stated.
Musikman--who was intimately involved in TES's Orlando searches--has tried repeatedly to share with everyone here his first hand, indisputable knowledge that TES searchers did NOT search that specific site, and he's also explained why they did not. Tim Miller is the founder of TES and he's stated the same thing, publicly and emphatically. He has produced photographs that prove the area was under water; he's shown a few of them during a press conference, and he will show many more, even clearer and more precise photos, during the trial.
I am on the Board of TES, and I was 40 feet away from that site in October, 2008. I know what that wooded section along Suburban looked like, and I also know how large an "area" we're really talking about here. If you assume that the distance along Suburban from HopeSpring to the school is only 1/2 mile (2,640 feet), and if you assume that the wooded section along Suburban is a mere 20 feet deep, that means there was a 52,000 square foot "area" of dense jungle and swamp to be searched.
Little Caylee's remains were in a garbage bag that occupied, at most, 12 to 15 square feet. I don't know how they were found, but I do know that immediate area had not been searched by TES. I hope this information will be useful to anyone reading this.