I doubt this because everyone knows the State can't distinguish cause death, and everyone on the stand who knew Casey in real life has not said anything that bad, and has indicated she was a good mother.
She has a pattern of hiding the truth, starting with her pregnancy. Having a personality disorder and being raised around weird parents does not make a murderer. I think the State better have a huge smoking gun.
jmo
Hi, Chablis, the state doesn't have to determine an exact cause of death. That's been shown by numerous past cases. Concealment and an obstructive pattern of behavior can serve effectively as smoking guns.
The statements that Casey was an attentive mother are more than neutralized by the absence of mourning for her daughter, who the defense is claiming she knew was dead.
As for the topic of the thread, Casey has some cause to be emotional. She is not a lawyer and her main defense is not a good lawyer. She has watched as he has been unable to pry into testimony statements about sexual abuse. She must feel frustrated watching Baez awkwardly lead witnesses (most of whom she knew or knows) through painfully long cross-examination, no doubt imagining alternate lines of questions (some of which, to be sure, might well be inadmissible or counterproductive.) Nothing in her history suggests that she is an adept problem-solver, but then, none of it indicates that she has been hesitant about trying.