Left for Garbage
me, and when Charlie is finally freed, we will be a family. God knows, she won’t want to return to the cesspool she came from.
Speaking of cesspools, today in court was particularly ludicrous , and when Denise dissolved in giggles, I don’t think there was a person alive who could blame her for doing so. Some enormous fat woman, who was able to just wander into the court room like we were there for her entertainment alone, immediately took off her filthy shoes and started to throw them at Denise. The bailiffs got her before that could happen, but she did manage to scream out, “You killed her,” before she was brought down.
Judge Saget was enraged and unmoved by her plea that she was just looking for a place to sit while waiting for the methadone clinic to open. He sentenced her to a night in jail.
While I was pleased by his decision, I have begun to fear, based on how quickly he is forcing us through jury selection, that today’s ruling might be the only one I’m going to agree with. Still, I know with a deep certainty that this time, this one time, with the Denise Brown case, that I am backing a winner.
As for those whose lives will be destroyed by the truth, namely her awful family, well , it’s my belief that in time they will be grateful for the courage Denise has displayed, and that no matter what happens to them, they will understand one day it was justice and it was right.
Charlotte Hope
(Eye on America)
Good evening , America, this is ‘Eye on America’ and I’m Charlotte Hope.
Tonight, breaking news out of Orlando, Florida. It was opening day for the defense statement in the trial of Denise Brown, and it left shocks all around.
Salvatore Gutierrez, the attorney for Fibber McMom, has been promising for the past three years that in the first three minutes of his opening statement he would clear up any questi ons about the disappearance of Baby Deeley. I say he has created more questions than he answered, but first a recap of the last three years …
July 2008, distraught grandmother Margaret Brown notifies the authorities that her two and a half year old granddaughter, little Deeley, is missing, and has been missing for thirty-one days while her young mother, Denise Brown, parties away. A nationwide search commences. Denise is arrested in October the same year on a charge of homicide in the death of Baby Deeley. In December of that year a sewage worker, Harley Ray, discovers a tiny human skeleton wrapped in duct tape and sticking out of a garbage bag, like she is trash.
The remains of the child were recovered in a wooded area fifteen houses down from the Brown home and found to be those of missing toddler Deeley Brown. After three years of motions , a change in judges, and despite using every trick in the defense handbook, finally a jury is seated and a trial begins for Fibber McMom.
Following a riveting opening by the prosecution , aided by a damning timeline reflecting the activities of Denise Brown, the defense gave their opening statement and, America, it is a shocker. According to the defense, little Deeley was never missing at all. She drowned accidentally in the Brown pool on the morning of June 16 th , 2008.
But that’s not all. I t seems that Baby Deeley was found and fished out of the pool by Grandpa Keith who then confronted Fibber while holding the still dripping wet body of his grandchild!
According to attorney Gutierrez, Keith Brown screamed at his daughter that she was a neglectful mother and that Deeley’s drowning would kill his wife Margaret. Following this confrontation, America, attorney Gutierrez stated that Keith decided to help his daughter cover up Deeley’s drowning.
Make sense to you, America?
I didn’t think so. Y ou see, the only point in attorney Gutierrez’s opening statement, which we, here at ‘Eye on America’, can agree on, is this: dozens of children die in the State of Florida in swimming pool-related accidents.
Yes , they do, America, and in most cases no charges whatsoever are brought. Worst case scenario for the parent of a child who drowns is a charge of felony child endangerment, with a possible, though not probable, sentence of up to five years. But this is a rare charge and one usually only pursued if the custodial parent has prior charges for child abuse.
So is it too much to wonder why Keith Brown, a former sheriff’s deputy, decided against calling 911 instead of telling what attorney Gutierrez claims is the truth, the truth
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