Skip to main content

Casey Anthony Juror Describes Life After The Trial

Jennifer Ford Says She Receives Hate Mail

ORLANDO, Fla. – Casey Anthony murder trial juror No. 3 says life has been hard since delivering a verdict of not guilty.

Jennifer Ford described her experience of returning to life in Pinellas County in an interview with CNN on Wednesday.

Recommended Videos



"You know, you come home and everyone's mad at you, and the media is outside hounding you, and making it clear they're not leaving, and it's just very stressful and, you know, you get anonymous letters from people -- they're hateful and nasty -- um, honestly, I read probably the first sentence and it starts with 'shame on you' in all capital letters. I just rip it up and throw it away," Ford said.

Ford said there was not enough evidence for the jury of 12 to convict Anthony of murdering her daughter, Caylee.

"I think everyone will tell you the same thing; it's just lack of hard evidence. It's just -- like I said, the duct tape and the chloroform and things like that, you could -- if you took a hard look, a good hard look at it, you could kind of -- there was a lot of doubt surrounding all of those certain things, so there's not enough to make anything stick," Ford said.

After a nearly two-month trial, Anthony was found not guilty last week of all felony charges in relation to Caylee's death.

Jurors were brought from Pinellas County to Orange County for the trial due to intense media coverage of the case in Central Florida.


Recommended Videos