These range from safety graphics to themed graphics that are found in the queue line. The marathon would appeal to kids, teens and adults using characters from the film. The design for the marathon would be in the same graphic style as the film.
For the D23 event, I was involved in designing the look of the Dream Store. This store was for the expo and to a temporary structure and design that could be put up and taken down quickly, but still have a unique look. For the inaugural year of the Princess Half Marathon, I came up with the design of using a running shoe as the main icon for the store expo.
I contrasted the hand drawing of the running shoe with a very royal background of pinks and golds. The Confectionery on Main Street wanted store ads that showed items that were sold in the store.
I designed these ads to mimic turn of the century Victorian graphics, but used a bright color palette that is found in the shop.
I designed several illustrations for Disneyland's Star Traders. She retrieved them from the trunk of her car and returned them. This occurred about a week after Caylee was last seen, but allegedly before anyone in the family knew she was missing. Before the gas cans were taken, George Anthony had left duct tape on one of them, and according to him, the returned cans had no duct tape.
It had been found abandoned in a parking lot and towed two weeks earlier. The decomposition of a human body is a very unique and recognizable smell to anyone with experience with it, and the manager testified that he has had that experience. George Anthony also claims familiarity with the stench through his time as a detective.
Judge Belvin Perry questioned the probative nature of these messages, and suggested they would be excessively prejudicial, so the prosecution withdrew their attempted introduction of them. For the full story of this testimony, go here. It was Cindy who finally reported Caylee missing a month after she last saw her, and her testimony focused on that month. The explanations involved a nanny named Zanny who was taking care of Caylee while Anthony attended work meetings, as well as a car accident during an outing in Tampa.
Another explanation was that they were staying in a hotel with a wealthy suitor. Hopkins said he knew Anthony from school, but had no children and had not introduced Anthony to a nanny for Caylee, as she had claimed. Several other aspects and details of her stories about him were also untrue, including their relationship, his job, and where he lived. Testimony included a description of a statement and interview given by Anthony after Caylee was reported missing, in which she claimed Caylee had been kidnapped by the nanny introduced to her by Hopkins.
Investigators were unable to find the nanny described by Anthony. Anthony claimed she did not come to the police after the kidnapping out of fear. She also said the hair from the trunk of the car contained a mark she had only seen in hairs from decomposing bodies—that is, hairs still in the scalp when the body started decomposing. The DNA present in the hair shaft was also tested, but this was not DNA that can be linked to a single individual either.
While hair ripped by the root can still contain nuclear DNA, the shaft of hair such as that found in the car contains only mitochondrial DNA. Unlike nuclear DNA, mitochondrial DNA does not change between generations, but is passed directly and intact from the mother to the child. The analyst described a particular band on the hair as consistent with decomposition, but this observation is based only on her experience, and is not a proven correlation.
Other interesting forensic evidence brought up included air samples taken from the car, which showed signs of gases consistent with decomposition, as well as chloroform, which is what the prosecution says Anthony used to kill her daughter. After hearing from multiple witnesses describing an odor of decomposition in the car, the jury heard evidence from experts regarding the same odor. A trash bag was found in the trunk and ruled out by technicians as being the source of the odor recognized by witnesses; a highly trained cadaver dog alerted on the trunk, indicating that a body had been stored within; and the jury heard from Arpad Vass, a forensic anthropologist conducting research at the body farm on decomposition.
Vass performed chemical tests on air samples from the trunk, carpet samples, the spare tire cover, and scrapings from the wheel well of the car. He testified that these results indicate only decomposing remains could account for the odor in the trunk.
He also testified that there were high levels of chloroform present in the samples—an important fact to the prosecution, which claims Anthony used chloroform on her daughter before smothering her. Duct tape was found over the mouth, holding the jaw bone to the rest of the skull.
Chief medical examiner Dr. While potentially disturbing, and therefore prejudicial to a jury, Judge Perry allowed this evidence because of its importance in the case. Entomological evidence is the most accurate indication of time of death once the body has decomposed.
Judge Perry denied the motion and the defense would begin presenting their case that today. Blood might have been found from the decomposition of the remains in the trunk among the fluids released, if there was a hole in the bags the prosecution claimed the remains were wrapped in. He was still alive when they set him on fire.
Morris, 37, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and kidnapping last year and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. In , Terry, 23, pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of second-degree murder, as well as kidnapping. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Ackerman's then-girlfriend, Rosanna DiMauro, 41, and her son, David Link, 21, both admitted assisting the attackers after the killing. He was sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty in to being an accessory after the fact.
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