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EXCLUSIVE: Casey Anthony's father seen for 1st time after taking polygraph test about granddaughter's murder
EXCLUSIVE — Casey Anthony’s father appeared in front of his Florida home for the first time this week ahead of the release of a TV special set to premiere Thursday at 9 p.m. ET, in which he and his wife agree to take a polygraph test.
Dubbed “America’s most hated mom,” Casey Anthony, 37, was accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, in 2008 but has alleged that her father is the real perpetrator.
George Anthony, 72, and Cindy Anthony, 65, are now speaking out in A&E’s new special, “Casey Anthony’s Parents: The Lie Detector Test,” which comes about a year after Casey Anthony doubled down on allegations that George molested her and may have killed Caylee — a claim George has repeatedly denied — in a Peacock TV docuseries released in 2022.
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George Anthony seen outside his home in Orlando, Florida, on Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2024. Anthony will appear in a TV special based on the suspicious death of his granddaughter, Caylee Anthony. (Mark Sims for Fox News Digital)
George walked in front of his house on Tuesday and appeared to have a relatively calm demeanor while he spoke on the phone.
He also appears to have lost weight over the last year.
George Anthony appears to have lost weight over the last year. (MEGA; Mark Sims for Fox News Digital )
In the new TV special, George and Cindy take the polygraph test in an effort to prove their innocence in their granddaughter’s murder.
A clip from the special shows George “struggling” to answer a question from retired FBI Special Agent George Olivo. The parents also respond to the polygraph test results in the upcoming show.
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“When I met them, they were soon separated, and I tested George first,” Olivo previously told Fox News Digital. “Nothing really stood out to me.”
“They seem like, on the surface, just a regular couple that have been together for a very long time.”
Olivo said polygraph tests are “85 to 90% accurate” when administered correctly.
Cindy initially reported Caylee missing on July 15, 2008, about a month after the toddler was last seen on June 15, 2008. She also told police at the time that Casey’s impounded vehicle smelled like a dead body, and experts later testified during her trial that the vehicle did contain evidence of human remains in the trunk.
George Anthony speaks on his phone outside his home in Orlando, Florida, on Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2024. (Mark Sims for Fox News Digital)
Casey was arrested in connection with her daughter’s disappearance and death that same year, initially telling police the girl had vanished while she was with a babysitter.
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Caylee Anthony was missing for months, beginning in June 2008, until her remains were eventually located in December of that same year about a half-mile from her family’s Florida home. (Getty Images)
Following her daughter’s death in June 2008, Casey left home and spent the next month with her boyfriend, apparently failing to report any crime involving her daughter.
She said she “genuinely believed that Caylee was still alive” in Peacock’s 2022 series titled “Casey Anthony: Where The Truth Lies.”
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Months later, in December 2008, a utility worker located Caylee’s skeletal remains in a wooded area about half-a-mile from the Anthony family’s home.
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Jose Baez, who represented Casey Anthony during a monthlong trial in 2011, argued that Caylee accidentally drowned in the family’s above-ground swimming pool in June 2008, alleging that Casey’s parents then attempted to cover up her death and dispose of her remains, which George and Cindy have vehemently denied.
In the new TV special, George and Cindy Anthony take the polygraph test in an effort to prove their innocence in their granddaughter’s murder. (©️2023, A&E Television Networks, LLC photo: Mary Beth Koeth)
Prosecutors argued that Casey Anthony suffocated her daughter with chloroform and taped the 2-year-old’s mouth shut.
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After deliberating for 11 hours, a Florida jury found Casey Anthony not guilty of first-degree murder, aggravated manslaughter and aggravated child abuse. The case remains unsolved to this day.
In December 2008, a utility worker located Caylee Anthony’s skeletal remains in a wooded area about half-a-mile from the Anthony family’s home. (©️2023, A&E Television Networks, LLC photo: Mary Beth/Getty Images Koeth)
“You’ve got your daughter that’s accusing you of some pretty horrific things,” Olivo previously said. “If they claim that they didn’t do anything, it’s like the old saying goes, you’re darned if you do and you’re darned if you don’t. If you say nothing, those same critics will say, ‘Well, there you go. They didn’t say anything, so they must be guilty.’ And if they speak up … then critics will say, ‘They’re trying to capitalize on it.’”
“Casey Anthony’s Parents: The Lie Detector Test” airs Jan. 4 at 9 p.m. on A&E.
Fox News Digital’s Stephanie Nolasco, Stephanie Pagones and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Southeast
Rep. Steve Cohen tells Pam Bondi that ‘worst of the worst’ are native-born Americans, not immigrants
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A House Democratic lawmaker told Attorney General Pam Bondi that the “worst of the worst” targeted by the Trump administration are actually native-born Americans, not illegal immigrant criminals.
Rep. Steve Cohen, of Tennessee, was speaking to Bondi during a combative congressional hearing over the Justice Department’s handling of files related to Jeffrey Epstein when he made his remarks.
“We need people working on the front lines and local law enforcement to protect our citizens from the worst of the worst,” Cohen said. “The worst of the worst are not the immigrants. The worst are the worst, records show, are native-born Americans, and they are committing crimes that hurt our citizens and our cities.”
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Rep. Steve Cohen said the “worst of the worst” are native-born Americans, not immigrants, during a congressional hearing. (Jonathan Newton-Pool/Getty Images)
“And you’re working against it,” he added. “And thank you for that, but by trying to get our local law enforcement, where we have an undercount of officers in Memphis, to leave Memphis and go to work for ICE to deport people is a wrong priority.”
The Trump administration has said that around 70% of the illegal immigrants targeted by federal immigration authorities have criminal records, including for violent offenses.
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Attorney General Pam Bondi testifies before a House Judiciary Committee hearing on “Oversight of the Department of Justice” on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty )
Many Democrats maintain that most illegal immigrants have not broken any laws aside from entering the United States illegally.
Bondi argued that local and federal law enforcement both need “strong people.”
“I’ve seen some of the worst of the worst, violent criminals, violent criminals who were in this country illegally,” she said. “We both know that.”
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Cohen also told Bondi that ICE was “running rampant” and that Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti were “executed” by federal authorities in Minneapolis as they allegedly impeded law enforcement operations.
“They were executed like (Homeland Security Secretary) Krisit Noem executed her dog, and that was wrong,” Cohen said. “And you should investigate those people. And you should investigate anybody that uses a weapon as a federal official or not, for civil rights violations.”
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Southeast
K-9 hit by vehicle during bank robbery chase keeps going and helps capture suspect
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A Georgia K-9 deputy was struck by a vehicle Wednesday while chasing a bank robbery suspect but got up, continued the pursuit and helped deputies take him into custody.
Fox 5 Atlanta reported that deputies with the Coweta County Sheriff’s Office were notified of a possible bank robbery in progress at the Regions Bank in Newnan, Georgia.
Authorities located the suspect’s vehicle and attempted a traffic stop, but the driver failed to yield, sparking a pursuit.
The chase ended when the suspect crashed and ran from the wrecked vehicle, officials said.
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A dog was hit by a vehicle in the process of pursing a suspect in Newnan, Georgia, on Feb. 11, 2026. (WAGA)
The driver lost control, and the car became wedged between a light pole and a tree, according to the local station.
Airbags were deployed, and the vehicle sustained heavy front-end damage, including blown-out wheels and damaged bumpers.
A K-9 handler then deployed his partner, Robbi, to track and apprehend the fleeing suspect.
A K-9 captured a suspect on foot despite being hit by a vehicle in Newnan, GA. (Karl Merton Ferron/The Baltimore Sun/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
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During the chase, Robbi was struck by a vehicle, but despite being hit, the K-9 continued the pursuit and helped deputies make an arrest.
Robbi was taken to Sweetwater Veterinary Hospital, where staff determined he suffered minor abrasions but no internal injuries. He is expected to make a full recovery.
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Fox 5 reported that authorities have not yet released the name of the man taken into custody or outlined the full range of charges he could face in connection with the reported bank robbery and ensuing chase.
The Coweta County Sheriff’s Office told Fox News Digital that the Newnan Police Department is leading the investigation.
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TikTok-famous Hooters girls built viral following, but landlord had final say about their future
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A successful Hooters location that gained a following through its social media videos will be closing soon — which means the people behind the posts are preparing for one last Super Bowl Sunday.
When news broke that the Hooters in Boca Raton, Florida, was closing at the end of February because of the landlord’s decision not to renew the lease, longtime customers and employees were surprised, general manager Chris Torelli told Fox News Digital.
In a tough restaurant economy, closures can be a sign of decline. But this Hooters location built a cult following through TikTok dances, parody skits and viral videos.
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“We are a healthy, successful location, and in this economy, the places that close are the opposite,” Torelli said.
Over the years, the Boca Raton location distinguished itself by leaning heavily into social media. What started as a simple marketing experiment, Torelli said, evolved into one of the most recognizable Hooters social media accounts in the country.
Employees at the Hooters location in Boca Raton, Florida, have become viral sensations for their roles in the restaurant’s social media videos. (Hooters/@hootersbocaraton)
The videos — often featuring choreographed dances, playful jabs at local sports teams or scripted phone-call skits — resonated far beyond Boca Raton. Torelli said early viral success helped confirm the strategy.
“You get one or two that go viral, then you start seeing the comments and the interaction with the consumers,” he said.
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But the success wasn’t just about algorithms or follower counts. The goal “has always been to make it fun.”
“It’s not a business,” Torelli said. “I mean, we are a business — but Instagram, for us, is fun.”
Much of that fun came from the women who appeared in the videos. Hooters waitresses Amanda Hall and Sarah Glynn became familiar faces online, dancing, joking and often poking fun at themselves.
The social media presence helped turn the Hooters girls into “local celebrities,” Torelli said, as recognition followed them outside the restaurant.
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It’s something former employee Abigail Fuqua still experiences more than a year after leaving the Boca Raton location. She said she’s still recognized from posts still circulating online.
“As soon as you open that door up, and you immerse yourself into it, you just have fun,” Fuqua said of participating in the videos.
Although Abigail Fuqua (at left, and standing on the table at right) no longer works at Hooters, she said she still gets recognized in public from the viral videos that still circulate online. (Hooters/@hootersbocaraton)
The social media success has also become a reliable job-recruiting resource, Torelli said.
“We’ve stumbled upon one of the best marketing tools to recruit future Hooters girls,” he said. He noted the “tremendous success [in] hiring staff” who wanted to work there because of the videos.
As the restaurant prepares to close its doors after 16 years, Hall and Glynn describe the workplace as more than just a job.
“These girls are my sisters now,” Glynn said.
“It kind of became more like a home and a family,” Hall added.
Hooters bartender Amanda Hall gets beer from the tap for a customer. She said her job has been “like a home and a family.” (Peter Burke/Fox News Digital)
Still, there is optimism about the future. Torelli said the “plan all along” was to find a new home nearby.
“We’re not done yet,” he said.
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For the employees, the future is less certain — but not without gratitude.
“Life is going to take you in different directions, but I had a great time while I was here,” Hall said.
Current and former employees of the Hooters in Boca Raton pose for a photograph with their work “family.” (Hooters)
Glynn joked that the end of the Boca Raton location may mark the end of an era for her.
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“It may be time to retire the orange shorts a little bit, because I don’t know how I can do any Hooters other than Boca,” she said.
“I had a great time while I was here.”
Even after the restaurant closes, its social media presence isn’t likely to fade, Torelli said.
Hooters waitress Sarah Glynn said she doesn’t know what will come next once the Boca Raton location closes at the end of the month. (Peter Burke/Fox News Digital)
“We owe it to our guests and our staff and the people in the community, because we do so much with them, to continue to do this,” he said.
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Fox News Digital reached out to the property management company for comment.
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