Internet Is Heated Over New Casey Anthony Documentary

See why the masses are bothered about Anthony being given a platform.

Casey Anthony's documentary just dropped on Peacock, and the internet is outraged.

Anthony is widely known for her acquittal of the murder of her daughter, Caylee Anthony, who was last seen alive on June 16, 2008. Casey's mother Cindy reported Caylee missing on July 16, 2008, after Casey told her mom that she hadn't seen Caylee in a month. Caylee's remains were then found in the woods near the Anthony family home in December of that year.

Casey repeatedly lied to police and was eventually arrested and charged with first-degree murder, aggravated child abuse, manslaughter of a child, and providing false information to law enforcement. She was found not guilty of all charges except lying to the police.

Now, over a decade since the trial took place, the NBC streamer is giving Anthony a platform to finally speak about the case with her new docuseries, Casey Anthony: Where the Truth Liesand the masses are taking to Twitter to express their outrage.

"Casey Anthony making the classic O.J. mistake of just not shutting the f**k up when you already got away with murder," one user wrote.

"I would rather take a cheese grater to my eyes than to watch a series that lets casey anthony try to convince the world she isn’t a child murderer," another person tweeted.

Another Twitter user is certain the streamer released the documentary to continue the conversation of Anthony being a murderer, writing, "Convinced Peacock released that Casey Anthony docu just to reunite us all… because if we can all agree on anything, it’s that she is a liar and got away with murder."

Another user tweeted a picture of Caylee, stating, "This is who I want to remember."

Another user wrote, "Casey Anthony’s bombshell in her documentary is unbelievable. As in, I literally don’t believe her at all," regarding Anthony stating that her father, George Anthony, staged her daughter's drowning and that she lied to protect him. 

In case you're interested in what she has to say–or not–the new documentary is now available to stream on Peacock.

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