the story of jaycee lee dugard has gripped the nation. she of course is theheoman who was kidnapped by a sex offender at age 11 and spent the next 18 years in captivity. unimaginable. dugard is speaking up for the very first time about her ordeal. she sat down for an exclusive interview with abc s diane sawyer and told a story of fear, hope and survival. reporter: this is how she looked the last time we saw her. a little girl with a name out of a story book. jaycee lee dugard. 11 years old. a girl who loved her mom, her little sister, and a cat named monkey. a fifth grader who set out for the school bus one morning where she was kidnapped by a convicted sex predator, philip garrido, who handcuffed her, raped her, imprisoned her. and she gave birth twice in a
name believe that jurors are being unfairly targeted. i mean, they re given a hard task. they re there to weigh the evidence of what they can and cannot hear. they do the best job that they can. they re people too. reporter: the 12 jurors from pinellas county were faced with the civic duty of determining the fate of casey anthony. it s about life and it s about death. it s about assigning responsibility and sorting out who s to blame. reporter: stetson law professor charles rose believes the jurors properly followed the evidence presented. you don t have anyone who is familiar with the way the legal system actually works, as opposed to the way it looks on television, saying that they got it wrong. the moment that justice becomes more involved with the story ending the way the audience wants it to end, that s the moment where we don t have any justice anymore. reporter: in pinellas county, brad davis, abc news. and you know, it s really tough. many people are saying, if
candle. d you know, one of the things this by y e way is our question of the day, wnnfans.com. a lot of people weighing in about whether they re sad to see the shuttle program ending, what this means to transition to the next stage. it troubles some folks to see that the u.s. manned spaceflight program is basically going to be run by the russians. if you want to get up to the international space station after this it s going to be on board a soyuz. that s troublesome for some folks after seeing its legacy. it s a bit of history for us with jfk starting this space program. really putting his weight behind it, which is how it really got going. in such a short amount of time it s amazing how much was accomplished. we ll see what s next. could be exciting. we re following a developing story in michigan where seven people have been killed in a shooting rampage. police in grand rapids say the suspected gunman in the case has now committed suicide. the tragedy began to unfold when pol