So you're convinced of Steven Avery's innocence...Read:
-Avery was convicted of dousing a cat in oil and threw it on a bonfire (Nice Guy!) -- Past criminal activity also included threatening a female relative at gunpoint. -- In the months leading up to Halbach's disappearance, Avery had called Auto Trader several times and always specifically requested Halbach to come out and take the photos. -- Halbach had complained to her boss that she didn't want to go out to Avery's trailer anymore, because once when she came out, Avery was waiting for her wearing only a towel (this was excluded for being too inflammatory). Avery clearly had an obsession with Halbach. -- On the day that Halbach went missing Avery had called her three times, twice from a *67 number to hide his identity. -- The bullet with Halbach's DNA on it came from Avery's gun, which always hung above his bed. -- Avery had purchased handcuffs and leg irons like the ones Dassey described holding Halbach only three weeks before Halbach's rape and murder.
So you're convinced of Steven Avery's innocence...Read:
-Avery was convicted of dousing a cat in oil and threw it on a bonfire (Nice Guy!) -- Past criminal activity also included threatening a female relative at gunpoint. -- In the months leading up to Halbach's disappearance, Avery had called Auto Trader several times and always specifically requested Halbach to come out and take the photos. -- Halbach had complained to her boss that she didn't want to go out to Avery's trailer anymore, because once when she came out, Avery was waiting for her wearing only a towel (this was excluded for being too inflammatory). Avery clearly had an obsession with Halbach. -- On the day that Halbach went missing Avery had called her three times, twice from a *67 number to hide his identity. -- The bullet with Halbach's DNA on it came from Avery's gun, which always hung above his bed. -- Avery had purchased handcuffs and leg irons like the ones Dassey described holding Halbach only three weeks before Halbach's rape and murder.
I've been watching the documentary this weekend. I don't know if he's guilty or not but there is a lot of questionable stuff from the prosecutors.
Also, about that cut and paste:
-Avery was convicted of dousing a cat in oil and threw it on a bonfire (Nice Guy!)
Awful, awful act of cruelty but it hardly makes him a murderer. Plus. he admitted to the crime and was punished for it
-- Past criminal activity also included threatening a female relative at gunpoint.
A female relative who was spreading shit about him. Threatening her at gunpoint is probably just how you warn some one in those parts. Again, doesn't make him a killer.
-- In the months leading up to Halbach's disappearance, Avery had called Auto Trader several times and always specifically requested Halbach to come out and take the photos.
Maybe he just found her easy on the eyes. Just because he would ask for one specific person isn't enough to label him a murderer.
-- Halbach had complained to her boss that she didn't want to go out to Avery's trailer anymore, because once when she came out, Avery was waiting for her wearing only a towel (this was excluded for being too inflammatory). Avery clearly had an obsession with Halbach.
Yet she still went, god knows how many times after her initial complaint. If she found him that weird/creepy, would she not have been more persistent with her requests not to go? And who knows, maybe there was a good explanation for him wearing only a towel that day?
-- On the day that Halbach went missing Avery had called her three times, twice from a *67 number to hide his identity.
Bit weird this one. Thing is, if he wanted to hide his identity, when did he only do it twice?
-- The bullet with Halbach's DNA on it came from Avery's gun, which always hung above his bed.
Stumbled across this on another forums:
William Newhouse, a gun expert with the Wisconsin State Crime Lab, said he couldn't conclusively link a bullet found in a crack in Avery's garage to a .22-caliber rifle seized from his bedroom. (He could only confirm that it was definitely a bullet from a .22 caliber rifle). There was no DNA on the gun, no blood blow back that you’d get from shooting someone at that close range and no blood mist / spatter around the garage that would also be present had someone been shot in the garage. www.jsonline.com/news/crime/p...363819121.html
-- Avery had purchased handcuffs and leg irons like the ones Dassey described holding Halbach only three weeks before Halbach's rape and murder Wasn't the testimony of Dassey eventually thrown out because of how it was obtained?
Who knows if he did or not. There's a lot of stuff in the evidence and the investigation that seems corrupt as fuck.
I find it laughable that key evidence was uncovered DAYS after the initial searches by the very same police officers that were found beyond any doubt to be culpable for the cover up of information which would have exonerated Steven Avery the first time he was convicted. They weren't even supposed to be involved in the investigation either, Manitowac county were supposed to have handed over the investigation quite rightfully to the neighboring police department as it was clearly a conflict of interest. The sheer gall of it astounds me.
I only finished watching it last night and I gotta say i'm pretty fucking angry about it.
At least when I watched the HBO Paradise Lost: Murder in the Robin Hood Hills series it had a happy ending, this is just really fucking depressing