Monday, January 11, 2016

A couple weeks of buzz about a show called Making Of A Murderer, is about the death of Teresa Halbach, 25, a photographer from AutoTrader magazine

Steven Avery and his family have a 25 acre junkyard in Wisconsin, and he is the most talked about person around the office water cooler right now, the focus of a tv show on Netflix.

I hadn't heard why until now... just buzz, lots of buzz about the tv show. And the petition.

So far over a hundred thousand people have signed a petition to have his case brought to the attention of the President of the United States, and I've never even heard of that before. Turns out that the Presidents office people say that Avery was sentenced by a court of a certain jurisdiction that the president isn't able to supersede. States rights vs federal I guess.

Was he framed by the Manitowoc Police Department, averting a multimillion-dollar settlement over Avery’s wrongful conviction and 18-year imprisonment for rape in the same jurisdiction in 1985?

Because, that really happened. DNA evidence proves that he was not guilty of, and possibly framed for, a rape that he spent 18 years in jail for.

Or was he framed by his brothers, jealous of Avery’s newfound fame and potential windfall?

The way I understand it, and I've only got a vague idea about this, is that he was sueing the county for imprisoning him, and maybe even framing him, (I just don't have the time to watch this show to learn all the details) and if and when he wins this case which he spent 18 years in jail for (can you imagine spending your last, or next 18 years of life in jail?) he would benefit by 10 or 20 million dollars.

Well, the direction this news story / tv show seems to be going into is that before he could get this wrongful prosecution and jail time case completed, the powers that be in the local Wisconsin law enforcement, set him up to get back in jail fast, and permanently get the case against them dismissed. Like I said, I've only got a vague idea, as I haven't watched the show.

Though I haven't heard why, there was a search team canvassing Steven Avery's family junkyard who uncovered the green Rav4 belonging to the AutoTrader photographer who went missing. Her charred bones are found on the Avery property conspicuously close to Steven Avery’s lodging; an invoice from AutoTrader is found on Avery’s desk. The key to the Rav4 is later found in Avery’s bedroom and the trial unfolds.

http://www.thedrive.com/article/1587/in-making-a-murderer-the-avery-junkyard-is-the-real-star for another look at this story

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