Sunflower 27 wrote: » She was so genuine. I really felt for her. She has been to hell and back. Twice. Just like her son.
PressRun wrote: » They were great. I don't think they were actually a team that had worked together before either. I think they were two separate lawyers who were just drafted in to work on this case. Hard to believe. They did a great job of tag-teaming the case, as if they'd been working together for years.
Mightydrumming wrote: » Another thing that boggles the mind is the fact that the FBI (stand for correction there!) started back up the testing and provided 'results' for E.D.T.A all in a matter of weeks. Why was there a needle mark on the blood vial? Why was the evidence box in a complete mess? Why was the Styrofoam box clearly opened? SO MANY QUESTIONS!!
JaMarcusHustle wrote: » It's a very hard-hitting documentary and it really got to me at certain points. Especially when they showed the picture of Brendan, now 26, but noting that he would not be eligible for release for another 32 years. At face value, it's unbearably cruel. However, it's unashamedly one side of the story. Im sure there's more that needs to be considered. Ultimately, I would echo Avery's lawyer. I just really hope they are both guilty and all this sympathy is unwarranted.
Thelomen Toblackai wrote: » And a lot of people seem to be glossing over the fact a poor girl was violently murdered. The police mangled the investigation but theres enough to know Avery more than likely killed her and ****ed up a lot of lives including his own.
Sunflower 27 wrote: » I don't need to see the other side.
PressRun wrote: » I think a key point is reasonable doubt though. If I had been sitting on that jury, there is no way I would have felt comfortable returning a guilty verdict just because I felt like he probably did it. There would still be a niggling doubt in my mind that he didn't, and I'd want to know for sure before I returned a verdict that was going to send someone to prison for the rest of their life, and possibly prevent the real murderer from being brought to justice. To my mind, there is still a possibility that Teresa's murderer is still out there, happy knowing that they got away with it. That's probably the worst part. If both men are innocent, then that woman has not received justice.
Heisenberg. wrote: » Please don't ever sit on a Jury!!
Thelomen Toblackai wrote: » The show doesn't present the full trial and all evidence that was presented though. It was deliberately one sided to sell the story. So none of us are in a position to say with any confidence the jury were wrong. That wasn't my point anyway, as I said the police department and court seemed pretty incompetent. Given the conflict of interests I also wouldn't rule out evidence planting. But not an entire set up. Perhaps it was so messed up the jury couldn't return a guilty verdict but without witnessing the full trial it's hard to tell. From what I seen as one sided as it was I'd be surprised if Avery wasn't the killer. So the poor family not only has a bunch of idiots locking up their son for 18 years but then they have to go through it all again because he was actually a psycho but being innocent the first time people bought into his lies this time. That's the cruellest part of it, how he exploits all that to string his family along and ruins lives all over the place.
Goose81 wrote: » I seem to be the only person that thinks they are both 100% guilty . like her truck disappeared on his land and she was burned on his land, who the hell else did it. I didn't think it was very good tbh, dragged on way too long. I had lost interest by episode 6/
datk wrote: » I think Brendan Dassey's step-father Scott Tadych and brother could be an option - something happened and in a bid to save their own skin they were best placed to make it look like Avery did it and they'd know the police would jump at the chance to get him. I think Brendan getting caught up was an accident.
PressRun wrote: » They did speak to the juror who did sit through the trial and had to leave because of an illness in the family during deliberations, and he said that he wasn't convinced of his guilt and that when he was there, there were seven others who weren't either. He even went on to say that the three who were convinced of his guilt refused to participate in deliberation. Now, I don't know what sort of agenda a former jury member would possibly have to push to say that they came out of the trial unconvinced. If there's further evidence that was presented in the trial that the public should know about before they start calling for the heads of members of the police or prosecution, then let's hear it. I'd love for the prosecution team that worked on it to produce something compelling and clear-cut that closes it down once and for all. For all their claims that the documentary is untruthful, they haven't actually produced any evidence as of yet that proves beyond reasonable doubt that Avery did it. And that's the bottom line really.
Thelomen Toblackai wrote: » That's one jury member who wasn't there for the full deliberation though. He like the others may have changed their initial opinion like others did after going through the evidence. It did seem odd that they let him off for mutilating the corpse but convicted him of murder when a large part of the evidence was burnt remains. That doesn't make much sense to me. But you can't really base an opinion on what one jury member says his initial opinion was before deliberations when all others found Avery guilty after discussing the evidence for days when you haven't seen the full trial and all evidence. I'm not saying he's clearly guilty or that there's enough to suggest there's no doubt. But the documentary is entirely Avery's side of the trial and it deliberately presents the story to paint a picture of innocence and a cover up. It's neither a full nor entirely accurate representation of the investigation or the trial. The other evidence they claim was shown changes the story dramatically. The requests from Avery for Teresa specifically to photo the car, the fact Teresa was uncomfortable with Avery due to his previous behaviour, the multiple phone calls on the day, the fact he used a different name when making the appointment, her phone and palm pilot being found in the burn barrel behind his house, the bullet with her DNA found in his garage matched that of his rifle, the handcuffs and stuff Avery bought in the weeks prior. Add that to the evidence we seen. The fact there was no activity from her phone after her visit to Avery which by all account definitely happened and was the last place she was seen alive by anyone, her car was found on his property with his blood inside, the defence argued it wasn't reliable but the FBI test could be seen by the court as perfectly valid, teeth and bones from Teresa found amongst the remnants of a fire in his back yard, the bullet etc. The case can be made that the police planted the key, possible tampered with other evidence, that the blood in the jeep wasn't reliable and they were hell bent on Avery and didn't bother fully and properly investigating the case and all possible suspects. There may be a case made that there wasn't enough to say beyond a reasonable doubt. But tbh there's plenty there to convince a jury she was there, she was murdered and disposed of on the property and Stephen Avery was responsible. It's not clear that it was a travesty by any means and that an innocent man went down a second time. Considering after the fact even if the trial was such a farce he shouldn't have been found guilty the Brendan Dassey statements and phone calls to his mother which weren't all shown in the show but depict Dassey as clearly stating that they did kill Teresa. That to me gives enough evidence to show it was indeed Avery that killed her whether he should have been found guilty of it or not.
PressRun wrote: Was Scott Tadych the one who gave conflicting statements about when he saw a bonfire on Avery's property? I couldn't figure him out at all or why he was getting in the middle of it.
gilberto_eire wrote: » Have to say this is a great watch. Would make a great drama in itself its so off the wall. Just going onto episode 5 now. In fairness its never exactly slow but once you hit episode 3 and get settled it turns into a binge. If I hadn't an exam today id have got way further last night. So tempted to google the people involved to their story since but just about staying strong until I finish it.
Sunflower 27 wrote: » It all seems very weak though. Who said she didn't like Avery? Her boss? How can that be evidence if it can never be proved she said it. The boss may have disliked Avery, maybe jealous of the money be was going to get. A comment a dead woman supposedly made can't be legitinate evidence. It is clear why Brendan 'confessed' and that was shown in the documentary very well. Again, how do we know he said send Teresa? Maybe he found her non judgemental and that was important to him? Maybe he knew people looked down on him and she didn't.? There are just too many what ifs and maybes for that to be actual concrete evidence of anything. To me, none of that points to murder. It means nothing.
Wompa1 wrote: » That one juror also claimed the initial count from the jury was 7 not guilty 2 guilty with the rest undecided. What ever about Steven. What happened to Brendan is beyond evil and a joke. Actually what happened to Steven is evil too. Even he is guilty, there was clear grounds for a mistrial. Unfortunately, for her family that would have been awful but I think that would have been justice in this case. You can't convict with so much of the investigation and evidence being compromised.
Sunflower 27 wrote: » If you are suspicious of Bobby & Scott, read the following:https://m.reddit.com/r/MakingaMurderer/comments/3y5brb/they_are_guilty_and_they_couldnt_be_happier_about/
Chocolate girl wrote: » Just finished it last night so sad and unjust. I think these 2 had something to do with it.
JaMarcusHustle wrote: » Look - there's far more evidence that implicates Steven Avery
finglashoop wrote: » Is the evidence reliable though? The police make it look that way. Its highly suspicious. The car and the key can be ignored as the most dodgy cop you could imagine seen the car and called in the reg and the key Was obvously planted there in plain sight by the second most dodgy cop and they didnt find it first time round. It wadnt hidden. Just out in the open with no dna from the owner of the key The blood spots in the car could be from the sample the police have why else is there a needle hole in a sealed sample. So the evidence is set up to point at Avery whether he is actually guilty.