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Reply to "Making a Murderer on Netflix "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Steven Avery thinks his brother(s) may have committed the murder- http://www.businessinsider.com/making-a-murderer-convict-seven-avery-says-his-brothers-may-have-killed-teresa-halbach-2016-1 [/quote]Wow I wish someone would do a new documentary and focus on all the new information we've heard since this series was released![/quote] A lot of information the film makers kept out was deliberate. There was non-blood evidence revealed at trial that they did not include. Basically, they were trying to feature a man wrongly jailed for rape, but the guy's a sleaze and actually murdered someone in the process of making their film. I think he was quite capable of murdering someone well b/f he went to jail for the rape he didn't commit.[/quote] This just doesn't make sense. He was free, had public opinion on his side, and stood to receive a $36 million payout from the county. He had a girlfriend and was going to get married. What possible motivation did he have to MURDER someone on his own property and then LEAVE ALL THE EVIDENCE THERE knowing the police had it out for him already? . [/quote] I'm not opining on his guilt or innocence, but I don't think most people who commit murder make a pros and cons list first. [/quote] That's actually not the case - they didn't set out to make the film until after they heard he had been arrested for murder. [/quote] They obviously set out under the assumption that he was yet again being railroaded by local police. I'm sorry but these "documentarians" are full of sh*t. From the NPR interview: MONTAGNE: As a teenager, Demos says, Steven Avery made a series of bad choices, like burglarizing a local tavern with friends. DEMOS: [b]These are felonies, but when you look at the actual report, it's about breaking in and making a cheese sandwich and stealing some beer.[/b] MONTAGNE: But what turned out to be his most fateful bad choice was his decision to escalate feud with his own cousin, who was spreading nasty, humiliating rumors about him. [i]One night, he decided he'd had enough. He ran her off a country road and pointed a gun at her he says was not loaded. Turns out, she was the wrong person to intimidate.[/i] DEMOS: [b]She was married to a sheriff's deputy. And there's certainly a line that he crossed there that it became personal[/b]." Oh yeah, he made a cheese sandwich, and by the way, threw the family cat into a bonfire after pouring oil on it. You know, just normal, good hearted, boyish fun stuff. And there is no "wrong person" to intimidate by running them off the road and pointing a gun at them--it is [b]illegal[/b] no matter who the victim is. If Demos or Ricciardi were run off the road by some creep in a car who then pointed a gun at them, they wouldn't be downplaying this behavior as much. Cognitive dissonance to support their agenda.[/quote]
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