Anonymous wrote:I didn't watch last night but did watch the first ep and follow the case pretty closely.
I HATED the first ep. I agree with pp it jumped around a ton, the drawings were incredibly distracting, etc. The only interesting part to me was the additional insight into Adnan's family.
I honestly still don't know who did it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've listed to various podcasts on the case, read articles, and now seen this documentary and my belief still hasn't changed: Jay did it. He did it either on his own or with someone else, but he did it.
I believe he did it because Hae had some dirt on him (perhaps saw him cheating) and was going to tell his girlfriend Stephanie. His girlfriend was waaaaay out of his league (good MC to UMC family vs. his LC upbringing) and he didn't want to lose her.
If Hae had dirt, I'm pretty sure it would've been in the diary. I don't buy your theory...
Anonymous wrote:The one thing I remember most from the Serial podcast was that Jay knew where Hae’s car was. So I don’t think it was random. Ultimately I don’t know who did it but I think that Jay knows who did it and I don’t think he’s a truthful person, so I’m not sure if Adnan did it. I think a new trial would be fair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've listed to various podcasts on the case, read articles, and now seen this documentary and my belief still hasn't changed: Jay did it. He did it either on his own or with someone else, but he did it.
I believe he did it because Hae had some dirt on him (perhaps saw him cheating) and was going to tell his girlfriend Stephanie. His girlfriend was waaaaay out of his league (good MC to UMC family vs. his LC upbringing) and he didn't want to lose her.
If Hae had dirt, I'm pretty sure it would've been in the diary. I don't buy your theory...
It was Don, the guy Hae was dating when she died. He did it because he didn't like that she was still friends with Adnan, IMO. What Serial got wrong/didn't explain well was the Magnet program Hae, Adnan, and Stephanie were in. Serial said it had 50 kids in the program but in reality it was much, much smaller with around just 25. They also didn't explain that the kids in the Magnet program had every class together except for the classes like art, music, etc. It wasn't possible for Hae to avoid Adnan in that kind of scenario.
The Crime Junkie podcast did an episode called What Serial Didn't Tell You that also further explained how the manager who vouched for Don as being at work was his mom. And the manager at the store where Don was filling in that day was Don's mom's girlfriend (and became his future stepmom). Plus there were some time card inconsistencies found upon further investigation, like the wrong employee number was used on his time card for that day instead of his longstanding employee number. And the shift he was supposedly working didn't actually exist as a shift and became of the way their time card system worked, a manager could only edit a time card for one week following the entry, so adding that shift with the wonky employee number had to of been done before Hae's body was found. That particular time card had to be changed by January something and that same day that was the cut off was also the same day that Don was first interviewed by the police. It was a very good episode!
This, and Jay's junk testimony is why he deserves a new trial. I think Jay's testimony should be disregarded all together.
Yes! I remember hearing the Jay interview tapes on Undisclosed (I believe it was) and the knocking/tapping sounds the detectives made when Jay started saying something that was incorrect or contradictory to a previous statement.
Anyway, now that the highest MD court has denied a new trial, can they take it higher? Is that an option?
I think the Supreme Court is the last option at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've listed to various podcasts on the case, read articles, and now seen this documentary and my belief still hasn't changed: Jay did it. He did it either on his own or with someone else, but he did it.
I believe he did it because Hae had some dirt on him (perhaps saw him cheating) and was going to tell his girlfriend Stephanie. His girlfriend was waaaaay out of his league (good MC to UMC family vs. his LC upbringing) and he didn't want to lose her.
If Hae had dirt, I'm pretty sure it would've been in the diary. I don't buy your theory...
It was Don, the guy Hae was dating when she died. He did it because he didn't like that she was still friends with Adnan, IMO. What Serial got wrong/didn't explain well was the Magnet program Hae, Adnan, and Stephanie were in. Serial said it had 50 kids in the program but in reality it was much, much smaller with around just 25. They also didn't explain that the kids in the Magnet program had every class together except for the classes like art, music, etc. It wasn't possible for Hae to avoid Adnan in that kind of scenario.
The Crime Junkie podcast did an episode called What Serial Didn't Tell You that also further explained how the manager who vouched for Don as being at work was his mom. And the manager at the store where Don was filling in that day was Don's mom's girlfriend (and became his future stepmom). Plus there were some time card inconsistencies found upon further investigation, like the wrong employee number was used on his time card for that day instead of his longstanding employee number. And the shift he was supposedly working didn't actually exist as a shift and became of the way their time card system worked, a manager could only edit a time card for one week following the entry, so adding that shift with the wonky employee number had to of been done before Hae's body was found. That particular time card had to be changed by January something and that same day that was the cut off was also the same day that Don was first interviewed by the police. It was a very good episode!
This, and Jay's junk testimony is why he deserves a new trial. I think Jay's testimony should be disregarded all together.
Yes! I remember hearing the Jay interview tapes on Undisclosed (I believe it was) and the knocking/tapping sounds the detectives made when Jay started saying something that was incorrect or contradictory to a previous statement.
Anyway, now that the highest MD court has denied a new trial, can they take it higher? Is that an option?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've listed to various podcasts on the case, read articles, and now seen this documentary and my belief still hasn't changed: Jay did it. He did it either on his own or with someone else, but he did it.
I believe he did it because Hae had some dirt on him (perhaps saw him cheating) and was going to tell his girlfriend Stephanie. His girlfriend was waaaaay out of his league (good MC to UMC family vs. his LC upbringing) and he didn't want to lose her.
If Hae had dirt, I'm pretty sure it would've been in the diary. I don't buy your theory...
It was Don, the guy Hae was dating when she died. He did it because he didn't like that she was still friends with Adnan, IMO. What Serial got wrong/didn't explain well was the Magnet program Hae, Adnan, and Stephanie were in. Serial said it had 50 kids in the program but in reality it was much, much smaller with around just 25. They also didn't explain that the kids in the Magnet program had every class together except for the classes like art, music, etc. It wasn't possible for Hae to avoid Adnan in that kind of scenario.
The Crime Junkie podcast did an episode called What Serial Didn't Tell You that also further explained how the manager who vouched for Don as being at work was his mom. And the manager at the store where Don was filling in that day was Don's mom's girlfriend (and became his future stepmom). Plus there were some time card inconsistencies found upon further investigation, like the wrong employee number was used on his time card for that day instead of his longstanding employee number. And the shift he was supposedly working didn't actually exist as a shift and became of the way their time card system worked, a manager could only edit a time card for one week following the entry, so adding that shift with the wonky employee number had to of been done before Hae's body was found. That particular time card had to be changed by January something and that same day that was the cut off was also the same day that Don was first interviewed by the police. It was a very good episode!
This, and Jay's junk testimony is why he deserves a new trial. I think Jay's testimony should be disregarded all together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've listed to various podcasts on the case, read articles, and now seen this documentary and my belief still hasn't changed: Jay did it. He did it either on his own or with someone else, but he did it.
I believe he did it because Hae had some dirt on him (perhaps saw him cheating) and was going to tell his girlfriend Stephanie. His girlfriend was waaaaay out of his league (good MC to UMC family vs. his LC upbringing) and he didn't want to lose her.
If Hae had dirt, I'm pretty sure it would've been in the diary. I don't buy your theory...
It was Don, the guy Hae was dating when she died. He did it because he didn't like that she was still friends with Adnan, IMO. What Serial got wrong/didn't explain well was the Magnet program Hae, Adnan, and Stephanie were in. Serial said it had 50 kids in the program but in reality it was much, much smaller with around just 25. They also didn't explain that the kids in the Magnet program had every class together except for the classes like art, music, etc. It wasn't possible for Hae to avoid Adnan in that kind of scenario.
The Crime Junkie podcast did an episode called What Serial Didn't Tell You that also further explained how the manager who vouched for Don as being at work was his mom. And the manager at the store where Don was filling in that day was Don's mom's girlfriend (and became his future stepmom). Plus there were some time card inconsistencies found upon further investigation, like the wrong employee number was used on his time card for that day instead of his longstanding employee number. And the shift he was supposedly working didn't actually exist as a shift and became of the way their time card system worked, a manager could only edit a time card for one week following the entry, so adding that shift with the wonky employee number had to of been done before Hae's body was found. That particular time card had to be changed by January something and that same day that was the cut off was also the same day that Don was first interviewed by the police. It was a very good episode!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This HBO show is based off of Rabias book so it has to be biased right?
Of course... Serial was balanced I would say. Rabia wanted her own spin so she helped launch Undisclosed. It was great to hear another perspective but clearly she's the most biased of the three lawyers on the project.
I'm not sure if Adnan did it but if he's in jail I think Jay also needs to be in jail.
I think that the HBO show, if anything, adds much more context to Hae herself. I found that Serial focused on the crime itself more than the people caught up in it. I think that Hae has largely been forgotten due to the hullabaloo about the case developments. I think HBO did a good job of bringing her to the forefront.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This HBO show is based off of Rabias book so it has to be biased right?
Of course... Serial was balanced I would say. Rabia wanted her own spin so she helped launch Undisclosed. It was great to hear another perspective but clearly she's the most biased of the three lawyers on the project.
I'm not sure if Adnan did it but if he's in jail I think Jay also needs to be in jail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This HBO show is based off of Rabias book so it has to be biased right?
Of course... Serial was balanced I would say. Rabia wanted her own spin so she helped launch Undisclosed. It was great to hear another perspective but clearly she's the most biased of the three lawyers on the project.
I'm not sure if Adnan did it but if he's in jail I think Jay also needs to be in jail.