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Prosecutor in “Making a Murderer” case says he’ll write book

Due to questions being raised about the evidence used against Avery and Dassey, fans of the series believe the men were framed for Halbach’s murder.

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Regardless of its origin, the theory states that the essential mistake made by the Manitowoc Sheriff’s Department occurred when Andrew Coborn went to the Avery Salvage Yard, where Mike Halbach and Ryan Hillegas had discovered the RAV4 belonging to victim Teresa Halbach.

Trial prosecutor Ken Kratz has spoken out, as has Brendan Dassey’s original lawyer. In short, Kratz seemed like a total dick, and he’s not afraid to admit it. I didn’t sit through the trial nor I have I read the trial transcript, so everything I say here is simply my opinion. “I am really innocent of this case, and that is the truth”, he wrote. Kratz, then 50, wrote to the woman in a text.

And he has again protested his innocence in a 3-page letter when he responded to a request for comment on the series from WISN 12 News in Milwaukee.

As TheBlaze previously reported, Stachowski, who was prominently featured in “Making a Murderer” defending Avery, shockingly changed her story in an exclusive HLN interview that aired earlier this month, saying that she believes that the convicted murderer is guilty of killing Halbach and that he once threatened to murder her as well.

But while watching the video interview, which has its fair share of awkward, cringeworthy moments, it’s tough to feel empathetic.

“Even a presidential pardon would not be able to do anything since he is a state prisoner and the governor of Wisconsin, Scott Walker, has already stated that he will not consider a pardon”, said Neil Rypka, a fourth year mechanical engineering student.

He did, however, share an interesting piece of clarification on that suspicious vial of blood.

“The purple-topped tubes have to be filled up somehow”, Kratz told Friedman. When they’re sitting by the phlebotomist, they’re empty, right?

“The blood gets in there through a needle. It’s no more complicated than that”, he said. That’s because, according to The Hollywood Reporter, the Wisconsin prisons have denied all interviews.

He says that it’s a “Catch 22” and that you’re “damned if you do and damned if you don’t” put the suspect forward as a witness. It’s real-life so you don’t know what’s going to happen.

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The Internet sleuths found a picture of Teresa shortly before her death, clutching a set of keys in her hand while standing next to her auto. “It’s not true that she asked us not to be part of the documentary”.

This image released by Netflix shows Steven Avery right in the Netflix original documentary series'Making A Murderer