How Much Do These Pieces Of Evidence Convince You Of Steven Avery's Guilt
How Much Do These Pieces Of Evidence Convince You Of Steven Avery's Guilt
Making A Murderer Quiz..
Making A Murderer Quiz..
In this photograph, Halbach appears to be holding only two pairs of keys, when evidence only found one
A vial of Avery's blood located in a police evidence unit had a broken seal on its box and a needle hole through its lid
Avery had only recently bought the leg irons he was accused of using on Halbach
In a police report from 1983, Avery's sister-in-law told police that Avery "beat up on his wife, and she left home and went to a domestic violence center"
Avery filed a $36 million (£23.5 million) federal lawsuit against Manitowoc County after he was convicted 18 years in prison for a sexual assault he didn't commit
Avery pleaded guilty to animal cruelty after he threw his family's cat over a bonfire, causing it to ignite
The prosecution's DNA expert had the worse record in her lab
Prosecutor Ken Kratz cites phonecalls made to Halbach as evidence he acted creepily towards her
Halbach's ex-boyfriend was seemingly never considered as suspect, Avery's lawyer Jerome Buting said "In most cases, the people who are close to a victim are the ones who are in fact the killers"
Halbach's bones were discovered in multiple places across the Avery Salvage Yard
Prosecutor Kratz claimed that "an inmate was told by Avery that the way to get rid of a body is to 'burn it'
The defence appeared to prove that voicemails had been deleted from Halbach's phone, after her death
An AutoTrader receptionist testified during the trial and said that Avery specifically asked for Halbach
The bullet which was apparently ‘planted’ in Avery’s garage had Halbach’s DNA on it and was seemingly fired from Avery’s gun, according to ballistics report
According an email from Kratz, Avery used a hidden phone number to call Halbach so she would pick up
Halbach’s purse and other items were found near the Avery property and police reported her bones were “intertwined” with tires
Police claim they found a key to Halbach's SUV in Avery's home. But the key was only found after multiple searches, and contained only Avery's DNA, not Halbach's
Tests found no signs of EDTA, an anticoagulant used to preserve the blood in Avery's vial, in the blood found in Halbach's SUV. The prosecution used this finding as proof that the blood found in Halbach's SUV was not the same as the blood found in Avery's vial
The prosecution built much of its initial case on the testimony of Brendan Dassey which was later pulled from trial due to its questionable nature
Kratz claims that Avery ‘told inmates’ he wanted to ‘build a torture chamber’ when he got out
Guilty
Guilty
Innocent
Innocent
Still Undecided
Still Undecided