Allegations of planted blood and a "discovered" key that seemed all too convenient for law enforcement.
When Netflix dropped Making a Murderer in late 2015, it didn’t just launch a binge-watching trend—it ignited a global obsession with the American justice system. Over a decade in the making, this docuseries by Laura Ricciardi and Moira Demos pulled back the curtain on the case of Steven Avery, a man whose life seems scripted by a dark, relentless irony. A Story Too Strange for Fiction Making a Murderer DocumentГЎrio, Crime 2015 1h 0...
The same sheriff’s department Avery was suing was heavily involved in the new investigation. Allegations of planted blood and a "discovered" key
The heartbreaking interrogation of Avery’s nephew, Brendan Dassey, whose limited IQ and lack of legal representation during questioning left viewers outraged. A Story Too Strange for Fiction The same
While critics and prosecutors like Ken Kratz argue the film omitted key physical evidence to paint Avery as a victim, the show’s power remains in how it forces us to ask: Is the system designed to find the truth, or just a conviction?. Making A Murderer - series review