Criminal Minds
AP Language and Composition Period 3
Ms.Burke
14 March 2016
As with any other murder case that comes to surface, conspiracies will be right around the corner. No matter what the unknown truth may be, or the amount of witnesses and DNA that is available, the twisted theories will rise and grow, just as the case does. Taking a look at the murder case of Teresa Halbach, with number one suspect, Steven Avery you see a tumble of theories jolting together. Breaking it down to only one hard piece of evidence- the blood vial found in the sealed box. The conspiracy begins with the punctured hole that was found in Steven Avery’s blood vial which was said to be done by law enforcement officials in Manitowoc County. Proving that
…show more content…
James Fitzgerald and members of Avery’s defense team met and opened packages of evidence in the 1985 court file with the court’s approval to determine what to send out for additional tests. On June 19, 2002 at 12:25 p.m., Fitzgerald opened the box with the blood vial in it and closed it again two minutes later. It was believed the evidence tape seal was broken at that time, the court records say. In shorter words, the blood vial wasn’t as big a smoking gun as expressed in the 2014 documentary, “Making a Murder”. There is also question about whether the blood needed to be tested for EDTA at all, if evidence that it had been tampered with could so easily be explained. As defense attorneys continue with their argumentation that the EDTA testing was faulty- (and several DNA scientists have backed them) that EDTA could have been present in three of the samples from Halbach’s car that the prosecution didn’t test. However this all goes back to the documentary and its misinterpretation of how “clear cut” the evidence tampering really was. As said before, experts back up the ideal normality of finding “punctured” holes in rubber stoppers, when if it wasn't extracted with a needle- the blood would have been improperly just ‘dumped in there’. (Dustin Rowles