IMO
The major things that came out of this case are the not guilty verdicts. That the jury could see through the false confessions is a sign the public is waking up to the tactics used by some detectives to get what they want.
Putting everything else aside about what led to the 2nd interrogation, the legitimacy of the interrogation methods used on Skylar, and giving LE and the State every benefit of the doubt.....
At the time of interrogation, LE believed the bones were charred. From that and from what Skylar had told them in interview #1, including that she didn't want the baby, hadn't told anyone she was pregnant, and had birthed in secret, made it reasonable for LE to believe it was more likely than not to have killed her baby. Fair enough.
Believing that, of course they weren't going to automatically accept her denials that she burned her baby. Again, fair enough.
Let's even posit it wasn't problematic for LE to hold her hands and tell her they knew she burned her baby because she loved her.
The point at which any confession Skylar made from then on lost all legitimacy was when LE accepted Skylar's account of setting her baby on fire with a lighter. No matter what she said or did not say about how high those imaginary flames leapt up.
It was an absurd and impossible scenario. That LE accepted it then, and that the State insisted upon it as truth at trial, made everything Skylar "confessed" to afterwards highly questionable at best.
I'm still convinced the State lost at least some jurors the day that interrogation was played at trial.