well... some points i cannot say that you are wrong.. or that they did not happen as they happened.
reg. bullet.
i was talking about bullet fragments with no indication of TH on it. where did they find the actual bullets (iirc 2 bullets that went through her body) - was the assertion that they went through, and then avery picked it up and got rid of it?
reg. the way he was thinking... maybe it wasn't like he had to form his answers according to the things police said they found - and let us just pretend for a moment that what they said they found was not put there by avery..... psychologically, avery feels that somethings happening here (dejavu from 20 years ago) and he is trying to give them an answer. so that they cannot say "hey we know, or, you didn't tell us what happened exactly..."
at the 2nd interview when they told him they found the car, he felt that fear, cause he instinctivly knew where this was going... first the car, then the body, then jail again.
don't forget that this guy spent a small eternity in prison for something he actually didn't do. if anything, he developed a hatred against LE. not against women.
at one point he says "i would have crushed the son of a b*ch", reg. THs car, and the cop says "you didn't have time"
really, mark weigert? if avery wanted to crush the car he would have crushed the car at one point during those 5 days. IF he was guilty. the guy was supposedly incinerating a murdered women casually there at this fireplace.. with everybody around?
Not sure what you are saying about the bullet fragments. They found 2 bulleft fragments in that garage. One was matched to Avery’s rifle, and had the victim’s DNA on it.
Zellner is claiming the state claimed that bullet caused one of the bullet wounds on the victim, but they never did. So by trying to “prove” that the bullet not have bone matter embedded in it somehow equates to it being planted is Zellner employing the same “bait and switch” tactics she has used, repeatedly, in this case. This is reflected in the constantly changing theories and suspects, and complete lack of exculpatory evidence.
Re:Avery’s accounts. Just look at what he said in the context of the moment. He went from staying home to make phone calls, chatting with his mom, going to his sister’s house, talking to his brother and his friend, staying home by himself listening to music, and watching *advertiser censored* to NONE of the above having happened.
This was his story before he knew any burned remains had been discovered.
Instead, his story NOW is, he admits to having a fire, and spending that night tending it with Brendan Dassey, but neither it,
nor his lies about, have anything to do Teresa Halbach’s disappearance at that very time and place. Nor any of the other evidence that points directly to her never having left.
Among that evidence is her vehicle, her blood in that vehicle, his blood in that vehicle, his non-blood DNA in that vehicle, her bones, personal items, and clothing in his firepit, a bullet wih her dna that matched his rifle, her key in his bedroom, dogs tracking her to his trailer and garage(despite his insistence she had not come into either that day), and his changing stories to account for it all, and, somehow, his stories are still changing.
As for not crushing the vehicle, there is plenty there as well. That vehicle was parked in area by the crusher, by other vehicles he was personally familiar with. He couldn’t just crush a perfectly good vehicle with his family around. It needs to be prepped, and that takes time. Too much attention would be drawn.
To crush it properly he would need time, and to reduce the number of eyes. Both needs would be met by waiting until his family was away, and the salvage yard closed. Both conditions would have been met over the weekend. His family went away, and the yard closed at noon on Saturday, and was closed all day Sunday.
And just crushing a vehicle doesn’t make it disappear. Further plans would be needed. He could mix it in with a stack of crushed cars, as they are stored after crushing. He could take it off the salvage yard, bury it, or divest himself of it by some other means I can’t conceive of.
I do find it interesting though, that Avery had crushed a car (after having just learned to do so), and left it waiting in the crusher just gthe day before going away.