I don't think this has any bearing on guilt or innocence, but in light of the fact that he kept the key, it makes sense that he locked the doors and in my opinion points more toward his guilt than innocence.
I think the Avery case is much more difficult that any exoneration she has won before. Those cases were about false eye witness identification or the convicted not leaving DNA at the scene and the DNA of the real killer was not tested. In Avery's case his DNA was found, so she will have to...
I would have also thought she would have had paperwork in her car for the Auto Trader and maybe even some other jobs. I think he kept the spare key and cleaned any trace of her off it like he cleaned everything out of her car that would have looked obvious like it belonged to her.
There are some photos of that phone record that somebody got from the Murder ID show? where they were not blanked out. Some were incoming and some outgoing, but not all the same number. They were calls she was making to and receiving from her customers that day. The call I have not yet seen...
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