I'm reading the comments from this NY Times article, which asks for a discussion on the subject:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/31/a...king-a-murderer-spoilers-discussion.html?_r=0
Especially interesting to me is that the comments are from people from all over the map, and they're mostly quite articulate and well-thought-out.
I have grown weary of reading comments by (mostly) Wisconsans defending the guilty verdicts. I understand that Steven Avery -- indeed, the whole Avery family -- might seem unsavory -- even embarrassingly so -- but it seems as if the locals truly can't see past their own biases. In most cases, they state something to the effect of, "I think/believe/know that Steven Avery did it." They then go on to cite tainted, questionable and discounted evidence.
Well, it was never about what anyone thinks or believes (and no one really knows). It's about whether or not the prosecution proved their case(s) beyond a reasonable doubt.
Due to the flagrant abuses of power and misconduct by the prosecutor, Brendan's first defense attorney, and the Manitowoc County PD, I can't see how the mountain of Reasonable Doubt was something a fair jury could ever realistically climb over. IMO, those biases followed (at least some) jurors right into the deliberation room.
One more thing: Of all the "players" in the docu-series, who would you most like to have on your side? Strang and Buting, or the Manitowoc County PD, Kratz, et al?
It seems to me there is a clear line of distinction between the integrity of some and the lack of it among others. JMO