From the article Missy provided:
As the talking-head prosecutor on Nancy Grace screamed at the time, “The real crime is they let him out in the first place – thanks a lot, Wisconsin Innocence Project!”
Whoa. How repulsive. What sort of moron is angry that a man is let out of prison when it is demonstrated he was wrongly convicted? This idiot probably writes forwards in poorly written books.
Interesting read by the way, Missy.
But he does say some....specious things. Like this:
He considered prison his home, a place to which he was almost destined to return, and the prospect of returning there did nothing to deter him from committing murder.
I've never seen anything that supports this. I imagine Avery does handle prison fairly well, having spent so much time there, but I haven't seen anything that says he's loving it.
He supports that idea with this quote:
Sometimes, I feel like it’s easier in there,” he said a few months after moving into an ice shanty with its jail-like confines, “some days, just put me back there, get it all over with.”
[SUP]4[/SUP]
And for people who can handle prison, prison IS simpler. There are no bills, no jobs you have to go to. All of your decisions are made for you. Food is provided for, as well as medical....to an extent. You have few real decisions you have to make. But it isn't always easier and the ways it is harder can be MUCH harder than on the outside. I think people who feel life is easier in prison have a lot of similarities to people suffering PTSD.
But sometimes not wanting to have to make it on your own is far from wanting to be in prison so bad you murder someone. Though I guess that might sort of poorly explain why he did such a bad job of hiding it.
First, how frequently do wrongful convictions occur? The short answer is, not very. Concurring in a 2006 U.S. Supreme Court death penalty decision, Justice Antonin Scalia estimated the rate of wrongful convictions in felony cases to be less than three-hundredths of one percent – 0.027 percent to be exact.
This also caught my eye as tremendously poor reasoning. Relying on Scalia's estimation....As far as I am aware Scalia was not a wrongful conviction expert and a quick look turned up research from Ohio State that suggests there are 10,000 wrongful convictions a year.
https://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/ronhuff.htm
A second puts it at 5,000-10,000
https://wrongfulconvictionsblog.org...iction-rate-in-u-s-at-5000-to-10000-per-year/
If we pretend for a second that really is .027 percent, 5000-10000 is a gut wrenching number to dismiss as "not very" many.
While the prosecutor at his best is one of the most beneficent forces in our society, when he acts from malice or other base motives, he is one of the worst.”
-Judge Robert Jackson. Great quote.
Anyone graduating from law school ought to get this tattooed on their chest. Hah
Anyways, far from a perfect article, but it is always nice to see someone who thinks Avery is guilty taking a look at the big picture problems that the Halbach murder highlights instead of patting themselves on the back.