Indefensible
Page 25
(Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
Brendan Dassey’s drawing of Steven Avery’s garage depicting Teresa, Steven and Brendan in their locations when Teresa was shot by Steven. (Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
Side by side comparison of Trial Exhibit 107 with manual entries made next to Brendan Dassey’s drawing of the garage on March 1, 2006.
(Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
Animation showing the location of a burn pit behind Steven Avery’s garage and two burn barrels.
(Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
Testing on the charred remains found in burn pit behind Avery’s garage showed a match to Teresa Halbach’s DNA profile. (Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
Teresa Halbach’s cell phone, PDA and camera were found, shattered and burnt, in a burn barrel in front of Avery’s trailer home. The tire rim to the right was found on top of the other burned debris.
(Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
Avery’s red trailer home, Barb Janda’s van, and Avery’s burn barrel (on the right), where Teresa Halbach’s cell phone, PDA, and camera were found.
(Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
Retired Deputy Inspector Eugene Kusche testifying at his deposition in Steven Avery’s wrongful conviction lawsuit on October 26, 2005, just five days before Teresa Halbach was murdered.
(Photos courtesy of Magne-Script Video Court Reporting)
From the Dassey trial: Written statement of Kayla Avery, Brendan Dassey’s first cousin.
(Photo courtesy of Calumet County Sheriff’s Department)
This picture accompanied a Tweet meant for Colborn and Lenk.
Colborn Winch Bullet Should We Use Lenk One On The Right Grab Teresas Toothbrush Brains Dont Matter #MakingAMurderer pic.twitter.com/3FPxQUNnM6
—0Hour1 (@0Hour1) December 29. 2015
Facebook call to action to sabotage The Innocent Killer.
The Manitowoc County Courthouse.
About the Author
Michael Griesbach is a longtime Wisconsin prosecutor and active member of the board of advisers at the Wisconsin Innocence Project. He is a frequent presenter and panelist on the topic of wrongful convictions and their causes. He has also presented on other topics concerning the criminal justice system and its need for reform. Through his books The Innocent Killer and Indefensible he hopes to leave his readers better informed about the criminal justice system and more concerned about those whose lives it deeply affects. He lives in northeastern Wisconsin with his wife, Jody, and their four children.