Yesterday: in bedroom where key was "found." Room is so small could not have missed unless they searched w/eyes closed. #MakingAMurderer
— Kathleen Zellner (@ZellnerLaw) January 21, 2016
Also body was not burned in burn pit bc heat would have burned down Avery's garage. A lot of junk science at the junkyard. #MakingAMurderer
— Kathleen Zellner (@ZellnerLaw) January 21, 2016
The 22 recovered from garage did not exit TH's head. State expert failed to testify bullet exited--that 22 driven to scene #MakingAMurderer
— Kathleen Zellner (@ZellnerLaw) January 22, 2016
Culprit had to remove his own DNA from key so TH's removed in process.Rub key on Avery's clothes for skin cells. Presto #MakingAMurderer
— Kathleen Zellner (@ZellnerLaw) January 22, 2016
The New Yorker got it so wrong: said sweat on battery cable not planted . You're right bc there is no DNA in sweat. https://t.co/bAOF6Kx4WZ
— Kathleen Zellner (@ZellnerLaw) January 21, 2016
Brendon Garrett's book ""Convicting the Innocent" shows how often judges get it wrong by rubber stamping prosecutions. #MakingAMurderer
— Kathleen Zellner (@ZellnerLaw) January 12, 2016
Legal experts blast Avery prosecutor's conduct https://t.co/iL3sLY6Imx #MakingAMurderer
— Kathleen Zellner (@ZellnerLaw) January 19, 2016