Unabridged Audiobook
I really liked seeing another perspective and the revelation of the Netflix documentary's bias. I feel that some of his points are plausible. I would argue for people to read this book but the fact that Dassey's confession wasn't discredited in this book showed a little bias for me. The authors points were strong enough to possibly sway a person to believe on Avery's guilt without agreeing that Dasseys confession was in fact uncoerced or that of a youth with a very low IQ who could easily be manipulated. If the author would have at least shared my view in the obviousness of that false confession then he would have probably sold me on Avery's guilt even if I still feel like Manitowoc county possibly tampered with evidence to ensure his conviction as they have a history of inappropriate practices.
Great book, and for once also a great narrator! This is how it should be done, actually looking for the truth, whatever that may be, and reporting all of the facts. Making a Murderer was fiction. It's utterly dumbfounding the amount of sheep that bought that garbage. The handling of Dassey was wrong, all the way around. I felt Griesbach made that clear. Not every question was leading. The kid knew details he would not have known had he not been there.
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