Feb 9, 2019

Advocates for Wrongfully Convicted in Making a Murderer Get FOIA Docs — Law Enforcement Looks Guilty

Update II: Another tweet appears to indicate the Calumet County Sheriff's Office (CASO) changed evidence tags in an attempt to implicate Steven Avery.

If the interpretation of innocence advocates is correct, then Wisconsin law enforcement has been caught red-handed planting evidence.
Update - Advocates demand statement from Gov Tony Evers (D) and Attorney General Josh Kaul (D).

Reads one Tweet:

"You are in power? You have JUSTICE SYSTEM and LE [law enforcement] not fit for purpose. Any other state or country with that label would be ashamed and the CEO would be fired and thrown in jail for the state yours is in."

Madison, Wisconsin—Advocates for two wrongfully convicted men are elated and outraged about the contents of some 300 documents obtained in a new Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request.

Wisconsin law enforcement appears to implicated in obstruction of justice.

Several innocence advocates speculate the information will provide a new basis for legal motions seeking a hearing to vacate the 2007 conviction of Steven Avery and Brendan Dassay, featured in the Making a Murderer documentaries, Netflix.

The documents are housed online at Google Docs.

The documents are entitled CASO Ledgers for Calumet County Sheriff's Office (CASO).

Advocates are sorting through the documents now, and are responding to questions asking for explanations:

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