Jun 5, 2019

Wrongfully Convicted Wisconsin Man Awaits Word from Circuit Court

Multiple violations of the law committed by Wisconsin
law enforcement are part of post-conviction litigation
in Steven Avery's bid for a new trial.
[p. 10, Defendant's Motion for Leave to File Defendant's
Reply to the State's Response in Opposition to
Defendant's Motion for New Trial. April 11, 2019
]
Madison, Wisconsin — Two Wisconsin Dept of Justice (DoJ) attorneys conspired to destroy exculpatory evidence in 2011 in the Steven Avery case, featured in the Emmy-winning Making a Murderer.

This evidence destruction is being litigated in Avery's post-conviction case by the same two DoJ perpetrators — Asst Attorney General and Special Prosecutor Thomas J. Fallon, and DoJ Special Prosecutor Norman Gahn. Gahn and Fallon were also part of the Special Prosecutor's trial team led by the disgraced sex offender, ex-Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz. (McDonell-Parry reports in Rolling Stone Magazine)

The case is State v. Steven A. Avery, Appeal Number 2017AP002288.

Fallon and Gahn argue that the evidence they helped destroy was "inexplicably released" from the Calumet County Sheriff’s Department’s evidence control unit in their March 29, 2019 legal filing, (p 13).

"Inexplicably released" is an interesting, indeed disingenuous characterization for the illegal destruction of evidence that not only implicates Fallon, Gahn and Calumet County Sheriff Mark Wiegert, but also is a part of Avery's post-conviction litigation pleading this concealment and destruction violates the Due Process Clause and is a clear Brady violation under Wisconsin judicial doctrine.

The sheer multiplicity of illegality and violations of Avery's constitutional rights by Wisconsin law enforcement is a window into Wisconsin law enforcement corruption.

A reader ought consider noting this is not ole-boy Louisiana corruption. This is demented Wisconsin police corruption, more insidious than any conduct our fellows to the South can conjure.

A co-conspirator in the evidence destruction is current Calumet County Sheriff Mark Wiegert — the same Mark Wiegert who abused a cognitively challenged 16-year-old Brendan Dassey and falsely claimed Dassey had confessed to killing a young woman with Avery in 2005. (Michele LaVigne, Sally U. Miles. Under the Hood. Brendan Dassey. Language Impairment and Judicial Ignorance.)

DoJ attorneys Fallon and Gahn are working under the authority of Wisconsin Attorney General Joshua Kahl (D).

A decision is expected before June 10, 2019. An adverse ruling for Steven Avery is expected from a Wisconsin circuit court judge, Sheboygan County Judge Angela W. Sutkiewicz, (Workwith KZ legal filings).

Avery is expected by observers to prevail in state appellate court.

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