Showing posts with label Halbach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halbach. Show all posts

Friday, January 15, 2016

Steven Avery"s Mother: Teresa Halbach is Still Alive!

Even if you haven"t binge watched all ten hours of Making a Murderer, you"re probably at least somewhat familiar with the mysteries surrounding the 2005 killing of Teresa Halbach.


If not, allow us to give you a very brief, Wisconsin-accent-free rundown of the salient facts:


A Manitowoc County, WI man named Steven Avery was falsely convicted of rape in 1985, and served 18 years in prison before being exonerated by DNA evidence.


Avery sued the county for $ 36 million, but was arrested for the murder of a 25-year-old woman named Theresa Halbach before he was able to see his civil case through.


Now, Avery is serving a life sentence behind bars, and both his lawyers and the wildly popular Netflix documentary series still maintain that he"s the victim of an elaborate frame-up executed by vengeful law enforcement officials.


There"s ample reason to believe that Avery was framed, or at least convicted by a biased jury, but as with all conspiracy theories, the arguments in his favor have gotten stranger and stranger as the years have passed by.


For example, check out the latest claim from Avery"s own mother, who says that her son can"t be guilty of murdering Theresa Halbach – because Theresa Halbach is still alive.


To be fair, Avery"s mother is elderly, and even if Steven didn"t kill Halbach, many people (including Steven) believe that one of her other sons did


So it"s not hard to see why Mrs. Avery would be a proponent of the unlikely theory that Theresa went into hiding just to screw some guy over.


Still, it"s an indication of how insane the speculation about this case has gotten.


Listen to Mrs. Avery"s latest interview in the clip below.


Steven averys mother teresa halbach is still alive

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Steven Avery: I Know Who Killed Teresa Halbach!

Even if you didn’t binge-watch the series over the holidays like the rest of your co-workers, you’re probably well aware of the controversy surrounding the Netflix docu-drama Making a Murderer.


If not, allow us to summarize:




Steven Avery



After serving 18 years behind bars for a sexual assault that he didn’t commit, Steven Avery was released only to be imprisoned again two years later for allegedly murdering a 25-year-old photographer named Teresa Halbach.


As with his first trial, Avery’s second case was marred by controversy and allegations of police corruption, and the series makes a compelling argument that the 53-year-old has once again been wrongly convicted.


(Before you tear us apart in the comments, note that we said “the series makes a compelling argument,” not, “OMG YOU GUYS STEVEN AVERY IS TOTES INNOCENT!!!”)


Anyway, TMZ has obtained court documents filed several years after Avery’s 2005 murder conviction in which he reveals for the first time his theory on who killed Halbach.


In 2009, Avery told the court that he believes there’s a good chance that his brothers – Charles Avery and Earl Avery – may have committed the murder, and he makes a strong case for why they should at least be investigated.


For starters, both men have had troubling brushes with the law in recent years – Earl was arrested for sexually assaulting his daughters and eventually acquitted; Charles was accused of choking and raping his wife, but was also cleared.


The documents also note that Charles has a long and well-documented history of harassing women at the exact location on the Avery family’s property where Halbach was last seen.


Interestingly, Steven claims that his cash-strapped brothers would have ample motive to frame him, as they had recently expressed jealousy over the multi-million dollar settlement he was soon to receive for being wrongfully convicted of sexual assault two decades prior.


It’s unlikely that Steven’s accusations will lead authorities to take legal action against his brothers, but they do serve to further muddy the waters in what is already an impossibly murky case.