'Making A Murderer' News: Steven Avery's Son Has Info That Can Further Bury His Father?
America's interest on Steven Avery has been aroused after his case was featured on Netflix TV series, "Making a Murderer," which was aired on Dec. 18 last year.
Avery was allegedly wrongfully imprisoned in 1995 for a sexual assault in 1985. He was set free on Sept. 11, 2003.
After the airing of "Making a Murderer" docu-series on Netflix, many people sympathized with him. But his son is not really convinced Steven Avery is innocent.
"Only one person can answer that, and that would be Teresa Halbach. But she can't answer that no more," Steven Jr. told Crime Watch Daily.
"The only thing I know was the entire case was very shady," he added. "It's clear that there was corruption. Him and Brendan deserve a fair trial. That's my take on it. If they're guilty, let them sit."
"But if they're free, get them out. It's been ten years now. They've wasted going on 30 years of his life if he's innocent."
Netflix's "Making a Murderer" has trained a spotlight into the country's judicial system. On the flip side, the show is making people do dangerous things.
Just last week, it was reported that the Manitowoc County Sheriff's Department, the infamous precinct where Steven Avery's case was studied, has received bomb threats from groups supposedly seeking justice.
"Someone got real pissed off watching 'Making a Murderer' ... a bomb threat was called in to Manitowoc cops and the caller demanded justice for Steven Avery," TMZ reported.
Manitowoc County residents also didn't take kindly to the negative publicity generated by the show in their community.
"We lived through this 10 years ago," Jason Ring, the president of the Manitowoc Area Visitor and Convention Bureau, said in an interview with New York Times.
"We made our judgment, and the trial came to an end, and locally most people were in support of that," he continued on Netflix's "Making a Murderer" about Steven Avery. "Now it's back - by no choosing or no doing of anyone in this community."