Yeah, the documentary seemed pretty thorough in displaying what was presented in the court room. What stood out to me was the officer who ran the plates of the missing woman's car 2 days into a 5 day search and the car subsequently, and miraculously, appears on the Avery property with some sticks and a plank of wood laid on top of it, and it also just so happened to be the location one of the Sheriff's detectives directed a woman to search while giving her a camera and a direct line to his phone and she found that same vehicle 15 minutes into a search of a salvage yard with over a thousand cars in it.
Yeah, but that was actually in the documentary. It just happened to also show other evidence that made the discovery of that evidence seem very skeptical. Like a vial of Avery's blood which was in police custody in a sealed evidence bag since his false convition for rape being opened and resealed with Scotch tape, and bone fragments from the woman being found in a burn pit in a rock quarry far south of his residence where the police and the prosecution's top witness claimed it was done in a bonfire near his trailer, and then retracted that testimony in his own trial (while being recorded as being coached into his confession). There's also the fact that the woman's dna, and his alleged accomplaces dna, was not found anywhere inside his residence though they'd both allegedly handcuffed, raped, stabbed, and shot the woman in Avery's bedroom.