3 Nov 2016

New DNA tests could prove Steven Avery's innocence - lawyers

7:41 am on 3 November 2016

Lawyers from the documentary Making a Murderer are excited about new forensic DNA testing methods that could finally prove their client Steven Avery was framed.

Steven Avery was found guilty of the murder of 25-year-old Teresa Halbach, whose remains were found on his property.

Steven Avery was found guilty of the murder of 25-year-old Teresa Halbach, whose remains were found on his property. Photo: AFP Photo / Handout / Wisconsin Department of Corrections

Avery and his nephew Brendan Dassey were found guilty of the murder of Teresa Halbach, whose remains were found on Avery's property 11 years ago.

His lawyers Dean Strang and Jerry Buting told the ABC that new scientific testing methods might be able to radiocarbon date blood found at the scene of the crime.

"Probably over 100 scientists all over the world between the two of us contacted us [after the documentary] and said hey, you know there's new tests you can do," Mr Buting said.

Since the 10-hour series aired, Avery has retained a new lawyer, Kathleen Zellner, who specialises in wrongful convictions.

In August she filed a motion at the Manitowoc Circuit Court demanding scientific testing that did not exist at the time the case was tried be conducted.

"We actually were contacted before she was retained," Mr Buting said.

"Some of it was just, oh our ability to detect EDTA, chemical tests have been refined, but some of the more interesting ones were these scientists with things like radiocarbon dating and DNA ageing, it's called, where you can actually look at somebody's sample of blood maybe a month or a year ago and distinguish it from their blood right now."

Mr Strang hoped the DNA ageing method will prove Avery is innocent.

"If it turns out that the blood in [Teresa Halbach's] Toyota is older than the car itself - is 10 years older than the time at which it's found and five years older than the car - then that's also good at getting us to the truth," he said.

"And it also will mean not only a new trial, I think, for Steven Avery, but the likelihood that he walks free, because his blood from the mid-90s, if it's in that car, then Steven Avery was telling the truth when he said it was planted."

'I've always believed that he's innocent'

It was 11 years ago that 25-year-old Teresa Halbach went missing in Manitowoc County on an early evening on Halloween.

The young photographer was last seen with Steven Avery when she went to his home to take pictures of a car he had for sale.

When Ms Halbach's charred remains were found on Avery's property, he and his nephew Brendan Dassey were arrested and charged with her murder.

Avery had only just been released from prison two years earlier after spending 18 years behind bars for a violent rape it was later proved he did not commit.

Both Avery and his nephew were found guilty, but Mr Buting said he never thought the state's case added up.

"I've always believed that he's innocent for a lot of reasons," he said.

"They never had a motive for him to do this, he was about to come into a $400,000 tax free cheque from the state that very week that she disappeared, that's over and above the $36 million lawsuit he had that was also succeeding."

In August this year, the worldwide spotlight on the case helped overturn Brendan Dassey's conviction, and he is now set to be released from prison.

- ABC

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