By Andrew Johnson Special to The Star
Like a lot of people, I spent some recent days binge-watching the Netflix original series “Making a Murderer,” a 10-part documentary about Steven Avery. Avery was wrongfully convicted of a rape, released 18 years later after DNA evidence proved his innocence, and then ended up accused of a heinous murder.
In spite of how one feels about the documentary’s neutrality, the show raises serious questions over how our justice system works, and how our media risk their objectivity in the service of a prosecutor’s agenda.
As I watched the show, I couldn’t help but think of how much Steve Avery reminds me of Bryan Sheppard.
Bryan is currently serving a life sentence for a 1988 arson that caused the deaths of six Kansas City firefighters. The tragic deaths shocked our Kansas City community, and law enforcement promised to catch the killers. Justice would be served.
But the case went unsolved for nearly a decade. Then suddenly in 1995, a sensationalized episode of “Unsolved Mysteries” aired, telling the story of the “cold-blooded murder” of Kansas City’s finest and ended with a call for any tips and a reminder of the $50,000 reward for information leading to arrests of the killers.