A Conversation on Justice | Jerry Buting | Talks at Google

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2016
  • Jerry Buting, criminal defense attorney, stops by Google to discuss justice and the American criminal justice system. Jerry, along with attorney Dean Strang, defended Steven Avery in a 2005 criminal case. The case was made famous by Netflix's "Making a Murderer" series, which documents the arrest and trial of Steven Avery.
    Jerry and Dean are now hosting "A Conversation on Justice," a national tour focused on the American criminal justice. The tour will involve the two attorneys in conversation about the Steven Avery case and its broader implications, as well as a discussion on the larger topic of the American criminal justice system. Each night will also feature a Q&A portion and the opportunity for the audience to address questions directly to Jerry Buting and Dean Strang.
    conversationonjustice.com/
    Moderated by Artur Oliveira

Комментарии • 27

  • @wahibyusuf
    @wahibyusuf 3 года назад +2

    IMO, it's unbelievable that judges at the highest level of the American Appeals Court System failed to see the difference between "thinking of " and "remembering" something like shooting someone in the head. I hope & am glad that there are "fair-minded" ppl funding and fighting a profoundly corrupt, criminal injustice system on behalf of Dassey, Avery and all the wrongly convicted.

  • @teenacurl4690
    @teenacurl4690 5 лет назад +3

    I'm hopeful that Avery case aids our great country to a disclosure of truth, as people watch these videos, and some become enraged to the "that could be me or my children" mindset, that the clarity to truth, and a future that government runs a much tighter, honest and justiced ship, that we can bring our nation to the greatness it was founded on 260 years ago. Where the government is FOR the people, OF the people and BY the people. To become as we we're founded once more, a truly FREE nation of people not controlled by corrupt control of a group

  • @teenacurl4690
    @teenacurl4690 5 лет назад +8

    Brendan's attorney, Len, was overly exuberant, smiling almost giddy! Really concerning when your so called attorney knows he's placed in to cause you to please guilty... Proven when his investigator bullied Brendan to confess, and Brendan wrote the actual truth, but then he forced him to draw the body being murdered! I mean are you kidding me!?

    • @chefsputnik1
      @chefsputnik1 3 года назад +1

      It's clear that Len was dirty. Either he didn't watch the whole confession tape, or he acted on Kratz orders. By the way, coincidentally, later he was convicted for harassing a woman, just like Ken Kratz eu.postcrescent.com/story/news/2019/10/01/len-kachinsky-former-municipal-judge-guilty-violating-restraining-order/3828322002/

    • @teenacurl4690
      @teenacurl4690 Год назад +1

      @@robintamihere4550 yup! Exactly!! What these cops did to Brandon not only ILLEGALLY Coerced him, BUT this a BLATANT ABUSE OF A DISABLED PERSON😳😡
      I watched this case when it first came out and it still pisses me off😡😳 The scandal and corruption goes waaay deeper than that police department... It had to for them to not be held accountable so to this day😳

  • @mcgarnicle201
    @mcgarnicle201 7 лет назад +7

    At 34:30 they are discussing the DNA on the hood latch. Jerry Buting says that the state's experts are going through Halback's Rav4, they want to read the odometer, but the battery is disconnected. On most vehicles just having the battery hooked up doesn't display the odometer, you need the key to do that. I wonder if the key was in the vehicle at this time....

    • @cbmtrx
      @cbmtrx 7 лет назад +10

      They "found" the key in Avery's trailer...on like the 7th search or some bullshit. Remember that the defense team also pointed out that the key ONLY had Avery's DNA on it--that it didn't even have the driver's DNA on it. Surely a massively significant fact, also overlooked. The defense argued that this would infer that it had been scrubbed clean, applied with Avery's DNA, and planted.
      And what percentage of the population keeps their car key all by itself on a lanyard? Where are her other keys?

    • @jarls5890
      @jarls5890 6 лет назад +12

      Add Colborn calls in the RAV4s license plates over radio two days before it is officially found. Clear as day that Colborn was looking at the vehicle when he made that call. His mental gymnastics when he realized he was caught during hearings and needed to make some plausible explanation to this - almost made him have an aneurism.

    • @teenacurl4690
      @teenacurl4690 5 лет назад +5

      mcgarnicle201 good point. We know that prosecutors and police held control over defense getting any evidence.

    • @teenacurl4690
      @teenacurl4690 5 лет назад +5

      Also, the neighboring county Police even admitted that they didn't even know they were supposed to be "watching" the police on scene so there was no holes or lapses in accountability to missing times and what activity the investigating officers were doing. To eliminate corruption due to those officers being sued by Avery in another wronful imprisonment case prior. It's just rediculous

    • @meems4378
      @meems4378 5 лет назад

      Could be true. Really depends on the year of the car. Older models had rolling odometers.

  • @mamsy1169
    @mamsy1169 4 года назад

    What's even worse about the civil penalties of a criminal conviction (or even an accusation/criminal charge), like the sex offender example here, is that the constitutional challenges against it have lost under the guise that they are civil penalties and not criminal penalties and Judges have ruled that certain circumstances are not too punitive in effect to determine the civil consequence as more punitive than not, which is a factor in determining if a civil penalty is covered constitutionally (Mendoza-Martinez factors). And obviously these rulings are well established case law now from all of the people who fought their responsibility to either register or conform to residential requirements or other requirements with ex post facto, due process, & equal protection claims. Emphasis on ex post facto. My opinion and analysis comes from researching cases to find case law that would support a case involving license reinstatement after revocation.
    I believe that we will see more and more of this in the years to come and its terrifying to think of. It's essentially a "loophole" legislators have created along with the support of Judge's rulings in order to bypass the constitution. They can be challenged, however, it does not relieve the party effected of any mis-justice until if and when the final decision is in their favor, which we know takes time, time that nobody can get back.

  • @laurencejoaquin3675
    @laurencejoaquin3675 6 лет назад +5

    This interviewer actually scored a job at google? wow........

    • @meems4378
      @meems4378 5 лет назад +1

      Some of the best programmers and developers I know are naturally introverted. Nothing wrong with it...more common than not actually.

    • @michellewoods7299
      @michellewoods7299 5 лет назад

      I love Jerry!! He's very smart... But this other guy... You think he could have came up with some more in depth questions... Jeez...

  • @SourPatchPuss
    @SourPatchPuss 7 лет назад +5

    The saddest part of the whole case to me is how UNBELIEVABLY UNEDUCATED the Avery family is. Like they clearly dont know whats going on 10 feet beyond their own land. But they seem like good honest people who just dont know much.

  • @darksideofthemoon2348
    @darksideofthemoon2348 4 месяца назад

    Gerry knows Steven Avery is guilty...

  • @cutthroattruthnews4766
    @cutthroattruthnews4766 5 лет назад

    Jerry and Dean are like fucking funeral directors....lol They lost...they deal with the dead I guess, Have they ever won a profile murder case?