. 30 June, 2017. by Unsolved Mysteries.14 CommentsThe cold case double murder of Texas teenagers Shane Stewart and Sally McNelly is heating up.In June of 2017, officers pulled over John Cyrus Gilbreath on suspicion of possession of marijuana. A female passenger in the car with Gilbreath told police that Gilbreath was a drug distributor, prompting police to search Gilbreath’s home.During the search, investigators found writings, audio tapes, and biological evidence that they believe are connected to Shane and Sally’s murders.Gilbreath has not been charged in connection with the murders, but has been named as a person of interest.We will bring you more information as this story develops.See the case on Amazon Prime in and in. Also available on YouTube with. I was told that the gun that Shane and Sally gave to Deputy Larry Counts has vanished from the evidence room (along with other evidence).
The person that told me this is working for a company doing a cold case video production about the murders of Shane and Sally. If this is true, it shows how big of a cover up is going on with the Shane and Sally case and the attempted murder of my daughter. To this day—–ALL—law enforcement refuses to interview me. ALL law enforcement refuses to take ANY information from me. Think about this. I found satanic evidence while the bodies of Shane and Sally were still missing.
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I report it to the Tom Green County Sheriffs Office. They do nothing. Then Shane and Sally are found in the same area. I then go to someone Shane knew very well. The person invites me into his home. He has a yellow legal pad. I thought he was going to take notes about the information I was giving.
Instead he draws a big star and acts VERY weird. I leave his house instantly. Oh–and by the way he has direct connections to law enforcement. Then a woman tells me that Shane and Sally were murdered by law enforcement and the same person that drew the big star. I tell NUMEROUS law enforcement agencies what happened. The Texas Rangers in Waco, Tx tell me to watch your back. Then in 2009 my daughter almost dies in a so called accident.
I file a police report and police refuse to investigate. The 2 suspects in the attempted murder of my daughter have NUMEROUS connections to people mentioned in the Shane and Sally case.Law enforcement is ABSOLUTELY involved in the murders of Shane and Sally—and the attempted murder of my daughter. Law enforcement is so brazen that they murder 2 teenagers and attempt to murder a baby—-they then rub it in my face by showing that—they don’t have to investigate anything.There is an old saying—-absolute power corrupts absolutely.I’m accusing the Tom Green County Sheriffs Office/ SAPD/ The Texas Rangers of covering up the murders of Shane and Sally–and the attempted murder of my daughter.
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This is obstruction of justice/ destroying evidence/ witness intimidation.Shane and Sally gave Deputy Larry Counts a gun they were told was used in a murder/ robbery. I believe the murder/ robbery that Shane and Sally mentioned is exactly what the cops are trying to keep a secret. The murder that Shane and Sally are talking about is probably the Sheila Elrod murder.
That would explain multiple agencies not wanting the murders of Shane and Sally solved because it would show that the Elrod murder case was not solved. It would show that the Texas Rangers and the SAPD had either done a poor job on the Elrod case or had planted evidence and lied.Both of the suspects that tried to murder my daughter had husbands that were lawyers. One of my daughters suspects husband works at the same lawyers office that Sheila Elrod had gone to the day before she was murdered. Sheila Elrod goes to a lawyers office and in less than 24 hours she is killed by a lawyer according to the police.
And of course the lawyer that supposedly killed Sheila Elrod is dead of natural causes when the police name him as a suspect and supposedly link his DNA.Both of my daughters suspects have links to the Sheila Elrod murder. One of my daughters suspects lived at a residence that a family member was named as a murder suspect in the Sheila Elrod murder.
The person was named as a suspect in the book “No Reason to Kill” written by former Chief of Police.Its not a coincidence that Shane and Sally gave a gun to Deputy Larry Counts that they were told was used in a murder/ robbery and my daughters suspects both have connections to the Sheila Elrod murder case. Read the story about Shane and Sally on this website It should be VERY obvious who “M.S.” is On any murder –who is the first suspect/s?
Hypothetical—-Do you think it would be weird for a very close family member of a murder victim to draw a big star on a yellow notepad instead of taking notes when someone brings that family member information about their murdered family member? (I guess it would be “normal” if you were in a cult.)Do you think it would be odd or unusual for a family member to be allowed to walk thru a crime scene? (“Normal” if the family member has an unusually close connection to law enforcement)Do you think its odd or unusual for the investigators of this case to state —We thought they ran off and got married–referencing Shane and Sally while they were missing.
(“Normal” if your stupid or part of the crime). Interesting considering Shane and Sally had given a deputy a gun they were told was used in a robbery/ murder. Interesting considering Shane and Sally had left town in fear for their lives.Whats more interesting is the news and local residents don’t question all the stupid stuff the cops claim.Do you think it would be odd to report “M.S.” and law enforcement as being involved in the murders of Shane and Sally—-then a suspect in my daughter’s so called accident—-lives DIRECTLY across the street from “M.S.”. When I say across the street –I mean a 10 second walk from one front door to the next (M.S. Front door) My daughter’s other suspect had direct connections with “M.S.” and a high ranking law enforcement officer for the SAPD.SAPD took the picture of my daughters suspect off of their website instantly when I mentioned the suspects connection to the SAPD. The reason the picture was on the SAPD website is the person had performed a community service for the SAPD. And the SAPD was proud or grateful for the service the person (suspect) had given.
So, why did they take the picture down after I made the connection?Also interesting is that high ranking SAPD officer went to high school with Sally. That high ranking SAPD officer made threats to a suspect and had been investigated by the Texas Rangers.That same high ranking SAPD officer was a COWARD when I went to the SAPD police station to confront him about his connection to my daughters suspect. He would not talk to me. He used one of his thugs to run me off. In the SAPD parking lot a SAPD detective told me he had testified against his boss (high ranking SAPD officer).The Texas Rangers covered for the high ranking SAPD officer.A Barnhart, Tx Deputy warned me about the SAPD and the officer in question. The Deputy stated the SAPD and the high ranking officer was involved in drug traffickingDo you think it would be odd for the Texas Rangers (in Waco,TX) to tell me to “watch your back”—then the situation with my daughter happens.Cops say they have a suspect.
June 2017—–Gilbreath was named as a suspect. Whats the current date—02/ 2019—-more non sense from the cops.OMG—how long is the news stations and public going to buy the garbage the cops are giving us?Try reporting a crooked cop in America. Cops will retaliate on you.
Cops are criminals. There is an article today (12-19-18) in gosanangelo stating: “Neglected dog dies, San Angelo Police investigateThats interesting because my daughter almost died because I reported information about the Shane Stewart and Sally McNelly murder case. For anybody reading this–If the Texas Rangers ever tells you to “watch your back”—-that means watch your daughter (family) because Texas has Mafia Cops.A dog has more value than my daughter?Organized CrimeMy daughter was in intensive care for 3 days.
She had an eye surgery because of the attempted murder. I found satanic ritual evidence while Shane and Sally were still missing. I reported it to law enforcement.
They ignored what I told them completely. From my understanding Shane and Sally were found exactly where I reported finding evidence. A girl told me who murdered Shane and Sally. Again I reported it. I was then told by the Texas Rangers to watch my back Then in 2009 my daughter was almost killed in a so called “accident”.
Police refused to investigate. Went to buy pot, as teenagers do, and some scuffle.maybe drug dealer came onto sally provoked shane, three way fight, or tried to steal weed from “dude man” and being texas and everyone has a gun AND ALSO being texas stayed in the 1600’s style punishment serves 20 to life for a joint.mmm shoot one you caught stealing, shoot one while in scuffle, or kill one for wanting to send you for the Texas “do over” in the penal systemwell you have to kill the other. The “show”, cops say, of the girl pulled over w/him throwing possible CI style info and go at vomitting confessions to a local drug dealer is base of my theory, also marijuana the narco of subject goes that way i hypothesized BUT style of info leaked takes me for two more cents debunking what i say bout pot deal taking turn, 1) so cops fabricated girl,omission, or pulling over a vehicle at all for other reasons out of scope for here, you take it from there. 2) local law wants a legit drug dealer and being cocaine, meth, MDMA.etc has common traits whe siezed, well promotions, pictures w/death to drugs qoutes or likes, and on the news and papers.hence we tend to give credit to legit busts BC we know those drugs.
Throw marijuana being so misunderstood, borderlined, socially not batted eyes to as much.gives us sense “o those dang potheads.” and dont hear big pot busts with pictures or blasted were picking up teens with weed. But take texas doing everything but excuting you and more time than murder half the time makes perfect scape goat to throw local away bc you suspect or hate drugs as a cop.
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DOC/Manitowoc CoAn inmate has confessed to murdering Teresa Halbach, the crime for which Steven Avery stands convicted, a director says.A convicted murderer from the State of Wisconsin – – has confessed to murdering photographer Teresa Halbach, the director of an upcoming documentary on the case told Heavy in a statement. However, Evans previously told a different story about the murder, writing that Steven Avery did it, Heavy has learned.The alleged confession’s legitimacy hasn’t been verified, including by Avery’s appellate lawyer, who is investigating it.
Avery and his nephew, Brendan Dassey, were convicted of the homicide in a case that was featured in Netflix’s Making a Murderer documentary.Avery’s lawyer, Kathleen Zellner, shared the written confession on Twitter. It identifies the inmate as Evans. In the past, though, Evans alleged that Avery confessed to him.“Inasmuch as attorney Zellner has released the inmate’s name, I will share it. Joseph W Evans, Jr.,” the director, Shawn Rech, wrote Heavy, shortly after Zellner tweeted out Evans’s supposed confession. “Also: Wisconsin DOJ has reached out and questioned me about teh (sic) confession.” You can read more background information on Evans He was convicted of murdering his wife in Marinette County, Wisconsin in 2008.A spokesman for the Wisconsin Department of Justice released this statement to Heavy: “The Wisconsin Department of Justice has received the new information related to the case.
DOJ takes all credible reports seriously, but it’s important to note that this new information directly contradicts information previously provided by the same individual.”, Evans, who was convicted of murdering his wife, previously claimed that “Steven Avery confessed to murdering Teresa Halbach.” In that 2016 letter, Evans allegedly wrote, “he would have gotten away with it, if his idiot nephew of his Brendan would not have spoken to the police like he told him not to” Evans stated that he met Avery in prison, the station reported. Evans is serving a life term in the Wisconsin prison system for the 2008 homicide conviction, prison records show.Here’s the new confession, in which Evans does an about face and now claims that he is the killer. However, the details of the case are now very widely known, as they were the subject of a highly publicized trial, not to mention the Netflix show. In the letter to Zellner, Evans writes that he encountered Halbach on the Salvage Yard property owned by Avery’s family, hit and killed her (without explaining a motive), and then planted Avery’s blood at the scene.
He provides no corroboration for these claims. Zellner wrote on Twitter: “We received the handwritten confession on Saturday. It is worthless unless it is corroborated.”. Joseph EvansRech, director of Convicting A Murderer, a documentary that explores the case anew, told Heavy in the statement on September 23, 2019 that his team hasn’t confirmed the legitimacy of the confession, which he wrote came from a “notable convicted murderer from Wisconsin.” He didn’t initially name the inmate. He says the confession is on audio. The news of the Evans’ “confession.”“As part of their investigation into the case and coverage of Steven Avery v. Wisconsin, the producers of ‘Convicting A Murderer’ have received a confession to the murder of Teresa Hallbach (sic) by a convicted murderer from the state of Wisconsin,” Rech wrote Heavy.
“An audio recording of the confession is being delivered to law enforcement and legal teams for review. Meanwhile, ‘Convicting’ producers will conduct their own investigation into the legitimacy of the confession as they continue production on the 10-part series.”Rech further told Heavy: “We haven’t confirmed the legitimacy of the confession, but seeing as it was given by a notable convicted murderer from Wisconsin, we feel responsible to deliver any and all possible evidence to law enforcement and legal teams. Having been in production for 20 months, we’ve uncovered an unfathomable amount of information and evidence that is leading us to the truth. Our investigation does not end here.”. Manitowoc CourtsThe Avery junkyard was filled with cars.
This compounded the searches in the beginning and later because there was such a large area to look through.Former DA Ken Kratz, who prosecuted the case, responded to the confession claim on Twitter, writing, “To be clear, like everyone else, this is news to me. I have NO COMMENT until I see the details. #MakingAMurderer.” Reached by Heavy, Kratz reiterated that sentiment and didn’t add further to the statement. Heavy has also reached out for comment from the Wisconsin Department of Justice, as well as the Manitowoc County Sheriff. Sheriff Dan Hartwig wrote Heavy that the Sheriff’s Department is directing all media requests on the story “to the WI Department of Justice Public Information Officer.”Lawyers for Avery and Dassey have aggressively challenged their convictions, alleging everything from messed-up blood evidence to coercive law enforcement interrogation techniques to blood planting accusations. Both men remain in prison, however.
Both Avery and Dassey maintain their innocence; Avery was well-known in Wisconsin even before the Halbach murder because he was exonerated after being wrongfully convicted and serving years in prison for a previous unrelated sexual assault. Others argue that the convictions in the Halbach case were correct and Making a Murderer misleading.The trials of both Avery and Dassey took place in Wisconsin back in 2007.Here’s what you need to know:Avery’s Appellate Lawyer Told Heavy The Firm ‘Received a Handwritten Confession’ But Isn’t Expressing an Opinion on its Validity Yet. Steven Avery.When asked about the director’s comments, initially told Heavy that she received a handwritten confession that she is trying to verify and that her investigators are looking into the background “of this individual.” In early September, a citizen was putting up a $100,000 reward for information leading to the “real killer.”Zellner initially wrote Heavy a statement in response to a request for comment but didn’t release Evans’ name at first. “We received a handwritten confession today,” she wrote. “Our investigators are checking out all of the details of the statement and the background of this individual. In order for a confession to be valid it has to be corroborated. We are not going to express any opinions about the validity of the confession until we have corroboration of the statements —which is what every well-trained and competent police officer should do.”The Zellner firm also wrote Heavy, using the same email that Zellner herself had signed with the earlier response, that “the inmates (sic) name is familiar to us but I do not want to release it yet.
We were contacted a week ago by the inmate. He mailed the handwritten confession to us before he contacted the production company. The confession occurred solely because of our 100k reward offer and had nothing to do with the production company. When we did not immediately respond to this person he called the production company.” She released the name the next day. Brendan DasseyYou can read Avery’s Wisconsin state prison system offender sheet. In 2014, he was moved to Waupun Correctional Institution in Wisconsin.
His nephew, Dassey, the Wisconsin prison system. His case has gone through twists and turns in federal court.The first season of Making a Murderer became a massive Netflix hit and featured behind-the-scenes footage shot of the Avery family and trial by two documentary filmmakers. (You can see crime scene photos from the case.)The premise of the show was that Avery, and his nephew Brendan Dassey, might have been set up by a system still upset by Avery’s earlier exoneration for a rape he didn’t commit. Avery had served years in a Wisconsin prison for that attack until DNA evidence showed another man, already incarcerated, and named Gregory Allen, might have done it. Halbach was murdered after Avery was exonerated and released in the earlier case to much cause celebre in Wisconsin. However, there was soon pushback against the series, with some arguing that it unfairly left out or minimized a complex web of evidence against Avery, including blood spatter evidence in Teresa Halbach’s car. In addition, authorities say they found a bullet with Halbach’s DNA on it in Avery’s garage and Teresa’s key in Avery’s bedroom – both pieces of evidence found belatedly.
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The defense has argued the evidence was planted, which authorities deny.The case against Dassey was very different; he was a teenager at the time of the murder, and his conviction rested largely on a series of confessions that he gave that defense attorneys have argued were contradictory and coercive in attainment. In other words, Avery was convicted largely on forensics (and circumstantial evidence) but no confession, whereas Dassey was convicted on the basis of the confessions but there was never forensic evidence tying the nephew to the slaying. Halbach’s bone fragments and shards of her personal belongings were unearthed in a burn pit behind Avery’s trailer on the family salvage yard property in Wisconsin.Avery’s attorneys at trial argued that law enforcement officers planted blood evidence to frame him (they adamantly deny it). Manitowoc CountyThis is a crime scene photo of one of the burn barrels on the Avery property.The allegedly cognitively slow Dassey, who was 16 when Halbach was murdered after visiting the family’s Manitowoc County, Wisconsin junkyard to photograph a van for a magazine, saw his conviction overturned by a federal magistrate judge and appellate panel, only to have a full Appeals Court reinstate it and the Supreme Court refuse to hear the case. Avery has not had success with post-conviction motions in the Wisconsin Court System.In a second season of Making a Murderer, Zellner aggressively attacked the validity of the blood and burn pit evidence, arguing that Halbach might have been killed elsewhere and moved and that there were other suspects who might have done it.Avery’s blood was located in Teresa Halbach’s car in several places, prosecutors argued, and a state blood pattern expert testified that drops of the blood appeared to have come from an active bleeder. If true, of course, that would mean that the blood was not planted but was dropped at the time.The victim’s blood was also found inside her vehicle. In addition, a state expert argued that authorities had found what might have been “touch DNA” from Avery on the victim’s hood latch.
The defense has also filed motions challenging that evidence.Rech’s Documentary Is Called ‘Convicting A Murderer’ & Is a Follow Up to ‘Making a Murderer’. When police investigated Halbach’s car, they found both Steven and Teresa’s blood inside the car. Steven’s lawyers argued that the evidence was planted in the car to frame him.Rech’s documentary Convicting A Murderer is created by Transition Studios. You can see the website on the productionA press release from 2018 on the new documentary stated that production had started on “Convicting A Murderer,” described as “a follow-up to Netflix’s sensational 2015 documentary series ‘Making A Murderer’.
Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Shawn Rech (A MURDER IN THE PARK, WHITE BOY, WRONG CAT) will direct the 8-episode series.”The release added: “He’ll also produce along with his long-time partner, Chicago Attorney Andrew Hale. ‘Convicting A Murderer’ will investigate the controversial case built by the State of Wisconsin against Steven Avery for the 2005 murder of Teresa Hallbach (sic), in which police were accused of tampering with crime scenes and planting evidence to manipulate the investigation and implicate Avery of the murder. Avery and his nephew Brendan Dassey are currently serving life sentences.”.
Teresa Halbach. Photo from her missing person poster.The release continues: “Shawn Rech, who has creative control over the series, has exclusive, unprecedented access to District Attorney Ken Kratz, Lead Investigator Tom Fassbender, and other major players in State v. Avery.”He was quoted then as saying, “When ‘Making A Murderer’ was produced, many on the law enforcement side of the story could not, or would not, participate in the series, which resulted in a one-sided analysis of the case. This docu-series will examine the case and the allegations of police wrongdoing from a broader perspective.
It will also share with viewers the traumatic effects of being found guilty and vilified in the court of public opinion.”.