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Was BK good? Been thinking about checking it out, but haven't yet.Through episode 4 last night.
Intriguing stuff.
So far this docu-series kind of reminds me of the story behind "Brother's Keeper" in the sense of a family being targeted by local/state law enforcement.
What are your thoughts on the human remains consistent with the bones in his backyard being found way off site? Why would he either A) burn the body off site and transport it to his house, or B) burn it at his house and transport few remains away.
I thought it was pretty well done.Was BK good? Been thinking about checking it out, but haven't yet.
If nothing else, I'm glad the documentary has exposed the world to the lovely Northeast Wisconsin accent.
WHOA! How about a spoiler alert in a spoiler alert! Wolverine Mike probably hasn't seen pulp fiction!
As for my thoughts so far:
I'm only 2 episodes in, but what left me scratching my head is why the hell would a man who knows what going back to prison would he like leave so many bread crumbs to a murder he committed? I won't question him committing the crime, because people do stupid [Mark May]. But he must have the car keys in his hand, right? And then decides to lazily toss them next to his bed? Why not toss them in the blazing fire? Or drive miles away and bury them in a ditch? And the car? Isn't his entire life revolved around dealing with cars? Couldn't he have dismantled the car to a state of no recognition? But instead he puts some branches over it, all while leaving a convenient blood sample next to the steering wheel? Huh?
Also, something that I didn't understand (and they perhaps touch on later) is the dropping of his civil suit for the wrongful imprisonment. It seems to just go away. Now I know you can't compensate on a crime, but it's not illegal to be compensated while being convicted of a crime unrelated to the compensation. And even if he was convicted of murder, was he still not the center of police manipulation costing him 18 years of his life?