Postconviction hearings Dassey's case was taken up in 2008 by confession expert
Professor Steven Drizin, from the
Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law in Chicago, who thought his wrongful convictions clinic could help and it would be good for his students to work on. He assigned it to a third-year law student
Laura Nirider, who gradually became the lead attorney. Experienced trial lawyer
Thomas Geraghty also represented Dassey at times. Robert Dvorak, a local
Milwaukee lawyer working with them, uncovered O'Kelly's interrogation of Dassey. In August 2009, they entered a motion for retrial. In October, Drizin co-founded the
Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth within the law school's
Bluhm legal clinic, which took on Dassey's case. The televised postconviction hearing took place over several days in January 2010. The motion was denied in December by Judge Fox.
Making a Murderer The release of
Making a Murderer in December 2015 generated a wide, international audience and was met with significant media attention. The Halbach family criticized it as trying to entertain for profit, from the Averys' perspective, while they remembered Teresa. Former juror Robert Covington said he had questioned Dassey's competency on the stand and thought there should be a retrial. The Netflix series, which chronicles the trials of Avery and Dassey, generated global dialogue centered around
wrongful convictions,
coerced confessions, interrogation of
minors, and
criminal justice reform. There were petitions for Dassey's freedom and the implementation of the "Juvenile Interrogation Protection Law in Wisconsin", which would prohibit police from questioning minors without a lawyer present. Petitions were also submitted for the investigation of the police officers who interrogated Dassey. Rallies in support of Dassey and Avery were held in the United States, UK and Australia. Prominent legal analyst
Dan Abrams pointed out that much of the country was divided over whether “they” did it, ignoring the likelihood that Dassey is innocent regardless of Avery's guilt. Director
Peter Jackson and others compared the interrogations of Dassey to those of
Jessie Miskelly. By July 2016,
Making a Murderer 2 was in production, focusing on the post-conviction process for Dassey and his family. It would broadcast in October 2018 to mixed reviews.
District Court In December 2015, Dassey's attorneys filed a
writ of
habeas corpus (unlawful detention
) in federal
district court for release or retrial, citing
constitutional rights violations due to
ineffective assistance of counsel and a coerced confession. In August 2016, William E. Duffin,
magistrate judge for the
Eastern district of Wisconsin, ruled that Dassey's confession had been coerced, and was therefore involuntary and unconstitutional, and ordered him released or retried. Legal analysts suggested the state would not want a
retrial, due to lack of independent evidence and to the solid alibi Dassey had until at least 5.20pm. A former teacher of Halbach said she did not think Dassey should be released, saying the interrogators just asked him questions.
US 7th Circuit Court In November 2016, the Wisconsin Justice Department appealed Duffin's decision to the
United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (a region covering Wisconsin), which blocked Dassey's release pending a hearing. In June 2017, after a hearing in February, a three-judge
panel of the Seventh
Circuit upheld the decision to overturn Dassey's conviction. Judge
Ilana Rovner, joined by Judge
Ann Claire Williams, affirmed, over the dissent of Judge
David Hamilton. However, on July 5, 2017, the Wisconsin Department of Justice submitted a petition requesting a rehearing
en banc (all available 7th Circuit judges). In August, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals granted the request for September 26. Judge
Richard Posner unexpectedly
resigned earlier that month. In the hearing on September 26, the confession was viewed through the lens of the restrictive
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. On December 8, 2017, the
en banc Seventh Circuit upheld Dassey's conviction by a vote of 4–3, with the majority finding that the police had properly obtained Dassey's confession.
Judge Hamilton's majority opinion was joined by Judges
Frank H. Easterbrook,
Michael Stephen Kanne, and
Diane S. Sykes. Then-Chief Judge
Diane Wood and Judge Rovner both wrote dissents, joined by Judge Williams.
US Supreme Court On February 20, 2018, Dassey's legal team, including former U.S. Solicitor General
Seth P. Waxman, filed a petition for a writ of
certiorari (review) to the
United States Supreme Court. The court had not addressed the issue of juvenile false confessions for nearly 40 years, and on June 25, 2018, certiorari was denied without comment. Any further options for Dassey were said to be extremely unlikely, unless new evidence were uncovered such as by Avery's lawyer
Kathleen Zellner.
Continued imprisonment In April 2019, Dassey was moved to the medium security prison
Oshkosh Correctional Institution. In December, Wisconsin
Governor Evers stated he is not exercising the power to
commute sentences, and is only considering
pardons after a sentence is served. Zellner continued to file
appeals for Avery, which were not successful. In 2024, she objected that the
Manitowoc County Circuit Court had relied on Dassey's statements which were not part of Avery's trial, and had referred to Dassey being directly forensically linked to the crime. The
Attorneys General, on behalf of the state of Wisconsin, argued in response that Brendan was convicted of the crime regardless of not being “forensically linked” to it. == References ==