Metro logo
My AccountMy Account
Small logo
  • Home
    • Trending
    • Newsletters
    • Puzzles+
    • Video
  • News
    • UK
    • London
    • US
    • World
    • Crime
    • Tech
    • Science
    • Politics
    • News Updates newsletter
    • E-edition
  • Entertainment
    • Showbiz
    • TV
    • Film
    • Music
    • Gaming
  • Sport
    • Football
    • Premier League
    • Transfer News
    • Cricket
    • Boxing
    • Tennis
    • Snooker
    • Football Newsletter – In The Mixer
  • Lifestyle
    • Sex
    • Health
    • Property
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Horoscopes
    • Money
    • Shopping
    • Lifeline
    • The Slice newsletter
  • Soaps
    • EastEnders
    • Emmerdale
    • Coronation Street
    • Hollyoaks
    • Soaps Showbiz
    • Soaps Newsletter
  • Opinion
    • Columnists
    • Letters
    • Cartoons
  • Shopping
    • Beauty Products
    • Black Friday
    • Amazon Prime Day
    • Shopping Newsletter
  • Puzzles
    • Puzzles+
    • Quick Crossword
    • Cryptic Crossword
    • Word Wheel
    • Hangman
    • Easy Sudoku
    • Medium Sudoku
    • Hard Sudoku
  • Money
    • Metro Deals
    • Investing
    • Cost of Living
    • Deals
    • Hacks
    • Saving
  • Property
    • What I Rent
    • What I Own
    • Property Prices
    • Home renovations
    • Interiors
    • Renting
    • Better Living
    • The Key Newsletter
  • Travel
    • Travel Advice
    • Travel Reviews
    • Travel Inspiration
    • The Getaway
  • Horoscopes
    • Your Daily Horoscope
    • Astrology
    • Tarot
    • Chinese Zodiac
    • Daily Horoscope Newsletter
  • More
    • Games
    • Submit Stuff
    • Competitions
    • Advertise
    • Weather
    • Trending
    • Privacy Policy
  • Metro on Instagram
  • Metro on Facebook
  • Metro on X
  • Metro on TikTok

Making a Murderer was true crime gold – but what was the unseen cost of its success?

Sarah Ingram
Sarah Ingram
Published January 22, 2026 7:00am
Share this article via whatsappShare this article via xCopy the link to this article.Link is copiedShare this article via facebook Comment now Comments
Viewers were hooked when the 10-part Netflix series dropped (Picture: Metro/Calumet County Jail)

When defence lawyer Dean Strang worked on Steven Avery’s case twenty years ago, there was no streaming or binge-watching. If you wanted to watch a movie or documentary, you had to wait for it to be posted through your letterbox in a little red and white envelope. 

So Dean could never imagine that he would become a Netflix star of one of the most-popular true-crime shows in the world. 

Thanks to Making a Murderer, which became must-see binge TV 10 years ago, Avery has become one of the world’s best-known criminals, and his lawyer, Dean, a cult hero. 

The documentary explores how the father-of-four Avery from Wisconsin was wrongfully convicted of sexual assault in 1985, exonerated by DNA in 2003, and then convicted again in 2007 for the 2005 murder of photographer Teresa Halbach, alongside his nephew Brendan Dassey. 

When the 10-part series dropped in December 2015, the show’s popularity surged within weeks, paving the way for more true crime binge-fests such as Tiger King and Evil Genius.

As the documentary examined evidence handling, potential police and prosecutor misconduct and inconsistencies in witness testimonies, by the end of the series, some viewers were still left wondering: was Steven Avery’s second conviction legally sound? Many remain unconvinced today. 

Avery, who was sentenced to life behind bars, had originally enlisted the help of Dean in February 2006, after her had been charged with Teresa’s murder.

** RETRANSMITTED TO REMOVE COPYRIGHT TIME RESTRICTION ** FILE ** In this undated photo provided by the Halbach family, Teresa Halbach is seen. Authorities said Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005, they had found the dark green 1999 Toyota Rav4 of Teresa Marie Halbach near an auto salvage yard operated by Steven Avery's family between Mishicot and Maribel. Avery's first degree homicide trial is scheduled to begin Monday, Feb. 5, 2007. (AP Photo/ Halbach Family via Herald Times Reporter) ** NO SALES **
The trial centres around the murder of young photographer Teresa Halbach (Picture: Associated Press)

‘He was kind of a simple guy, scarred by 18 years in prison. I thought he was likeable. And I don’t remember having an opinion [about whether he was guilty]. I often don’t. I really just try to withhold judgment. He was a fairly easy client, hard to keep on task and jaundiced by the legal system’, Dean tells Metro over Zoom from his home in Wisconsin. 

When Avery was convicted, Dean felt ‘awful’. It’s never nice to lose a case, but he also felt there wasn’t enough evidence to prove his guilt.

‘I thought there’s no way this guy should get convicted. There was just no way they can prove this beyond a reasonable doubt or that a fair, rational jury should convict him,’ Dean, co-host of true crime podcast I Rest My Case, remembers. 

‘I just thought: Who is going to watch this?’

At the time, the trial was already being filmed by Moira Demos and Laura Ricciardi, young graduate film students from New York who were documenting the investigation and trial in the light of the original wrongful conviction as their final project. 

NC BL WEB LN WISCONSIN OUT Mandatory Credit: Photo by Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock (16169160a) Jan. 6, 2016 - Madison, Wi, USA - In the wake of a Netflix documentary on convicted murderer Steven Avery, defense attorney Dean Strang and Jerome Buting have become internet sensations. Strang is shown on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, at his firm's office in Madison, Wis. Lawyers in ?Making a Murderer? case adjust to new fame, Madison, Wi, USA - 06 Jan 2016
Lawyer Dean Strang represented Steven Avery and had no clue how big the documentary would be (Picture: Zuma Press Wire/Shutterstock)

Dean believed the result would be a 90-minute documentary that would be shown in a handful of arthouse cinemas. He never predicted the cultural phenomenon Making a Murderer would become. 

Just before the show was due to be released, the pair called him to let him know a 10-parter was due to air – but that they couldn’t reveal where yet. 

‘I was gobsmacked. I thought – what an idiotic idea,’ Dean remembers. ‘Who thinks people are going to watch ten hours of some obscure murder trial from an obscure corner of an obscure state? And right before Christmas?

I thought – “Well, more good judgment. [Sarcastically] That’s a great Christmas fair. That’s what everybody needs – a nice murder, when they’re gathering around the fireplace for Christmas with family”.

Making a Murderer
Steven Avery was sentenced to life behind bars – but some armchair detectives believe he is innocent (Picture: Netflix)
FILE - In this March 3, 2006, file photo, Brendan Dassey is escorted out of a Manitowoc County Circuit courtroom in Manitowoc, Wis. A federal appeals court is about to consider the fate of the Wisconsin inmate featured in the Netflix series "Making a Murderer." Dassey was sentenced to life in prison in 2007 in the death of photographer Teresa Halbach two years earlier. Dassey told detectives he helped his uncle, Steven Avery, rape and kill Halbach in the Avery family's Manitowoc County salvage yard. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)
Avery’s nephew, Brendan Dassey, was also convicted of Teresa’s murder (Picture: AP)

‘I just thought it was preposterous. I was glad for the filmmakers. I really liked them, but I just thought: Who is going to watch this?’ 

19 million people tuned in. The show dominated social media, front pages, radio phone-ins and workplace chat for weeks. It won an Emmy Award, sparked intense public debate about the US justice system and a White House petition for Avery’s pardon. 

On the Friday of its release, Dean received the first of hundreds of emails from strangers. 

‘It was a guy from South Carolina – a total stranger, and one of the earliest true-crime binge watchers, who said, “Hey, I’ve been at home sick for more but today I was feeling a little better, so I watched all 10 episodes. I couldn’t shut it off”.’ 

Making a Murderer: Part 2
Netflix released all 10 episodes of the first season of Making a Murderer at once on December 2015. A second series came out three years later (Picture: Netflix)

Dean still gets emails today, the vast majority of which are supportive. ‘Under 1% are nasty or threatening. And I got a handful of pictures from women showing me their breasts or other ridiculous stuff. That was pretty remarkable,’ he remembers.

Pandora’s Box had opened

By the time New Year 2016 arrived, Dean was being mobbed in the street. On one trip to Dublin, he was surrounded by 20-25 people jostling and pressing in on him. ‘It was unnerving’, he remembers. 

However, while it may have been ‘unsettling’ for Dean, it’s nothing compared to what Teresa Halbach’s family have gone through.

After the series launched, avid viewers formed fan clubs for Avery’s parents, Dolores and Allan, and spent hours dissecting Dean’s fashion sense (Strangcore) branding him an ‘unlikely sex symbol’. Meanwhile the hashtag #freestevenavery quickly went viral and more than 300,000 people signed petitions for the convicted killer’s release.

Among such frivolity and focus to free Avery, Teresa’s devastated family were all too aware that their daughter’s murder was being played out on screen for entertainment.

Making a Murderer: Part 2
Fan groups were set up for Avery’s parents Dollores and Allan (Picture: Netflix)

In a bid to remember the young woman at the heart of the trial, as the show aired, friends paid tribute, saying that Teresa had ‘a smile that would light up a room’ and described her as ‘always a happy-go-lucky, typical Midwestern girl’.

And although her family declined to take part in the documentary, prior to release, they gave a statement saying: “Having just passed the 10-year anniversary of the death of our daughter and sister, Teresa, we are saddened to learn that individuals and corporations continue to create entertainment and to seek profit from our loss. We continue to hope that the story of Teresa’s life brings goodness to the world.”

?Making a Murderer? proved to be the Dom Perignon of binge TV options for many showbizzers during the holiday break. The ten-part documentary series about Steven Avery, a Wisconsin man who is believed to have been framed for the 2005 murder of photographer Teresa Halbach, has generated a storm of glowing reviews and discussion on social media about Avery?s fate. A Netflix rep said Sunday that at present there are no plans for the streaming service to feature any updates or additional material on Avery?s saga. Outrage stirred since the docu series bowed on Dec. 18 and has led to online petitions calling for his pardon, including a Change.org effort that had nearly 111,000 signatures as of Sunday evening. The detail in the docuseries from filmmakers Laura Ricciardi and Moira Demos has led to a chorus of critics calling for disciplinary actions against prosecutors in Wisconsin?s Manitowoc County and broader reforms of the criminal justice system.
Teresa’s friends and family felt that the documentary profited from their loss (Picture: Netflix)

Dean admits it must have been incredibly hard on the family. ‘They lost a 25-year-old daughter, sister, niece and they got thrust into this. They didn’t ask for a movie to be made. They didn’t ask for the trial. They are a farm family and they’ve had this horrible tragedy.

‘So what possibly could be welcome about any of this, no matter what the perspective is of the documentary? You just can’t help but feel bad for them. From the moment they lost Teresa, there will always be a hole in their lives.’

However, Pandora’s Box had been opened and the success of Making a Murderer opened the floodgates to a slew of true crime podcasts and documentaries. But as time has passed, it’s become undeniable that these shows possess a unique responsibility in the cultural niche they inhabit.

While they are important stories that need to be told, how can they do it responsibly?

Giving voice to the voiceless

Teresa Halbach went missing on October 31 2005, her body was tragically discovered just over a week later

Writer, consultant and campaigner for women’s safety, Jamie Klingler argues that true crime shows can oversimplify complex realities while also holding a very valuable place in holding power to account and ensuring better scrutiny for police and prosecutors. 

She says: ‘They can be hugely beneficial. Cold cases can be solved, and they can help get justice for women that have been buried for 50 years.

‘The threat of having somebody else go through and mark your homework can make police actually spend a lot more time on an investigation. If there’s a threat of somebody coming back and doing a podcast about an investigation, if there is a threat that everything you did is going to be critiqued by the general public, that’s going to make you dot your I’s and cross your T’s.’ 

But she also argues that more needs to be done to ensure victims’ and survivors’ voices are heard. 

‘There are real life ramifications from these projects, so it’s important to remember the humanity in them, and to remember the safeguarding of people whose livelihood and whose mental health is at risk – be that the families of the victims and the families of the perpetrators.’ 

Women’s safety campaigner Jamie Klinger believes more needs to be done to ensure victims’ and survivors’ voices are heard. (Picture: Sean De Sparengo)

Cindy Kanusher, executive director of legal non-profit the PACE Women’s Justice Centre, argues that with nearly three women being killed by an intimate partner every day in the United States, true crime documentaries have a responsibility to tell women’s stories without falling into tropes or lazy stereotypes. 

‘When true crime programmes come out, when they are done right, they give people the opportunity to see the point of view of survivors and victims and to understand the reality of what violence looks like and the trauma that it causes. 

‘And it is incredibly important to speak out and give voice to the voiceless. And for the survivors of domestic violence, assault or other types of cases, it’s so important to see that if they speak out, that they won’t be judged, that they will be believed. It is important that when you are watching true crime that you realise – this is one story. The reality is that there are a lot of people out there who are living with abuse, and we have to make sure that their stories don’t get lost or sensationalised.’ 

Dean wishes the documentary helped create more change in the police and justice system (Picture: Supplied)

Meanwhile, Avery remains behind bars at the medium-security Fox Lake prison in Wisconsin. A second series in 2018 followed his legal team, led by Kathleen Zellner, as they tried to prove her client’s innocence. However, their efforts failed and Zellner has continued to file appeals and motions for Avery, which so far have all been rejected.

Dassey is incarcerated at the Oshkosh Correctional Institution. Despite federal judges overturning his conviction in 2016 due to a coerced confession, higher courts reinstated it.

Brendan Dassey had his conviction overturned in 2016, but then it was reinstated (Picture: Netflix)

With questions about the safety of both of their convictions remaining, does Dean Strang have views on the idea that there could still be a killer roaming free? 

More Trending

  1. Helen Massiell Garay Sanchez smiling while sat in a car (Picture: Facebook)

    Naked body of mum found trapped overnight in supermarket freezer

    Channel: US US 1 hour ago By Barney Davis
  2. A world where dementia no longer devastates lives is 'finally within reach'
  3. How a US restaurant chain loved by Anthony Bourdain is a beacon for storm advice
  4. My life inside the bizarre orgasm cult 

‘Yeah, but so what? The point is, how reliable is evidence gathering? How reliable are the police, the lawyers on both sides of the system, the jury system? How should we think about the overall trustworthiness of the justice system, and if we don’t think it’s ever going to be entirely trustworthy, are we comfortable with life sentences? Are we comfortable with the death penalty?

‘Making a Murderer was a pop cultural phenomenon,’ he adds. ‘For me, I regret that in its wake there is not a more visible permanent impact in improving the enforcement system and making us a better, more humane society.’ 

Deals of the Day

  • The Traitors is over – but Claudia Winkleman’s shoes are everywhere

    The Traitors is over – but Claudia Winkleman’s shoes are everywhere

  • Craving sun, city streets or theme parks holdays? This £99 mystery deal has it all

    Craving sun, city streets or theme parks holdays? This £99 mystery deal has it all

  • This easy concealer trick transformed how my makeup looks and lasts all day

    This easy concealer trick transformed how my makeup looks and lasts all day

  • Tour Emily in Paris Season 6 Rome hotspots with a getaway from just £79pp

    Tour Emily in Paris Season 6 Rome hotspots with a getaway from just £79pp

  • 11 of the best expert-approved running shoes to buy now

    11 of the best expert-approved running shoes to buy now

View More »

Metro reached out to the Halbach family for comment.  

Arrow MORE: ‘I was so lonely I ended up talking to ChatGPT eight times a day’

Arrow MORE: Sled festival turned into anti-ICE protest targeting Trump in Minneapolis

Arrow MORE: ‘I came back from the dead. I know there’s an afterlife – I’ve seen it’

Comment now Comments Add Metro as a Preferred Source on Google Add as preferred source

TV Newsletter

Sign up and tell us which TV shows you love to watch to get personalised updates every morning.

?

Select your shows for TV news tailored to you

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy

HomedividerEntertainmentdividerTV
Related topics
  • Features
  • Making A Murderer
  • True Crime
  • USA

Sarah Paulson as Marcia Clark and Sterling K. Brown as Chris Darden

It's been 10 years since the acclaimed drama about 'most famous trial in modern history'

Channel: TV TV 19 hours ago By Asyia Iftikhar
Young man using mobile phone on floorboard, Freiburg im Breisgau, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany

‘I was so lonely I ended up talking to ChatGPT eight times a day’ 

Channel: TV TV January 27, 2026 By Sarah Ingram

Must Read

Faraaz smiles in a beige suit.

Billionaire offers to pay for Traitors star Faraaz and his family to do Hajj

Channel: TV TV 3 days ago By Rebecca Cook
Luke Thompson as Benedict Bridgerton in Bridgerton

Bridgerton's 'staircase scene' gets even more erotic if you change one Netflix setting

Channel: TV TV 5 days ago By Sabrina Barr

All the stars tipped for Celebrity Traitors season 2 including Jamie Oliver

Channel: TV TV 4 days ago By Emily Bashforth
Faraaz smiles in the library in a linen suit.

Faraaz reveals touching gesture Traitors star made after 'prayer buddy' Maz was murdered

Channel: TV TV 4 days ago By Rebecca Cook
Play Video A man standing beside a lake.

ITV fans left unable to sleep after bingeing 'absolutely brilliant' true crime drama

Channel: TV TV January 27, 2026 By Milo Pope
TX DATE:23-01-2026,TX WEEK:3,EMBARGOED UNTIL:23-01-2026 21:45,PEOPLE:Rachel, Faraaz, Claudia Winkleman, Stephen, Jack & Jade,DESCRIPTION:++POST TX ONLY++,COPYRIGHT:Studio Lambert,CREDIT LINE:BBC/Studio Lambert/Paul Chappells

The Traitors finalist pulled into room by producers after 'seeing red'

Channel: TV TV January 26, 2026 By Alana Anderson
A selfie of Rachel Duffy with her mum Anne.

The Traitors winner Rachel 'heartbroken' as she announces her mum has died

Channel: TV TV 7 days ago By Rebecca Cook
Millie Mackintosh and Hugo Taylor sitting together at an event, with rows of people sitting behind them.

Made In Chelsea stars Millie Mackintosh and Hugo Taylor 'split after 7 years of marriage'

Channel: TV TV 2 hours ago By Brooke Ivey Johnson
The Celebrity Traitors logo

Celebrity Traitors secret rule uncovered after TV star is 'banned' from BBC series

Channel: TV TV 21 hours ago By Asyia Iftikhar
Red Panda on The Masked Singer

The Masked Singer viewers floored after Red Panda's revealed as British TV legend

Channel: TV TV 23 hours ago By Emily Bashforth

Trending Now

Read more storiesRead more stories
  1. The Celebrity Traitors logo

    Celebrity Traitors secret rule uncovered after TV star is 'banned' from BBC series

    Channel: TV TV 21 hours ago By Asyia Iftikhar
  2. Made In Chelsea stars Millie Mackintosh and Hugo Taylor 'split after 7 years of marriage'
  3. Celebrity Bake Off 2026 lineup confirmed including JoJo Siwa and Molly-Mae Hague
  4. GAME to close all standalone stores in the UK after it enters administration
  5. Tom Cruise ‘abandons £35,000,000 London flat after claiming city has become unsafe’

Metro Shorts

metro deals

more offersmore offers
<strong>Bannatyne Spa</strong>
Bannatyne SpaSpa day for two with treatments, lunch & prosecco — save up to 57% off.
<strong>Mystery Escape</strong>
Mystery EscapeHotel stay with return flights from as low as £92pp — save on worldwide holiday packages.
<strong>Beach Retreat (Lanzarote)</strong>
Beach Retreat (Lanzarote)4* Lanzarote beach holiday with flights — save up to 58%.
<strong>UK Getaway</strong>
UK Getaway4* Radisson Blu Durham stay with breakfast, spa access & late checkout — save 60% off.
<strong>Drive Supercars</strong>
Drive Supercars 3–12 lap supercar driving experiences from £16.99 — save up to 65%. 
Metro logo
  • © 2026 Associated Newspapers Limited
  • Powered by WordPress.com VIP
  • Your ad choices
  • IPSO Regulated
  • Contributors
  • Newzit
  • Daily Mail
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Do not sell or share my personal information
  • Site map
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Metro on Instagram
  • Metro on Facebook
  • Metro on X
  • Metro on TikTok