Every face in the lens is terrifying. The prosecutor who stubbornly insisted on the murderer without even finding the body or the scene of the crime, the media who scorned the pillar of shame without knowing the truth, the family members who were disintegrated and ruthless on the surface, who crossed the objective boundary and regarded themselves as detectives A documentary filmmaker who asks leading questions, a top lawyer who can sell anything as long as he has enough money, family members and friends of victims who are obsessed with wanting the suspect to be executed by all means, "When you stare into the abyss, the abyss is also staring at you. ", Nietzsche honestly does not lie to me.
If all the three known cases were done by Robert, then I would have to say he really is a criminal genius. Clever use of the characteristics of the American judicial system, with the help of the power of the family, to hide and fabricate all the key evidence (no one knows how he did it so far), and rationally and emotionally cooperate with lawyers to fabricate a perfect set of evidence. Rhetoric to exonerate himself, and even boldly but cautiously provoked the police after his release. His calm face, dark and deep eyes, watertight answers (Jesus, except for the information he revealed when he muttered to himself, he did not lose his mind even before the iron-clad handwriting identification), and his unhurried attitude really made me once I believe he is innocent.
Assuming, assuming there's a 1 in 10,000 chance that he's really not involved in any of these three cases (or not in one or two of them), I hope Casey is just escaping from Robert's clutches incognito and going to his own Live, Susan just died in an accident and Robert found her body earlier than the police, Morris also died of a gun misfire in the fight as the defense attorney said, as for Robert, I hope he can be more honest. Oneself - if you tell too many lies, you will sometimes deceive yourself into it.
The people in the story are like a mirror, reflecting my own appearance. When I lamented Robert's intelligence, I ignored the impact of the word "dismemberment" in reality; when I sympathized with Robert's situation, I forgot what the victim's family had experienced over the years. A perfect crime is a crime no matter how perfect it is. It is bloody, and it should not obliterate humanity because of the obsession with technology. Above, leave it for introspection.
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