Teresa halbach: friends of making a murderer victim think about her every day

People

Teresa halbach: friends of making a murderer victim think about her every day"


Play all audios:

Loading...

_Eight years after Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey were convicted in the brutal murder of 25-year-old Teresa Halbach, a new Netflix series has thousands asking: Are the right men in prison?


Subscribe now for shocking new details about the controversial conviction, only in PEOPLE!_ Enrolling as a sophomore at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, Beth entered her first


photography class with trepidation, guessing that everyone there already knew each other. Then she met fellow student Teresa Halbach. “She made me feel like I fit in,” Beth, who asked that


her last name not be used, tells PEOPLE. “Honestly, it was her smile. She made you feel like you belonged just by her nature. She had a very adventurous spirit, and she made you want to come


along with her.” Teresa’s friends tell PEOPLE they can’t forget the bright light that was extinguished when Teresa, then 25, was murdered in 2005. Now, as Teresa returns to the headlines


thanks to the Netflix series _Making a Murderer_, her friends are rallying around her memory to ensure her life isn’t overlooked by the growing controversy around her convicted killer,


Steven Avery, who claims he was framed for the crime. • _FOR MORE ON STEVEN AVERY AND_ MAKING A MURDERER _PICK UP THE LATEST ISSUE OF PEOPLE, ON STANDS FRIDAY._ “She went out of her way to


make you feel special,” says Tina Mills, 35, another former college classmate. “People were inspired by her and people wanted to be like her. She just had a way of listening that made you


feel comforted and at ease. She made people love her, and obviously she had a lot of love to give away, too.” She adds: “Caring, loving, any good quality you could come up with, that was


Teresa.” Andy Behrendt, 35, now a Lutheran pastor, was editor-in-chief of the university’s student newspaper in 2001-2002 when Teresa was a staff photographer. “She just radiated happiness


and life,” he says. “Even after she died so tragically – and here we are again, faced with this awful, awful tragedy 10 years later – I still can’t picture her without a smile on her face.


In the end, nothing can take that away.” • _WANT TO KEEP UP WITH THE LATEST CRIME COVERAGE? CLICK HERE TO GET BREAKING CRIME NEWS, ONGOING TRIAL COVERAGE AND DETAILS OF INTRIGUING UNSOLVED


CASES IN THE TRUE CRIME NEWSLETTER._ Teresa was a bridesmaid in her friend Katie Uttech’s 2004 wedding. The two also had met in college. Uttech remembers nights out with Teresa singing


karaoke, cooking together, a fun driving trip from Green Bay to Kansas City accompanied by Beatles music, and sitting in front of the TV together to watch _Friends_. “She was always very


positive,” says Uttech. “I don’t ever remember her being mad about anything. She just had this positivity about herself. She didn’t have a bad bone in her body. She just enjoyed life, she


enjoyed new experiences.” And as Teresa turned her passion for photography into a profession, “she could just make people relax and smile, and she took great pictures,” says Uttech, who


still has brochures and magnets for the Photography by Teresa business that her friend started. “She was great at making memories.” It was while working as a freelance photographer for an


_Auto Trader_ magazine that investigators say Teresa went on assignment to Avery’s residence, and was never seen again. “I try not to think of the story of what happened to her,” says


Uttech, who has made a choice not to watch the Netflix series. “This Netflix thing is not something that’s made up,” she says. “This is somebody’s sister and somebody’s daughter and


somebody’s friend and somebody’s cousin. This is real. “It’s really easy for somebody to watch this show and come up with opinions, and everybody’s entitled to their opinions,” she says. “I


can’t do anything but say who Teresa was, and she was a really great person.” She adds: “I just miss her not being around and not being able to make more memories together.”


Trending News

Ai being used to detect fraud, scams on android phones

As a caller claiming to be from your bank alerts you to suspicious activity in your account and says he can help you tra...

Trump is way off about Amazon and the post office

President Trump is entering his sixth day in a row without any appearances in public, but he took some time out of his m...

Republicans say corporate tax cuts will boost workers' wages, but ceos might have other plans

Reporting from Washington — Gary Cohn, the top White House economic advisor, was onstage making the Trump administration...

Biotech unruffled by setbacks | Nature Biotechnology

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution ...

Senior tory mp scoffs 'what is the point of the brexit party'

The former chief whip scoffed at the idea that the Tories would need the Brexit Party’s help to win an election. He said...

Latests News

Teresa halbach: friends of making a murderer victim think about her every day

_Eight years after Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey were convicted in the brutal murder of 25-year-old Teresa Halbach, a ...

Il-22-binding protein exacerbates influenza, bacterial super-infection

ABSTRACT Secondary bacterial pneumonia is a significant complication of severe influenza infection and _Staphylococcus a...

Location: Convene - W Adams St.

Shannon O'CallaghanSTAT@ASCO: Fueling the Fight Against Cancer...

It’s not that i wanted you to go. I just didn’t want you to stay, if you didn’t want to.

It’s not that I wanted you to go. I just didn’t want you to stay, if you didn’t want to....

Exceptional dynamical quantum phase transitions in periodically driven systems

ABSTRACT Extending notions of phase transitions to nonequilibrium realm is a fundamental problem for statistical mechani...

Top