Will grant that RH had all the best intentions. I have no clue. He may have forgotten the time of day. No big deal. Forgetting the password. Ok. People forget things.
He loves for her and cares for her. He is in charge of the search party. He wants her home alive. He has 12 people he can deploy.
At this point, he knows her last phone call and last meeting was with Steve Avery.
SA is giving TV interviews describing his interactions in detail. He let the person who he deposed the prior week in a civil action search his property.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EtrzOgH2k10
You can search hundreds of miles of forest and cities and streets and skies. Or you can go exactly to the place she was last known to be alive and interacted with a convicted felon.
Kratz: OK, Do you know Pam Sturm or her daughter Nikole Sturm?
Hillegas: I had met them Saturday morning. They showed up after the good majority of everybody else had left. But that was the first time I had met them.
Kratz: What did you and Pam Sturm discuss?
Hillegas: She just basically came right out and said, “Has anybody went to the car yard yet? You know, the Avery salvage yard.” And we just said no, that we hadn’t been sending anybody in there and she offered to and said she’d be willing to and…
Kratz: Before Pam left then to travel to the Avery salvage yard, was she provided a map or any other information?
Hillegas: Yes. Yes, I gave her a map.
It doesn't mean RH is guilty or not guilty or SA is guilty or not guilty. Are we forbidden to question his search leadership decision making?
Where else is there possibly to go besides straight to his the salvage yard in the hopes of finding her alive? Why give a person a map instead of sending the entire search team to that specific area?
Odd. I think any investigator would agree. It is legally permissible to question his unorthodox approach. He did access a homicide victim's password. He was an ex-boyfriend. He led a search party in the exact opposite direction of a homicide. At the barest minimum, there is no way he should be allowed to enter the crime scene area. By the 200 law enforcement personnel that were there. All he could do is cast doubt on SA's guilt.
Even if SA is 100% guilty with video evidence, you would never let RH into the crime scene. You want your case to be as close to perfect as possible when you present it to a jury. Nothing is perfect. This seems to be one of those little mistakes that allows truly guilty people go free though.