It does seem a bit convenient. I also don't understand why everyone thinks that the police, the prosecution, and even the defense (since they didn't follow up on this letter) are out to get this one guy.
If the police/prosecution think Adnan did it, they should put on the evidence they have with their REAL theory for how it happened.
So, if they REALLY thought that Adnan killed her immediately after school, then this woman's testimony is a really big deal.
What makes more sense:
Asia McClain's letter was ignored due to legal "malpractice" or Asia's letter was ignored because they knew it wouldn't hold up under scrutiny in a trial?
I forget exactly how Koenig describes it...but Adnan was completely unmoved by the letter and so was his attorney (for reasons we do not explicitly know). If I am sitting in a jail cell, I am screaming and shouting for joy when I get a letter from someone professing to have an alibi for me. But, that didn't happen here.
And I suspect the reason is something along the lines of Asia's statements lacking credibility and being easily refutable. Is Adnan going to say that in an interview with Koenig. No. So he gives some sort of unconvincing story about him being young, naive, or however it was described.
It reminds me of the section of the interview/series when he was queried about not calling or texting Hae even one time after she went missing. Not one time to check in and tell her that he was thinking of her, concerned, or letting her know he was there to talk to her if she needed someone. The dude who dropped everything to pick her up when she was having car problems. Just crickets.
Koenig basically expresses skepticism about his lack of checking in with Hae and Adnan was like: "Is that a question?"
You need to get a better understanding of this case. Cristina Gutierrez
was disbarred for mishandling clients funds and
not providing services for which she was paid. It's entirely feasible that she simply dropped the ball due to failing health and declining ability to keep up with her case load.
I think I have a better understanding than most and I am aware of her mishandling of funds, etc. I suppose it is possible she dropped the ball due to failing health, although I have not seen any evidence to substantiate the notion that she was somehow derelict in her efforts to defend Adnan. For Adnan to be innocent you need so many unfortunate circumstances to coalesce over the weeks and that specific day that it is basically laughable.
And yet, for Jay to be guilty as you professed on the last page, you need a nearly equally improbable sequence of events to come together.
The notion that Jay "framed" Adnan is pretty far-fetched.
So, we have Jay pining away with some unknown motive festering inside him plotting and scheming to kill an innocent person simply so he could frame Adnan? That is what we are going with now? That instead of, oh I don't know....just actually killing Adnan on his own...he would instead kill Hae and frame Adnan. Where is the logic in this!
Meanwhile...Jay is just sitting there devising a master diabolical scheme whereby he must somehow use his telepathic powers to convince Adnan to loan him his car and cell phone. Then he must somehow follow Hae after school or locate her in some fashion after school, get her to pull over and then kill her in broad daylight in a presumably public place and then drive two cars simultaneously? Please let me know where I am getting the theory wrong.
Then...after killing Hae...Jay goes and hangs out with the dude he loathes so much that he is willing to kill the dude's ex-gf, but okay with puffing some joints. Maybe Jay is a psychopath and secretly bellowed a sinister laugh as he puffed jays...
Then...to make things even more amazing. Jay managed to somehow bank on the notion that one of the popular kids at school, who is an athlete, has practice that day would manage to go an entire span of several hours without one credible witness to corroborate or substantiate an alibi. That is ingenius. I mean...seriously think about that.
You are planning to kill another human being so that you can frame Adnan for murder and as you are concocting this fantastical plan...you assume/guarantee/know that nobody in the world would be able to come to his defense...not even the "victim" himself.
Are you listening to yourself when you convince yourself that this happened the way you are trying to say it happened?