'Making A Murderer' Convict's Half Brother Releases Rap Track

The half brother ofBrendan Dassey, one of two convicted murderers made famous by the Netflix docuseries "Making A Murderer," hasreleased a rap song protesting, as the lyrics state, the "injustice" that was "slammed in the face of two innocent people."

Brad Dassey, a32-year-old, self-proclaimedChristian hip-hop and rap artist, shared his song, titled “They Didn’t Do It,” earlier this week along with a note:

"Here's a track I wrote,spent 10 hours straight onabout Brendan Dassey and Steven Avery. Brendan is my half brother in prison ... Please download and SHARE my new track to bring justice to my brother!"

Brendan Dassey walks to the courthouse to hear the verdict in his case in 2007 in Manitowoc, Wis. A jury found Dassey guilty of raping a 25-year-old freelance photographer, Teresa Halbach, and helping his uncle, Steven Avery, kill her and burn her body.
Brendan Dassey walks to the courthouse to hear the verdict in his case in 2007 in Manitowoc, Wis. A jury found Dassey guilty of raping a 25-year-old freelance photographer, Teresa Halbach, and helping his uncle, Steven Avery, kill her and burn her body.

Avery and his nephew Brendan were convicted and sentenced to life in prisonfor the 2005 death of Teresa Halbach.

After the success of "Making A Murderer," many havecome to the convicted killers' defense, convinced that, as their attorneys argued in court, Avery was framed by police for Halbach's death and Brendan, then 16, was coerced into a false confession.

In the track, Brad, whoshares a father with Brendan, raps: "Things clearly showed that it was just a joke. Cops were only there just to prod and poke. Not a fair trial. Not a fair game. Whole thing’s whacked. Just a lying shame.”

As of Wednesday, the song had 131,000 plays on SoundCloud and nearly 50,000 on Youtube.

Brad told The Daily Beast he was influenced to write the song because the media focus seems to be entirely on Avery, with nobody talking about his half brother.

"The poor guy just got railroaded by investigators and got the raw end of the deal, and somebody needs to support him," he said.

Listen to "They Didn't Do It" below:

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost.