When the detective pulls up to Mary's house, she is watering the lawn with a hose. But when Mary calls Crystal to come out, she no longer has the hose and it isn't on the ground when the scene widens. When Crystal walks over to the detective's car, Mary once again has hose in hand, watering.
The detective wakes up just as his bedside clocks changes to 4:17. He picks up the victim's phone and it says 10:04.
When he's preparing his rifle and automatic for the drug meet, he cocks his handgun the first time. Then when he's in his car being shot at he cocks his handgun a second time without having fired or reloaded it.
At the beginning, the little girl's body changes position. When the trucker finds her, her lips are slightly apart, but when the police examine her body, he lips are closed.
When the police are at the scene of the crime, cars are lined up behind a truck, but immediately after, they disappear.
When Jay is loading his father's rifle in the car the ammunition is clearly not .308 Winchester as had been described several times. The cartridges are belted and too short to be a .308.
When the murdered indigenous girl is found in the pipe, she is sitting up with a gap behind her spine so that her weight is on her hips and her head against the pipe. She would have been slumped, but she was maintaining a posture impossible in a corpse.
Not impossible if she was still in rigor mortis.
Not impossible if she was still in rigor mortis.