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101- Celebrated investigative Journalist Exposes Deadly Corruption Within the Parole Board System

Open Mike Podcast

Release Date: 04/20/2021

119-A Firebombing & Wrongful Conviction Revealed Dark Realities of Detroit's Criminal Justice System show art 119-A Firebombing & Wrongful Conviction Revealed Dark Realities of Detroit's Criminal Justice System

Open Mike Podcast

In 2005, 18-year-old Kenneth Nixon and his girlfriend were arrested and charged with murder, arson, and four counts of attempted murder in conjunction with a tragic Detroit firebombing that killed two children. While Kenneth’s girlfriend was acquitted by a jury, he was sentenced to two life sentences. A collaborative review by the Medill Justice Project, Cooley Law Innocence Project, and Wayne County Conviction Integrity Unit would ultimately determine Kenneth didn’t receive a fair trial, citing inconsistent eyewitness testimony, opportunistic jailhouse informant testimony, and poor arson...

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118- After a 25-Year Wrongful Incarceration, This Navy Veteran Reassembles Pieces of His Stolen Life show art 118- After a 25-Year Wrongful Incarceration, This Navy Veteran Reassembles Pieces of His Stolen Life

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In June 1993, Navy veteran Derrick Sanders was arrested for the shooting death of a Milwaukee man he had assaulted seven months previously. Although he had no role in the man’s death, inept legal counsel advised him to plead no contest to charges of first-degree intentional homicide, party to a crime, and he was sentenced to 21 years to life in prison. Over the next twenty-five years, Derrick would be entrenched in legal rigmarole after filing a motion to withdraw his plea. He argued that, due to his attorney’s inadequate explanation of potential punishment, he did not intelligently enter...

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117- Detroit Exoneree Eric Anderson Reflects on 9 Years Wrongfully Incarcerated for a Brutal Robbery show art 117- Detroit Exoneree Eric Anderson Reflects on 9 Years Wrongfully Incarcerated for a Brutal Robbery

Open Mike Podcast

In April 2010, Eric Anderson was arrested and charged for involvement in a robbery and beating of two men outside their Detroit home. At the time of the crime, Anderson was actually at a Coney Island, ten miles from the scene, where he was shot in the foot, necessitating immediate medical attention. Despite hospital records confirming his treatment, and Coney Island security footage substantiating his injury, Eric would spend nine years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, asserting his innocence the entire time. The Michigan Innocence Clinic re-investigated Anderson’s claims of...

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116- Detroit Man Who Served 17 Years for Murder Awaits New Trial After a State Prisoner Admits Guilt show art 116- Detroit Man Who Served 17 Years for Murder Awaits New Trial After a State Prisoner Admits Guilt

Open Mike Podcast

Detroiter Thelonious Seaercy has wrongfully served 17 years behind bars for a murder that a self-professed hitman has confessed to committing. Despite no evidence tying him to the scene of the alleged crime, Searcy is stuck in a holding pattern. He and his lawyer await to see if the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office appeals a ruling from the Michigan Court of Appeals. Why is he stuck under house arrest? Why doesn’t Prosecutor Worthy dismiss his charges? Tune into this riveting episode of Open Mike to find out. Show Notes [00:07] Welcome to ! [00:26] Thelonious Searcy’s . [00:54] Welcome to...

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Open Mike Podcast

Eli Savit is a nationally recognized attorney, public servant, and civil rights advocate who currently serves as the Washtenaw County Prosecutor. Prior to his term, he served as a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, was a civil-rights and public-interest attorney, and also had a career as a public-school teacher. In addition to serving as Washtenaw County's Prosecuting Attorney, Eli is a faculty member at the University of Michigan Law School. Eli has been an integral part of several major, successful civil rights and environmental initiatives in Michigan and across the...

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114- After 32 Years Wrongfully Imprisoned for Murder, Gilbert Poole Is Reclaiming His Life show art 114- After 32 Years Wrongfully Imprisoned for Murder, Gilbert Poole Is Reclaiming His Life

Open Mike Podcast

On December 27, 1988, North Carolina resident Gilbert Poole was arrested and charged with the murder of a Michigan man he had never met. Due to faulty evidence, inaccurate eyewitness testimony, and inept defense counsel, he would ultimately be wrongfully convicted of murder and spend the next 32 years of his life in prison. After independently maintaining his innocence for the first 14 years of his incarceration, Mr. Poole was represented by the Western Michigan University Cooley Law School Innocence Project for the next 18 years. Post-conviction DNA testing was conducted on crime scene...

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113 - Award-Winning Criminal Justice Attorney Implements Cutting-Edge Data to Reexamine Convictions show art 113 - Award-Winning Criminal Justice Attorney Implements Cutting-Edge Data to Reexamine Convictions

Open Mike Podcast

Marissa Boyers Bluestine is an award-winning criminal justice attorney and reform advocate who serves as the Assistant Director of the Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. As Assistant Director, she oversees policy and public awareness by promoting reform through cutting-edge data, public education, and legislative reform for issues and outdated laws that beleaguer the criminal justice system. A former public defender, Marissa has helped facilitate the release of fourteen Pennsylvanians convicted of crimes they didn’t commit,...

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112- How a Criminal Justice Expert & Innocence Project Director Freed an Innocent Man After 32 Years show art 112- How a Criminal Justice Expert & Innocence Project Director Freed an Innocent Man After 32 Years

Open Mike Podcast

Professor Marla Mitchell-Cichon is an attorney, advocate, and criminal justice expert who has helped facilitate the release of seven wrongfully convicted Michiganders. As Executive Director of the WMU-Cooley Law Innocence Project, she and her team, largely consisting of law students, work to secure the release of factually innocent people solely through post-conviction DNA evidence, the only innocence organization in the state of Michigan to do so. To date, the WMU-Cooley Law Innocence Project has screened over 5,800 cases, several of which are actively being prepared for court. In this...

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111 - Texas Innocence Project Director Reveals the Most Egregious Wrongful Conviction of His Career show art 111 - Texas Innocence Project Director Reveals the Most Egregious Wrongful Conviction of His Career

Open Mike Podcast

Mike Ware is the Executive Director of the Innocence Project of Texas, where he champions the rights of the wrongfully convicted and tirelessly fights to overturn their sentences. In this compelling installment of Open Mike, he discusses the egregious case of Lydell Grant, a Houston man who was convicted on the basis of six false identifications, only to be released from prison a decade later once crime scene evidence was finally run through proper DNA testing. How can faulty identification processes be improved upon to avoid these miscarriages of justice? Why did it take a decade for DNA...

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110- How One Man Prevailed Over Malicious Judges and Excessive Sentencing to Seize His Second Chance show art 110- How One Man Prevailed Over Malicious Judges and Excessive Sentencing to Seize His Second Chance

Open Mike Podcast

In 1988, Alfonzo Riley’s friend asked him if he wanted to make some money. As a broke college student, he said yes. Little did he know that simple decision would shape the rest of his life. Alfonzo ended up transporting drugs from Brooklyn to Albany in a transaction gone awry. Two men ended up losing their lives and, while he was in a different room when the shootings occurred, he was charged under New York’s controversial felony murder law and sentenced to 71 years to life. It would take overcoming two malicious judges, three decades behind bars, and multiple applications for clemency for...

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Robert Riggs is Peabody Award-winning journalist and digital media entrepreneur, widely regarded as one of the nation’s top investigative journalists. In his new podcast, Free to Kill, he exposes the rampant, deadly corruption that has come to poison many parole board systems across the country. In a disturbingly increasing trend, many parole boards let out vicious killers who go on to commit new crimes while refusing to parole the wrongfully convicted, simply because they do not admit to their crimes or show remorse. This episode of Open Mike sees Robert discussing the most heinous crimes he’s covered throughout his storied career, reflecting on ways parole boards have failed those they claim to protect, and examining the intersection of wrongful convictions and deceitful parole boards.

Show Notes

[00:19] Welcome to Open Mike, Episode 101!

[00:46] Robert Riggs’s background and bio.

 

[01:23] Welcome to Open Mike, Robert Riggs!  Robert is one of the country's top investigative reporters. You've been on CBS Evening, Evening News, CBS 60 minutes ABC nightline, as well as local stations. Tell me about some of the hot stories you broke or covered as an investigative reporter.

[01:50] Robert tells the story of serial killer Kenneth McDuff who, enabled by political corruption, essentially bought himself parole and continued a killing spree.

[03:14] You’ve done reporting on parole boards before, with Free to Kill… what did you discover about parole boards?

[05:51] They want people to admit their guilt, take responsibility. It feels like that's the only litmus test to whether or not they're going to get out… If someone is innocent, and they keep proclaiming their innocence, there's no way they're going to get paroled. Do you think that's true?

 

[06:48] We cover a lot of wrongful convictions on Open Mike, and there as estimations that tens of thousands of innocent people are locked up. Some of the people we’ve interviewed have gotten a break because of an investigative journalist, like yourself. What's your sense? Do you think that there is a enough journalists covering these types of wrongful convictions or potentially wrongful convictions? To expose this this tragic injustice?

[09:20] Case after case that we cover…it comes down to a bad court-appointed attorney who pushes deals on innocent clients because they have too many cases, or they don't have enough time to do all the work. It feels like that should be a national story, but I think you just answered the question why we're never going to see a big story about this.

[13:02] Have you ever sat through a trial or covered a trial, where you've heard about so-called scientific evidence on bite marks, or Shaken Baby Syndrome, or even arson cases, that just didn't make sense?

[14:46] As we're talking about reporting… what we see in a lot of our cases here in Michigan, are that the police and prosecutors are lying. They hide exculpatory evidence to kick convictions and have crazy tunnel vision. Why isn't the media all over this? You might have already answered my question that it's budget cuts. But it’s just mind blowing to me that the public doesn't know what's happening.

[17:34] On true crime reporter you started talking a little bit about this five-part series… what can you tell us about one of the crazy cases that you've covered on that?

[21:02] Robert tells the story of Annie Laurie Williams who, in 1955, murdered and dismembered her two young sons. She was imprisoned, but then released by the Texas parole board after 25 years served, started a new life in Idaho where she likely killed a widower and took over his social security benefits.

[23:13] How the heck did they let this woman out for such a heinous crime?

[23:26] One of the problems is that the parole files in the prison files are secret. It's against the law to make them public. In Robert’s case, he developed the sources and they started leaking information about corruption to him at their own legal risk.

[24:14] True Crime Reporter podcast is available on all your favorite podcast apps, so be sure to check it out!

[26:16] On that note, Robert, Peabody Award-winning investigative reporter, I really loved having you on the show. I love hearing these stories. They're mind blowing to me, and we're going to check out your podcast today. I'm going to go check it out today. Thanks for being on Open Mike. And thanks for doing what you do, and keep exposing all this crazy stuff out there.

[28:06] I am literally going to subscribe to that podcast right now. Hope you enjoyed that episode. Like it, share it, comment, tell us what else you want to hear. And we will bring it to you here on Open Mike. That was Episode 101. I can't believe we are over 100. But thank you for your support. Thank you for sharing the episodes as you do. And I'll see you next time.