18 episodes

When Brendan Dassey uttered “I’m really stupid Mum, I can’t help it” this was not the failing of a suggestible, vulnerable teenager but the exposure of the systemic failures that permeate through the juvenile justice system of Wisconsin. This season join me as I step back into Manitowoc 2005 and explore and re-examine the factors at the heart of this profound miscarriage of justice.

SIXTH HOUR: The Wrongful Conviction of Brendan Dassey Tracy Keogh

    • True Crime
    • 5.0 • 1 Rating

When Brendan Dassey uttered “I’m really stupid Mum, I can’t help it” this was not the failing of a suggestible, vulnerable teenager but the exposure of the systemic failures that permeate through the juvenile justice system of Wisconsin. This season join me as I step back into Manitowoc 2005 and explore and re-examine the factors at the heart of this profound miscarriage of justice.

    The Innocent: The Intentional Conviction of Jason Baldwin

    The Innocent: The Intentional Conviction of Jason Baldwin

    “Taking the Alford Plea hurt my soul more than being found guilty in 1994 did," shares Jason Baldwin, a man who is so much more than a member of the West Memphis 3. “When they forced me to take the Alford Plea something in me broke…”
    The presumption of innocence and guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is seemingly reserved for a select few. For many flowing through the US system of [in]justice particularly children like 16-year-old Jason Baldwin and 16-year-old Brendan Dassey, the presumption of innocence is nothing more than a fallacy, a notion of intent not delivered. Contending with forces that conspire to convict, targeted by unmerciful prosecutors and defended by bad state actors - the truth of their innocence becomes a casualty of chaos.
    Jason Baldwin joins me on the Sixth Hour to discuss his life pre and post-the-lived and survived experience of his wrongful conviction, Brendan Dassey, and his role as co-founder of innocence org Proclaim Justice.
     
     
     
     
    Music reproduced with permission.
    Song: Bad Man
    Artist: Sarah and the Underground
    Writer: Sarah Marie Dillard
     
    “One of the first songs written after 'Making a Murderer' was released, 'Bad Man' by Sarah & The Underground is an unofficial anthem of the fight to free Brendan Dassey." - Steven Drizin, Legal Defense for Brendan Dassey

    • 1 hr 35 min
    The Reformers: Inside the Interrogation Room

    The Reformers: Inside the Interrogation Room

    It’s lawful for police to use a variety of psychological techniques to induce suspects to confess including lying about evidence, accusatory questioning, and stomping their size tens up the nine steps of the REID technique because well, that’s what they’ve been taught. But times are a’changing.
    In this episode of the Sixth Hour, my guests provide alternative, strategic interrogation practices grounded in science and rooted in humanity, what a revolution right?
    Join me as we step into the interrogation room of Brendan Dassey and others with Dave Thompson, Partner and President of Wicklander Zulawski, a world-leading interrogation training organisation, Matt Jones a detective and Director at Evocavi Group which provides strategic investigative interview training that is grounded in decades of social science research. And retired homicide detective and author James Trainum who now reviews, consults, trains, and instructs on wrongful conviction cases, specialising in the field of false confessions. 
     
     
     
    Music reproduced with permission.
    Song: You Know They Lie
    Artist: Big Little Lions, Jack Stafford
    Licensed by: The Orchard Music (on behalf of The Independent Record Company); Songtrust
    Wicklander Zulawski: https://www.w-z.com/
    Evocavi Group: https://www.evocavigroup.com/
    James Trainum: https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781538120033/How-the-Police-Generate-False-Confessions-An-Inside-Look-at-the-Interrogation-Room

    • 1 hr 12 min
    The Collective: Power to the People, Right on!

    The Collective: Power to the People, Right on!

    Did you walk past, or did you stop? Were you called to act – to advocate - to just do something, because doing nothing felt like a crime?
    When Making a Murderer was unleashed on an unsuspecting seasonal audience in the December of 2015, it triggered a gut punch for millions of people and birthed a community of criminal justice activists that continues to thrive five-plus years on.
    On this episode of the Sixth Hour, I’m joined by Stacey Seabrook, Paul Capaldi, and Mark Hoddinott to discuss the role of advocate and what that entails in the context of the wrongful conviction of Brendan Dassey and his uncle Steven Avery.
     
     
     
    Music reproduced with permission. 
    There's something going on.
    As justice slowly disappears.
    Artist: Stacey Seabrook
     

    • 1 hr 22 min
    The Homicide Detective: A System of Adversaries

    The Homicide Detective: A System of Adversaries

    “I’ll be honest if somebody waives their Miranda rights, and we know how to get people to waive their Miranda rights – we know how to manipulate the hell out of them …” shares former homicide detective, author, reformer, and wrongful conviction expert James Trainum. “You could almost put pins under their fingernails and it’s [confession] still voluntary because of that paper that they sign,” he adds.
    Joining the Sixth Hour, James Trainum author of How Police Generate Confessions: An Inside Look at the Interrogation Room, shares how his life as a homicide detective in Washington D.C. was transformed after eliciting a false confession from a suspect after a 16-hour interrogation - and informed and progressive insights on law enforcement, the Brendan Dassey case and modern interrogation practices in the United States.

    • 1 hr 12 min
    The AEDPA: Dismantling the Great Writ

    The AEDPA: Dismantling the Great Writ

    When the federal judges that made up the en banc majority found that while there were factors that supported finding Brendan Dassey’s confession involuntary; that his confession was riddled with inconsistencies and that interrogators did offer up broad assurances that honesty would be rewarded with leniency, the slim majority determined that this was not enough to uphold what four other federal judges found to be a “profound miscarriage of justice.” For the majority climbing the insurmountable wall that AEDPA built took a judicial courage they lacked.
    In this episode of the Sixth Hour, I’m joined by Professor Brandon Garrett, a distinguished Professor of Law and constitutional scholar prolific in the study of the innocent exonerated by DNA testing whose empirical research on the criminal justice system includes false confessions, forensics, eyewitness testimony and so much more. Join us for a masterclass in AEDPA.

    • 46 min
    The Conspirator: High Crimes and Misdemeanours

    The Conspirator: High Crimes and Misdemeanours

    “It was rumoured that there were people in the department of justice here saying, ‘leave it alone, don’t take it further,’ there are people who were offended but you know we got to have our win,” recalls Professor Michele LaVigne. As Brendan’s post-conviction appeal steamrolled its way through the federal courts the Wisconsin legal fraternity was as split as the en banc majority who had abandoned their call to conscience.
    In this episode I am joined by Professor LaVigne Clinical Professor of Law Emeritus and co-author of the herculean analysis; Under the Hood: Brendan Dassey, Language Impairments, and Judicial Ignorance to discuss the indefensible misconduct of Len Kachinsky and how Miranda intersects with juveniles with speech and language impairments like Brendan Dassey.
    To read the analysis: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3379727

    • 1 hr 44 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
1 Rating

1 Rating

Top Podcasts In True Crime

Manden fra Korsør
Sjællandske Nyheder
Mørkeland
Camilla og Kristine
Hun mødte en morder
Ekstra Bladet
Danske Kriminalsager
RadioPlay
True Story
Martin Hylander
Nationens mareridt
Ally & Ude og hjemme

You Might Also Like

Wrongful Conviction
Lava for Good Podcasts
Proof: A True Crime Podcast
Red Marble Media
Earwitness
Lava for Good Podcasts
Three
Wavland
The Rise and Fall of Ruby Franke
Law&Crime | Wondery
Murder 101
iHeartPodcasts