True Crime, Authors & Extraordinary People

David McClam

This is the podcast where two passions become one. Here weekly I will present a true crime story. It may be a crime you know about and it may be one that is new to you. Every other week, I will be interviewing an author. Maybe an author and some books you have never known about. So if you like True crime and have a passion to read, this is the podcast for you!Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

  1. From Trauma To Peace: A Survivor Therapist’s Journey Nikki Eisenhauer

    6小时前

    From Trauma To Peace: A Survivor Therapist’s Journey Nikki Eisenhauer

    Some stories rearrange how we see predators, survivors, and the slow work of becoming whole. This conversation with psychotherapist and survivor Nikki Eisenhower does exactly that. She breaks down how grooming hides inside everyday kindness—bedtime rituals, small errands, gentle touch—especially when a child is starved for warmth. That’s what makes it so dangerous and so easy to miss. Nikki also opens a window into repressed memory, explaining how the body sealed off what a child couldn’t bear and how a later trigger brought it all back with painful clarity. We get into the hard parts few shows cover: what happens when a survivor finally speaks and the family closes ranks; how abusers use “sleepwalking” and other scripts to fog the truth; and why pressing charges in non-homicide cases can feel sloppy and disheartening. Through it all, Nikki offers language and tools for listeners who need more than sympathy. She lays out how to rebuild boundaries you can actually enforce, how to use intuition as a compass, and how inner child work can return choice and safety to the present. This is healing without platitudes—practical, compassionate, and fiercely honest. The second half of our talk turns to love after trauma. We explore the brain’s pull toward the familiar, the traps of love-bombing and victim-flipping, and the everyday habits that signal a healthy partnership: direct communication, clean repair, and a willingness to learn. Nikki’s path—from chaos to a relationship built on clarity—shows that peace is not a miracle; it’s a trainable state. If you’ve been waiting for a guide that meets you where you are and helps you move toward calm, connection, and self-respect, this conversation is for you. If the episode resonates, share it with someone who needs practical hope, then subscribe and leave a review so more listeners can find these tools. Your story can help someone else start theirs. DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    1 小时 5 分钟
  2. The Attica Prison Uprising — When Survival Became Rebellion

    11小时前

    The Attica Prison Uprising — When Survival Became Rebellion

    A request for edible food, basic medical care, and protection from abuse should not be radical. Yet at Attica in 1971, those simple demands collided with a system built for control, and the result was deadly. We walk through the facts of the uprising with clear eyes—from the roots of overcrowding and neglect to the stalled negotiations and the order to retake the prison by force. The outcome was catastrophic: 39 people were killed, including 10 hostages, and autopsies later proved the hostages died from police bullets. No officers were held accountable, and the official narrative crumbled under the weight of evidence. As hosts, we connect Attica’s truths to the present, where many facilities still struggle with health care, safety, and pervasive racial disparities. We talk about how punishment has eclipsed rehabilitation and why dignity is not a privilege but a baseline for any legitimate system. You’ll hear why reform must center independent oversight, humane standards for food and medical care, education and mental health support, and grievance processes that actually work. We also challenge a stubborn myth: that more force equals more safety. History, data, and lived experience tell a different story. This is a sober, human account that asks us to care about people we are taught to ignore. It’s about accountability that reaches all the way to the state, not just the incarcerated. If you value justice that heals rather than harms, this story matters. Listen, share with someone who still thinks abuse is a deterrent, and join us in pushing for a system that protects life and makes communities safer. Subscribe, leave a review to help others find the show, and tell us: what does real accountability behind bars look like to you? DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    4 分钟
  3. The Central Park 5— A Confession America Wanted

    1天前

    The Central Park 5— A Confession America Wanted

    Panic can make a city certain, and certainty can turn a theory into a conviction. We revisit the Central Park Five—now known as the Exonerated Five—to unpack how five teenagers were funneled from marathon interrogations to headlines that branded them predators, and how DNA evidence and a prison confession finally cracked the story New York believed. Along the way, we trace the mechanics of false confessions, the power of media framing, and the political voices that amplified fear over facts. I walk through the timeline: a jogger attacked in 1989, a city on edge, and investigators extracting statements from kids without parents or lawyers present. We examine why juveniles are especially vulnerable to coercive tactics, how suggestive questioning plants “facts,” and why a signed statement can mislead juries more than any other form of flawed evidence. Then we follow the unexpected turn—an incarcerated man’s admission corroborated by DNA—that led to vacated convictions, even as some public figures and the survivor continued to dispute the truth. This story also lives beyond courtrooms. We talk about the human cost: years of youth erased, families strained, and the long road of reentry. Some of the men turned their pain into purpose through advocacy and public service; others still wrestle with trauma that exoneration cannot erase. From there, we get practical about reform—recording all interrogations, banning deceptive tactics on minors, ensuring immediate access to counsel, strengthening conviction integrity units, and teaching media literacy around crime reporting—so the next crisis doesn’t repeat the same script. If you care about wrongful convictions, juvenile justice, and how race, media, and power shape what we call the truth, this conversation will challenge and inform. Listen, share with someone who still doesn’t know the full story, and leave a review to help more people find the show. Your voice can push these reforms from idea to action—what change do you want to see next? DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    7 分钟
  4. The Angola 3 — Solitary For Believing Black Lives Matter

    2天前

    The Angola 3 — Solitary For Believing Black Lives Matter

    A prison built on a former plantation. Three men who dared to organize for dignity. A system that answered with isolation instead of justice. We take you inside the story of the Angola Three—Herman Wallace, Albert Woodfox, and Robert King—and trace how solitary confinement became a weapon used to silence voices that challenged abuse, corruption, and racial terror behind bars. We unpack how thin evidence, recanted testimony, and contradictory forensic reports produced swift convictions that endured for decades. From 23-hour lockdowns to years without human touch or sunlight, we examine what prolonged isolation does to the mind and why it persists as a tool of control. The journey from accusation to release—29 years for King, 41 for Wallace, 43 for Woodfox—shows how power can bend process and how resilience can still break through. Their story connects true crime, civil rights, and prison reform, revealing the human cost of policies that prize order over truth. Along the way, we discuss the history of Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, the influence of the Black Panther Party’s call for dignity, and the broader question of what safety really means inside a prison. We explore evidence standards, oversight, and the urgent case for limiting or abolishing long-term solitary confinement. If you care about criminal justice, mental health, and human rights, this conversation offers context, clarity, and a path toward change. Subscribe, share with a friend who cares about reform, and leave a review to help more people find these stories and keep the pressure for accountability alive. DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    5 分钟
  5. Sam Cooke — The Sound Of Freedom And A Death Still Questioned

    3天前

    Sam Cooke — The Sound Of Freedom And A Death Still Questioned

    A voice that could quiet a room—and a business mind that unsettled an industry. We dive into the life and legacy of Sam Cooke, exploring how a singer famed for smooth, intimate delivery became a blueprint for artistic power through ownership, entrepreneurship, and a fearless civil rights stance. From gospel roots to pop stardom, Cooke didn’t just cross over; he rewrote the rules by controlling his masters, launching his own label, and refusing to perform for segregated audiences, proving that creative freedom and economic autonomy can move culture forward. We also confront the night that still troubles history: Cooke’s 1964 death at the Hacienda Motel, ruled a justifiable homicide despite conflicting accounts and a rushed process that left no trial and few answers. The questions have outlived the headlines. Was he targeted for being loud in song—or dangerous in a quieter, deeper way, by modeling Black economic independence at the height of the civil rights movement? When “A Change Is Gonna Come” arrived weeks later, it felt less like a release and more like a signal that truth finds its way, even when a voice is cut short. Along the way, we connect Cooke’s fight to today’s debates over masters, catalogs, and the value creators deserve in the streaming age. We unpack why ownership shapes legacy, how control influences messaging, and why artists from Prince to the present trace their strategies back to foundations Cooke helped pour. If you care about music history, civil rights, and the business behind the art, this story resonates far beyond a single night in Los Angeles. If this moved you, share it with a friend, subscribe for more, and leave a review with the one insight you’re taking away. What question about Sam Cooke’s life or death still keeps you thinking? DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    5 分钟
  6. The Scottsboro Boys — Childhood On Trial

    4天前

    The Scottsboro Boys — Childhood On Trial

    A freight train stop in 1931 Alabama turned into one of the most consequential legal battles in American history. We revisit the Scottsboro Boys case—nine Black kids, no physical evidence, and death sentences—and unpack how rushed trials, media frenzy, and racial bias created a blueprint for injustice that echoes into the present day. We walk through the facts: the arrests on the rails during the Great Depression, contradictory testimony, medical exams that didn’t match the accusations, and all-white juries that moved faster than the truth. From there, we track two Supreme Court turning points that reshaped criminal justice—the right to effective counsel and the requirement for inclusive juries—while naming the cost the boys paid as years of their lives disappeared behind bars. Legal milestones matter, but they didn’t make these children whole, and that tension drives our reflection on what justice should look like when the system gets it wrong. Drawing a direct line to the Central Park Five, we explore how public panic and headline pressure can still drown out evidence. We examine the power of narrative, the danger of speed over care, and why wrongful convictions persist when officials resist admitting error. Along the way, we offer a clear, human lens on reforms that can stop the cycle: rigorous defense from day one, transparent evidence rules, full-recorded interrogations, and real accountability when bias taints the process. This is a sober, urgent reminder that innocence is not always a shield—and that protecting it requires more than faith in the system. If this conversation moves you, subscribe, share this episode with a friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find these stories. Your voice helps keep truth louder than fear. DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    6 分钟
  7. The Tulsa Race Massacre — When A City Was Eradicated

    5天前

    The Tulsa Race Massacre — When A City Was Eradicated

    A thriving Black city was once a beacon of self-made prosperity—until lies, fear, and sanctioned violence turned it to ash. We revisit Greenwood, Tulsa’s Black Wall Street, to understand how a community built by doctors, lawyers, shopkeepers, and teachers was not only destroyed overnight but then buried beneath decades of silence. From the false accusation against Dick Rowland to newspapers stoking rage and authorities deputizing civilians, we unpack how a spark became an onslaught, including aerial incendiaries, mass displacement, and a death toll counted in the hundreds. We go beyond the flames to trace the quieter policies that completed the job: insurance denials that nullified paid-up coverage, zoning and red tape that blocked rebuilding, and a reframing of the massacre as a “riot” to imply mutual blame. That narrative shift was not an accident; it protected perpetrators, stalled investigations into suspected mass graves, and cut families off from the intergenerational wealth Greenwood had already set in motion. The result wasn’t just trauma—it was economic assassination that echoes in today’s racial wealth gap. Using survivor accounts and the historical record, we connect Greenwood’s destruction to the modern case for reparations, showing how repair links directly to measurable loss, breached contracts, and state-enabled dispossession. We also reflect on how curricula, archives, and public memory can either hide or heal. If you’ve ever wondered why calls for reparations persist, or how prosperous Black communities were systematically undermined, this story offers clarity—and a challenge to what we think we know about American history. If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your thoughts on what real repair should look like today. DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    6 分钟
  8. Muhammad-Ali — When Conscience Became A Crime

    6天前

    Muhammad-Ali — When Conscience Became A Crime

    A single decision can redraw the boundary between loyalty and liberty. We pay tribute to Jesse Jackson’s life and then turn to Muhammad Ali’s defining stand—his refusal to be drafted for the Vietnam War—and how that choice reshaped the conversation about patriotism, race, faith, and the cost of conscience. Ali’s path from Olympic glory to public scorn shows how a nation can celebrate Black excellence while resisting Black self-definition, and why a name, a belief, and a sentence said aloud can shake the room. We walk through the key beats: Ali’s conversion to Islam and the backlash that followed, the 1967 induction order he rejected without apology, and the rapid fire consequences that stripped his title, his license, and much of his income. Sponsors vanished, headlines branded him unpatriotic, and a champion in his physical prime was kept from his craft. Years later, a unanimous Supreme Court ruling voided the conviction, noting failures in how his conscientious objector status was handled. The judgment was quiet, but the lesson rang clear: conscience deserves protection even when it is unpopular, and justice delivered late does not replace years lost. Along the way, we add personal context with a reflection on Selective Service and the uneven paths people navigate to avoid war. We consider what Ali’s stance opened for modern athletes and activists: the right to speak, to protest, and to define patriotism as a commitment to principle over applause. By the end, the portrait is not of redemption but of resolve. Ali didn’t need to be redeemed; he needed to be heard—and history finally listened. If this story moves you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find these conversations. DON'T FORGET TO RATE, COMMENT AND SUBSCRIBE JOIN ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA BY FOLLOWING THE LINKTREE Follow Our Family Of True Crime Shows The year I spent defending my best friend. The TRUTH is HERE We Are Not Afraid Podcast Extinguished With David McClam & LaDonna Humphrey Musical Album The Witch Hunt Of Lanny Hughes Cover Art and Logo created by Diana of Other Worldly Sound Mixing and editing by David McClam Intro script by Sophie Wild From Fiverr & David McClam Intro and outro jingle by Jacqueline G. (JacquieVoice) From Fiverr

    7 分钟
4.3
共 5 分
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关于

This is the podcast where two passions become one. Here weekly I will present a true crime story. It may be a crime you know about and it may be one that is new to you. Every other week, I will be interviewing an author. Maybe an author and some books you have never known about. So if you like True crime and have a passion to read, this is the podcast for you!Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.