Beyond All Repair
Imagine you're accused of something horrific. You swear you didn't do it, but someone says they witnessed it: your own brother. Sophia Johnson was newly married with a baby on the way when she became the prime suspect in her mother-in-law's brutal murder. WBUR's Amory Sivertson reexamines a case unsolved, a family torn apart, and the woman who wasn't believed.
Hôtes et personnes invitées
Wow
-4 j
The phone call where we hear Sophia reminding Sean REPEATEDLY the call is being recorded is what solidified it for me…she may have not acted alone, but there’s no way she didn’t have a big part of the crime.
Interesting
-1 j
I really enjoyed this story! I have been thinking about it for days afterward. My only complaint is that there were a lot of questions left unanswered for me. I would have liked to know more about Sophia’s life, her mother, Brad, etc to understand the dynamics between everyone. For example, why did Sophia’s mom come to her house asking for help with her bank account? That seems unusual to me but this question was no explored at all and going to the bank with her mother was a central part of Sophia’s alibi.
What a story
14 nov.
This has enraged me. The judges ruling to not discuss his character and behavior… this all feels very relevant and I don’t think she had a fair trial! I’m only on episode 3 but I am SOOOO happy you are sharing this poor women’s story. I’m grateful her case is being told.
S2 - Spoilers, 4 stars because it’s engaging not because of the end
-4 j
I warned about spoilers so I don’t feel bad and saying that there is no way that Sophia didn’t plan the murder of her mother-in-law for financial gain. I do like how the podcast was produced albeit a bit wandering at times. But it blows my mind that the journalist could not see past her own bias to realize that in the end, Sophia was completely guilty and had been lying to everybody the whole entire time. How can somebody change their story that many times and still be believed when they say anything is wild to me, especially by an investigative journalist. I suppose it does speak to how manipulative Sophia is, but the ending on a joyous note that she talks to her brother who thought she was a killer but now it doesn’t, and the journalist saying that she doesn’t believe everything, but does believe her to some extent is just wild. I don’t know who produced this or edited it, but somebody should’ve taken a second look over the final episode and given her some notes. Worth a listen for the rollercoaster, but it surely is a study in manipulation, naivety, and confirmation bias.
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