The Truth About False Confessions Alan Hirsch
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- True Crime
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False confessions expert Prof. Alan Hirsch explores the tragic phenomenon and immense ramifications of false confessions through the lens of riveting cases.
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Wrong Place at the Wrong Time
Sometimes people end up in the wrong place at the wrong time. In this episode, Prof. Hirsch recounts a harrowing case involving a late night assault on a police officer in New York City. The police apprehended a young man on a nearby street who later confessed to beating the cop with a baseball bat. But numerous inconsistencies in the testimony of various officers and questionable aspects of the man's confession cast doubt on his guilt.
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My Expert Beginnings: The Case of Frank Miller
In this episode of The Truth About False Confessions podcast, Prof. Hirsch describes his introduction to the field of false confessions. It dates back to his time as a law clerk for the U.S. Court of Appeals in the 1980s where he encountered a homicide case that went up to the Supreme Court.
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The Alford Ploy
Prof. Alan Hirsch describes his experience traveling to testify in an alarming case with a dubious confession and several strange developments. When is a guilty plea not a guilty plea? How did this bizarre case end?
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Would you help a guilty man?
Should an expert resist testifying in cases where he thinks the defendant is guilty? In this episode of The Truth About False Confessions, Prof. Alan Hirsch discusses the case of a man who was probably guilty but was also broken down by extreme and unusual interrogation tactics.
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Serial False Confessors: The Case of John Doe
Serial killer or serial false confessor? That's the question that had to be answered in this strange case. The man in question confessed to 18 murders, most of which he clearly did not commit. Why did he keep confessing? And was he innocent or guilty of the homicide that could determine whether he is executed?
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Misery in Missouri: The Case of Brandon McGill
There was little doubt that Jeremy Conover, who took his own life shortly thereafter, was involved in sexual assault, arson, and murder – what the Sheriff of this small county called “the most heinous crime I've seen or even heard of” in tiny Butler County, Missouri. Conover raped a ten-year-old girl, killed her and her father, then burned down their house. But did Conover have an accomplice? There was no evidence against the alleged accomplice, except his shaky confession, and he had a solid alibi. But he faced a sheriff convinced of his guilt.
Customer Reviews
Finally this is what I’ve wanted
Finally a true crime podcast that almost feels like the perfect amount. Each episode is like a new short story more unique and twisted than the last.