A podcast graces two friends free after 25 years in

A podcast graces two friends, free after 25 years in prison. “You didn’t kill your school friend, here’s the proof”

NEW YORK When Cain Joshua Storey and Darrell Lee Clark walked in prison 1998 became the President of the Use it was Bill Clinton and the most watched film was Titanic. The two boys were convicted when they were just 17 years oldlifelong prison sentence for the murder of her school friend, 15-year-old Brian Bowling. They had repeated in vain that they were innocent, the police did not listen to reason. 24 years later, in a completely different world than when they were young, the two are free again and the law recognizes their innocence. It was someone who saved her podcastProof, whose two presenters worked for a year to solve the case and then presented everything that made history over the course of 17 episodes.
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Macroscopic procedural errors, coupled with false testimony and police infidelity, came to light so clearly that the victim’s family, who up until then had had no doubts as to their guilt, conceded that “everyone was wrong.” The two presenters, psychologist Susan Simpson and lawyer Jacinda Davis, presented their work to the Innocence Project, a non-profit legal organization dedicated to saving those who accidentally ended up in prison. And the project’s attorneys filed the appeal, which settled with Storey and Clark’s acquittal. The events that took almost 25 years of their lives from them happened in 1996 when Storey brought a gun to the home of Brian Bowling, who wanted to play Russian roulette. Brian even told his girlfriend over the phone. But the game ended badly.

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Brian died with a shot in the temple, and police initially believed Storey, only charging him with manslaughter. But then he not only changed his mind and sued Storey for first degree murder, but also implicated Lee Clark in the prosecution, who claimed the two were getting revenge on Brian for accusing her of theft. It was the podcast that unearthed amazing facts about the case, such as that not even an autopsy was performed, that not only was Clark absent, but that he had an impeccable alibi, and that the eyewitness was a visually impaired person – what Clark saw escape actually referred to a shooting twenty years earlier and an African American fugitive (Clark is white). The revenge theory itself collapsed when the witness who exposed it admitted she lied after police threatened to take their children away.

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