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In a town that had never seen a homicide trial, Ron Dalton was convicted of murdering his wife based in large part on the word of a local pathologist over a certified expert from Philadelphia.
Ron was sentenced to life in prison after a six-week trial, and it would take 12 years and a nine-month retrial to finally prove his innocence.
On the next episode of Wrongfully Yours, Ron shares how flawed forensic testimony and small-town bias led to a devastating wrongful conviction and what it took to fight his way back to freedom.
Full episode drops March 31. Be sure to follow us and to subscribe on your favourite platform so that you don’t miss this powerful conversation.
https://bio.site/wrongfullyyourspodcast
#WrongfullyYours #RonDalton #WrongfulConviction #JusticeFailed #InnocenceMatters #CriminalJusticeReform #ForensicFailure #InnocenceCanada
By Kelly LauzonIn a town that had never seen a homicide trial, Ron Dalton was convicted of murdering his wife based in large part on the word of a local pathologist over a certified expert from Philadelphia.
Ron was sentenced to life in prison after a six-week trial, and it would take 12 years and a nine-month retrial to finally prove his innocence.
On the next episode of Wrongfully Yours, Ron shares how flawed forensic testimony and small-town bias led to a devastating wrongful conviction and what it took to fight his way back to freedom.
Full episode drops March 31. Be sure to follow us and to subscribe on your favourite platform so that you don’t miss this powerful conversation.
https://bio.site/wrongfullyyourspodcast
#WrongfullyYours #RonDalton #WrongfulConviction #JusticeFailed #InnocenceMatters #CriminalJusticeReform #ForensicFailure #InnocenceCanada