
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The knife used to kill John Sheridan is just the first of many clues casting doubt on law enforcement’s conclusion of murder suicide. A newspaper crime reporter, a veteran homicide detective out of Philly, and a whistleblower point to significant pieces of evidence that have been disregarded—even thrown into a dumpster. Although Mark has the state attorney general and the county prosecutor on direct dial, he still gets stonewalled. The authorities assure the political insider that his parents had a dark secret, which will eventually come to light. Mark isn’t convinced. Instead, as he goes through his parent’s papers, he stumbles into a different fight.
New voices interviewed in episode:
• Barbara Boyer, reporter from the Philadelphia Inquirer
• Eddie Rocks, veteran homicide detective, retired from the Philadelphia police.
• Lawrence Kobilinski, professor emeritus, department of sciences at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York
• Professor Keith Taylor, professor, Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration, John Jay College of Criminal Justice (and a former NYPD detective)
4.8
19241,924 ratings
The knife used to kill John Sheridan is just the first of many clues casting doubt on law enforcement’s conclusion of murder suicide. A newspaper crime reporter, a veteran homicide detective out of Philly, and a whistleblower point to significant pieces of evidence that have been disregarded—even thrown into a dumpster. Although Mark has the state attorney general and the county prosecutor on direct dial, he still gets stonewalled. The authorities assure the political insider that his parents had a dark secret, which will eventually come to light. Mark isn’t convinced. Instead, as he goes through his parent’s papers, he stumbles into a different fight.
New voices interviewed in episode:
• Barbara Boyer, reporter from the Philadelphia Inquirer
• Eddie Rocks, veteran homicide detective, retired from the Philadelphia police.
• Lawrence Kobilinski, professor emeritus, department of sciences at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York
• Professor Keith Taylor, professor, Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration, John Jay College of Criminal Justice (and a former NYPD detective)
63,160 Listeners
27,231 Listeners
4,284 Listeners
14,957 Listeners
3,608 Listeners
6,528 Listeners
2,962 Listeners
4,005 Listeners
3,182 Listeners
311 Listeners
597 Listeners
2,481 Listeners
462 Listeners
613 Listeners
4,184 Listeners