
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 1929 Kentucky, a six-year-old boy picked up his father’s shotgun—and changed American legal history.
When little Carl Newton Mahan shot and killed eight-year-old Cecil Darnell after a fight over scrap metal, he became the youngest person ever tried for murder in the United States.
Reporters packed the Knott County Courthouse as the barefoot child sat at the defence table, playing with a toy car while adults debated whether he should spend life in prison.
Convicted of manslaughter and sent to reform school, Carl’s case forced America to confront questions about childhood, morality, and justice that still echo a century later.
Become a Patreon or Apple + subscriber now for ealry and ad free access from as little as $1.69 a week. All the details here
Subscribe to Crime at Bedtimes Youtube channel HERE
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Jack Laurence4.8
2222 ratings
In 1929 Kentucky, a six-year-old boy picked up his father’s shotgun—and changed American legal history.
When little Carl Newton Mahan shot and killed eight-year-old Cecil Darnell after a fight over scrap metal, he became the youngest person ever tried for murder in the United States.
Reporters packed the Knott County Courthouse as the barefoot child sat at the defence table, playing with a toy car while adults debated whether he should spend life in prison.
Convicted of manslaughter and sent to reform school, Carl’s case forced America to confront questions about childhood, morality, and justice that still echo a century later.
Become a Patreon or Apple + subscriber now for ealry and ad free access from as little as $1.69 a week. All the details here
Subscribe to Crime at Bedtimes Youtube channel HERE
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

37,499 Listeners

1,331 Listeners

460 Listeners

534 Listeners

56 Listeners

598 Listeners

397 Listeners

190 Listeners

69 Listeners

116 Listeners

23 Listeners

99 Listeners

73 Listeners

9 Listeners

8 Listeners

24 Listeners