
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In part two, we follow Ronald Cotton from his decision to talk to police through two trials, decades in prison, and his ultimate DNA exoneration after another man, Bobby Poole, was identified as the true perpetrator. We unpack how racial bias, prior records, blocked expert testimony, and juries’ overreliance on confident eyewitnesses fueled Cotton’s wrongful convictions, and how his and Jennifer Thompson’s advocacy, alongside over 600 DNA exonerations nationwide, has driven reforms in interrogation, lineup procedures, and the use of eyewitness evidence.
Edited by Maxwell Holechek
By Gabi Fiore & Kim Douthit4.6
7575 ratings
In part two, we follow Ronald Cotton from his decision to talk to police through two trials, decades in prison, and his ultimate DNA exoneration after another man, Bobby Poole, was identified as the true perpetrator. We unpack how racial bias, prior records, blocked expert testimony, and juries’ overreliance on confident eyewitnesses fueled Cotton’s wrongful convictions, and how his and Jennifer Thompson’s advocacy, alongside over 600 DNA exonerations nationwide, has driven reforms in interrogation, lineup procedures, and the use of eyewitness evidence.
Edited by Maxwell Holechek

229,646 Listeners

17,312 Listeners

15,297 Listeners

172,096 Listeners

10,473 Listeners

11,968 Listeners

5,242 Listeners

2,496 Listeners

9,778 Listeners

980 Listeners

99,732 Listeners

47,538 Listeners

3,555 Listeners

10,274 Listeners