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FOR LIFE: The Podcast

FOR LIFE: The Podcast
Author: Sony Pictures Television & ABC
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© Sony Pictures Television & ABC
Description
FOR LIFE: The Podcast is a 6-part series exploring real stories from men and women who were wrongfully convicted, yet prevailed against unthinkable odds, and emerged with grace and newfound purpose. It's about the human stories, the tested relationships, and the triumphs of the human spirit. Hosted by Isaac Wright, Jr.
Produced in collaboration with Sony Pictures Television and ABC's new drama, FOR LIFE, airing Tuesdays at 10pm/9pm Central.
8 Episodes
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A preview of FOR LIFE: The Podcast, premiering February 11th
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Jeffrey Deskovic was just a teenager when he was wrongfully convicted in 1990. Through 16 years of incarceration — and despite countless painful setbacks — he remained determined to prove his innocence. In this episode, Jeffrey tells his story of resilience, and the tenacity he never knew he had until his freedom depended on it.
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Late one night in 1994, 19-year-old Richard Miles called his roommate from a payphone on his way home. He was at the wrong place at the wrong time. A nearby shooting, a case of mistaken identification, and brazen prosecutorial misconduct would put him behind bars for 15 years. Richard shares how faith and family helped him survive -- and how one lucky break led to his exoneration.
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Gloria Killian was a former law student with no criminal record when she was implicated in a 1981 murder and robbery. She was sentenced to 32 years to life in prison. In this chapter, Gloria shares how the community she found in prison and her work helping her fellow inmates, along with her unlikely friendship with a social justice advocate, would change the course of her life.
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A preview of the upcoming episodes when we resume on March 10th
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Kwame Ajamu was 17 years old when he, his brother, and their friend were convicted of robbery and murder in 1975. The only evidence against them was the fabricated testimony of a 12-year-old boy. Still, all three men were sentenced to death. In this chapter, Kwame describes how education became his refuge during his 28 years in prison, and how his personal transformation would turn him into the man who would exonerate the three, and eventually find the love and support he needed.
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In 1988, 22-year-old Christopher Ochoa was working at a pizza chain restaurant in Austin, Texas, when a tragic crime and a coerced false confession shattered his life and tore him from his family. Chris relates the harrowing events that led to his own wrongful conviction, and his forced implication of his coworker. Despite painfully dark moments in prison, Chris explains how compassion from others helped him endure -- and how finding his own compassion drove him to become an attorney and advocate.
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In 1990, Antione Day, a 28-year-old father of five and musician, had just returned from an out-of-town gig when he heard that local police were looking to ask him some questions about a recent robbery-homicide in his neighborhood. He had no idea that his freedom -- and his family -- would be ripped away from him for over a decade. In this episode, Antione talks about how his wrongful conviction also robbed his children of the father they needed, but with love and time, they are on the road to healing.
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It's a shame that our justice system has become a business instead of a living standard of laws. We have to protect the innocent or the guilty will always prevail.
brilliant🔥🔥🔥🤍🤍🤍
This is a sad, but inspiring podcast.
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I believe that people seeking paralegal certification an/or law degrees should be required to work for a year in a jail or a prison with people wanting to reduce or overturn their sentences!!✊🏿✊🏾✊🏽✊🏼✊🏻✊
These stories are horrible and beautiful all at once. These things should never have happened. I think hearing these stories are so incredibly important and everyone should hear these stories. To know that bad things are and have happened and that it's not ok. But also to know that people can prevail and that's precisely why we need change. Because people are worth it and hard work needs to be done to facilitate change. Listen to these stories and sit in the hurt with them.
Great podcast, really enjoyed all the stories presented. Our justice system is so broken, breaks my heart for all the time lost.
These people's stories are horrible and beautiful. They make me so angry, and then remind me that human spirit is so tenacious. Despite the US prison systems best efforts.
perfect example of the shit so called humans that controls the prison system, to put this man in the same cell of the guy that killed his son is fucking cruel and they damn well know what they were trying to do.
Christopher Is a bad ass
Terrible for any person to go through. Something has to be done to change our justice system.
enz. ,,.,. ,.,.x,
Beautiful Story. I feel like A Prisoner too.
Good https://www.brainwonders.in/blog/confused-as-to-which-career-path-to-choose-after-hsc-or-12th/
Breaks my heart to hear these stories but a great presentation of the facts.
I'm 0.
thanks for your video
our criminal system needs a reboot. DA's are desperate for guilty verdicts for their own resumes. it's not about what's right. Bless your ❤️ heart
great pod!
thanks to God