Deep Cover
Description
Deep Cover is a show about people who lead double lives. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jake Halpern reveals webs of deception and dark underworlds, through interviews with federal agents and convicted criminals.
Welcome to a new miniseries, Deep Cover: George Santos.
George Santos, the former Republican Congressman from New York, told a lot of stories about his life and his credentials. Many of which, it turns out, were not true. And now–in just a few weeks–Santos is scheduled to face a criminal trial.
Deep Cover Producer Amy Gaines McQuade, who grew up in Santos’ congressional district, speaks with insiders and experts to try to answer the question: Who is George Santos… really? Amy shares her findings with Jake Halpern as she covers Santos' rise and fall, the double life he led and reports from his upcoming trial in New York.
Season four, The Nameless Man, tells the epic tale of two federal agents who investigate a rumor about a murder that supposedly took place 15 years prior. It is also the story of a family searching for answers about why their brother was killed. These two storylines collide in a courtroom in Philadelphia, where murder, memory, and morality go on trial.
Season three, Never Seen Again, tells the story of two women living on opposite sides of the country, who went missing in the summer of 1999. Seven years later, their stories collided when a small town detective got a tip and became convinced that if he could solve one mystery, he'd solve the other.
Season two, Mob Land, is about a high-rolling lawyer who joins forces with the feds to try to bring down one of the most powerful criminal syndicates in the country.
Season one, The Drug Wars, tells the story of an FBI agent who goes undercover with a biker gang, and follows a trail of clues that eventually leads to the US invasion of a foreign country.
Deep Cover drops on Mondays. To hear episodes early and ad-free, subscribe to Pushkin+ in Apple Podcasts or at pushkin.fm/plus.
iHeartMedia is the exclusive podcast partner of Pushkin Industries.
To get the whole story, hear it directly from Terry Hake on FBI Retired Case File Review podcast #fbiretiredcasefiles with Jerri Williams #jerriwilliams
This is a great story, but there just isn’t enough material to smear it across 6 episodes. I nearly couldn’t be bothered to listen to the final episode.
Jesus they have made these repetitive!!! they're saying the same thing over and over and over again. this whole case should have been one episode!!
is this fiction?
Feeling incredibly uncomfortable about the imposter. Her story has some human interest. But when she is asked if she struggles with a decision, she responds in terms of tactics with no indication of self-awareness (or morality). At this point, it sounds like an origins story for a sociopath.
narcissist
So far the worst part is that no one is calling out Edna's mental health issues that really caused this whole situation.
8 minutes in and already hit with 2 commercial breaks.
Ben Ford is a fresh breath of air in law enforcement.
The saddest part of this series is that Esther is undiagnosed neurodivergent, and that she may never get the true diagnosis she needs.
Me: The body might be in a whale? What the...? Oh — a *well*! That makes more sense.
Halpern has made assumptions about Ester, he still is, STILL can't see a young, naive woman grappling with fear, life, terror of being found, & what Domestic Violence makes people do, think & feel about the world around them
🤫 Emily Bazelon is a really good person, but oh heck!, the American nasal, high pitched, female voice is so awful to listen to, worse, many don't realise they're damaging their vocal cords, & seriously women: you will not be listened to & responded too as an adult if you do not drop your voice to a mature tone & stop coming across like a 12 year old child
what about the law enforcement men who so relentlessly pursued Esther?, they were only concerned about their own grand/bizarre/misogynist theories (a spy?, get a grip) she was forgotten because she was only an incident in their story, not a young, vulnerable person in need of help empathy & compassion
how many young, naive, innocent young women are forced to flee domestic violence every year?, Esther did not, in my opinion, deliberately commit any crime, what Esther did was try to survive as best she knew how, inadvertently she created an awful situation for Brookes' parents but it wasn't done with forethought or malice on Esther's part, as for JCPenney & the student loans I think those could have been forgiven, this was a very young, very frightened, if not terrified woman trying to survive, the fault here is with a system that will not acknowledge Domestic Violence, it's aftermath & consequences & does not give women a safe way out
This episode, and the way the media was talking about her, is so infuriatingly misogynist. Meanwhile, there's the "spy cops" scandal in Britain (merely the best-documented example of a common tactic) in which multiple male cops got into long-term relationships with non-violent female activists, in a couple of cases fathering children and then just disappearing.
Esther is a narcissist. she doesn't care about the damage she did. she should still be in jail. Brooke's family needs to sue her.
The host of the show has a really annoying cadence to his voice.
So, he named his "Rocket"
I'm not sure why the host of the show presents this episode as if the guy was wrongfully convicted.... the guy admits he shot a cop pretty much on purpose,and the host of the show talks as if he should of been freed.