Episodes
We explore the obstacles to helping victims of a corrupt police unit regain their freedom.
Published 06/03/19
In our latest episode, we explore the obstacles to helping victims of a corrupt police unit regain their freedom.And what happened, when Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, tried to change the law to help make that happen.
Published 06/03/19
Published 06/03/19
A recent New York Times article raised the idea that crime has continued to rise because police ----Took a Knee---- after the death of Freddie Gray in 2015. We read from a series of charging documents that show the flip-side of that argument, how arbitrary and often inexplicable arrests sowed chaos in the community and turned people's live upside down.
Published 04/09/19
How arbitrary and often inexplicable arrests sowed chaos in the community.
Published 04/09/19
In part two of our series on rumors of serial killer preying upon women in Northwest Baltimore, we explore what happened when a rash of strangulations of women in 2008 unearthed cases form the past, and a suspect.
Published 03/14/19
In part two of our series on rumors of serial killer preying upon women in Northwest Baltimore.
Published 03/14/19
The first in a two part series, we examine the controversy surrounding the fear that a serial killer was preying upon women in Northwest Baltimore.
Published 12/05/18
Controversy surrounding the fear that a serial killer was preying upon women in Northwest Baltimore.
Published 12/05/18
As we continue to explore how the media narrative informed policing in Baltimore in the past, we tell the story of the arrest of Baltimore Examiner editor Frank Keegan in 2007.Keegan was arrested shortly after a dispute with his neighbors over smoking. But the timing of the arrest, just after the Examiner published the salaries and overtime pay for the entire Baltimore Police Department, points to an ulterior motive.
Published 10/30/18
The story of the arrest of Baltimore Examiner editor Frank Keegan in 2007.
Published 10/30/18
The 2006 video of police striking Glenn Curry while he was handcuffed was one of the first examples of how capturing arrests on camera would eventually change the conversation about law enforcement in Baltimore. However for the man that made the tape there were steep consequences, fallout that continues to have repercussions today.
Published 10/10/18
The 2006 video of police striking Glenn Curry while handcuffed and the fallout from that video.
Published 10/10/18
In this installment of our Hidden Victims series, we examine an aspect of the criminal justice system that is often overlooked: how police treat suspicious deaths involving women of color.To understand how some cases remain stuck in a nebulous category called ----undetermined,---- we speak to the family of Tyra McClarly. McClary was found buried under a pile of mulch with her ankles wrapped in a plastic bag in 2006, but her case remains in investigative limbo.
Published 09/13/18
How do police treat suspicious deaths involving women of color?
Published 09/13/18
In the second part of our Hidden Victims series, we explore how the tragedy of a police custody death affects the loved ones left behind and their relationships. To do so we speak to Marcus and Nicole Pettiford. In 2012 Marcus' father Anthony Anderson died at the hands of police after an officer violently threw him to the ground.But the officers were not charged, and it is how that decision affected their marriage that reveals much about the consequences of police violence which remains...
Published 08/29/18
In the second part of our Hidden Victims series, how those left behind are affected
Published 08/29/18
In the first of our Hidden Victims series looking at how the criminal justice system impacts women of color, we hear the story of Greta Carter and the death of her son, Kevin Cooper. Cooper was shot and killed by a Baltimore police officer after a routine call to his Southwest Baltimore home in August of 2006. Carter tells the traumatic story of her son's death, and her emotional encounter years later with the officer who killed him.
Published 08/06/18
A forum for the people of Baltimore to discuss the challenges of law enforcement reform
Published 08/06/18
During the height of zero tolerance the voices of dissent among the political establishment were few and far between. We talk to two people who fought back, Former State Delegate Jill P. Carter and Public Defender Todd Oppenhiem about what they experienced and how it affected their lives.
Published 07/30/18
During the height of zero tolerance the voices of dissent among the political establishment were few
Published 07/30/18
The effects of the The Gun Trace Task Force, a group of now nine police officers, accused of robbery, drug, and racketeering are just being assessed. To a get a sense of the fall-out over one of the worst scandals in BPD history, we talk to Ivan Potts, who was arrested by GTTF. We also talk to Corey Winfield, a violence mediator from Safe Streets on how he thinks the scandal will impact the streets.
Published 07/17/18
The effects of the The Gun Trace Task Force, a group of now nine police officers, accused of rob
Published 07/17/18
In the final episode of our four part series on the impact of the indictment of six officers in the death of Freddie Gray, we look at the myriad of reforms efforts which happened after Mosby's decision to charge, and the changes which have occurred to the process of policing in Baltimore as a result.
Published 07/02/18
The final episode of our four part series
Published 07/02/18