Archive

Episode # 18

Nathan Smith is a former Army Captain and intelligence officer at the command headquarters in Kuwait. Notably, he filed a federal lawsuit in 2016 against the President of the U.S. challenging the legality of the war in Syria and Iraq. This was obviously a difficult decision to make, but it was ultimately a principled decision. Nathan's story illustrates the stunning lack of checks and balances in our government, along with systemic forces that keep our country in a perpetual state of war, and much more.


A Soldier's Dilema

Why I Sued My Commander-In-Chief

Episode #17

There were too many fascinating details from the trial of the world's most notorious criminal, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, to list. However, this episode breaks down many aspects of the Sinaloa cartel's structure, allies, foes, corrupt enablers, etc. There was so much to unravel, but here's a concise, yet jammed-packed wrap up of the most important drug trafficking conviction in American history.


El Chapo: Another Case for Ending the Drug War

Episode #16

Richard Bronson is the CEO of 70 Million Jobs, which is the first for-profit recruitment company for people with criminal records. He worked at the infamous brokerage, Stratton Oakmont, which was portrayed in Martin Scorsese's “Wolf of Wall Street.” After serving 2 years in prison, Richard has dedicated his life and career to an underserved aspect of criminal justice reform, i.e. helping this massive segment of the population (70 million) gain employment.


70MillionJobs.Com

Research: Employers Willing to Overlook a Criminal Record to Hire the Right Person

Episode #15

Dame Catherine Healy is the founder of the New Zealand Prostitutes' Collective. This year, she was awarded the title of "Dame" by Queen Elizabeth II due to her advocacy efforts on behalf of sex workers and leading the way to the decriminalization of sex work in New Zealand in 2003. Her organization has contracted by the New Zealand government to do variety of tasks, such as HIV prevention. Dame Catherine Healy offered so much information demonstrating that decriminalization is a better policy for human rights, public health & safety, and much more.


http://www.nzpc.org.nz/

Decriminalisation of Sex Work in New Zealand: Impact on Maori

My Body, My Business: New Zealand sex workers in an era of change

Criminalisation of sex work normalises violence, review finds

Global epidemiology of HIV among female sex workers: influence of structural determinants

Episode #14

Dr. Frederic Whitehurst was a former Supervisory Agent at the FBI Crime Lab. He exposed several scandals and became the first successful FBI whistleblower. That led to him being pushed out of the FBI in 1998. Dr. Whitehurst now practices law and currently serves as the Executive Director of the National Whistleblower Center's Forensic Justice Project. In this fascinating interview, Dr. Whitehurst goes in detail about his experiences with fraud, waste, abuse, perjury by government agents, faulty forensic science, and more.

Episode #13

A number of recent news events involve both crime and geopolitics. The leader of a hacking group connected with the North Korean government is under indictment. A group believed to be connected with the Russian government attempted attacks against two US right-wing think tanks. Also, the US lost its extradition request to bring a Russian national who may have had information on this and other hackings.


Those stories along with election rigging, poisonings, corruption, a drone attack, and much is covered in this episode.


California says gangs stole $1 million by credit card fraud

North Korean hacking group "Lazarus Group" working on behalf of government

Russian National And Bitcoin Exchange Charged In 21-Count Indictment For Operating Alleged International Money Laundering Scheme And Allegedly Laundering Funds From Hack Of Mt. Gox

Russian hackers targeted U.S. Senate, think tanks: Microsoft

Trump and the Russian mob: why the relationship is deeper than you think

Let's Acknowledge US Interference in Foreign Elections

Nineteen Foreign Nationals Charged for Voting in 2016 Election

Straight-ticket voting returns for November election

Sergei Skripal 'hitmen' linked to GRU officer's plot to assassinate Montenegrin Prime Minister

We Now Know More About the Apparent Poisoning of the Pussy Riot Member Pyotr Verzilov

The numbers suggest strongly that Russia's Primorye gubernatorial election was stolen

How Paradise Was Carved Up And Sold

Maldives: Election Rigging Feared

Rubio plans national crackdown on real estate money laundering

Maduro’s stepsons face scrutiny in $1.2 billion graft case

Venezuela seeks US extradition of alleged drone attack mastermind

Trump Administration Met with Venezuelan Military Coup Plotters

Documents Show C.I.A. Knew of a Coup Plot in Venezuela

Pompeo said U.S. would not block Pakistan if it seeks IMF bailout: Pakistani minister

Episode #12

Meaghan Ybos is this episode's guest. She's a contributing writer at The Appeal, which is part of Harvard Law School's Fair Punishment Project. She is also the Co-Founder and Executive Director of People For The Enforcement of Rape Laws. We tend to assume that heinous crimes, such as rape, are highly prioritized and vigorously pursued by the law enforcement community. However, Meaghan's personal story, along with that of numerous other women, illustrates that our assumptions are wrong. Meaghan tackled many important topics in this interview, including the bureaucratic factors that thwart proper enforcement of rape laws. Notably, she also explained why we should no longer refer to the thousands of untested rape kits throughout Americas as a "backlog."


People For The Enforcement of Rape Laws

Defining the Problem

No Backlog: Why the Epidemic of Untested Rape Kits Is Not a Symbol of Insufficient Police Budgets But Instead a Failure to Investigate Rape

The chief wanted perfect stats, so cops were told to pin crimes on black people, probe found

A Moral And Economic Argument For Testing Rape Kits

Episode #11

Amani Sawari is the official media spokesperson of Jailhouse Lawyers Speak. Amani explained a great deal about the current national prison strike. She detailed the scale of this strike, what prompted it, the prisoners' demands, prison profiteering, which private companies use this exploitative labor, and much more.


National Prison Strike Details/Demands

Database of Private Companies That Use Prison Labor

Episode #10

Matthew Dunlap is Maine's Secretary of State. He also served on the Trump administration's Presidential Advisory Commission on Electoral Integrity. It was formed in the aftermath of Trump's claim that 3-5 million illegal votes were cast for Hillary Clinton. In this episode, Dunlap details that there was an obvious mandate to manufacture evidence of voter fraud. Independent-minded members, such as Dunlap, were stonewalled by the commission. You'll be alarmed by the details. He eventually sued the government to simply be allowed to participate in the commission. In this interview, he went in-depth about the legal battles, debunked the myth of widespread voter fraud, and called out the political operatives who are creating this false narrative. That includes the Kansas Gubernatorial candidate, Kris Kobach. Also, Dunlap's legal challenge prevailed in the courts. As a result, we can all view the documents from the commission, which prove that it was driven by a clear political agenda, not a search for the truth.


Dunlap v PACEI: Investigating the Voter Fraud Commission

Dunalp's Letter to Mike Pence and Kris Kobach

Documents of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity


Episode # 9

Philip Mattera is the Research Director and the Director of the Corporate Research Project. He's also the author of the "Dirt Diggers Digest" blog, which focuses on corporate crime. He explained the extent and harm from corporate crime, along with how to properly research this subject via the free online tools of his non-profit organization. He also went into length about the subject of wage theft, which is much more prevalent than most people realize.


Violation Tracker

Corporate Rap Sheets

Dirt Diggers Digest

"Grand Theft Paycheck"

"Corporate Impunity"

Philip Matter's Twitter Profile

Epic Systems Corp v Lewis


Episode #8

Toby Muse is a journalist, foreign corespondent, documentary filmmaker, and upcoming author. His work has been featured in The Guardian, The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Daily Beast, CNN, Vice, and many more. Toby has reported on a number of issues in Colombia for nearly two decades. In this episode, he covered a range of topics, such as "The Caravan of Death," right-wing death squads, communist rebels, record cocaine production, and much more.


TobyMuse.com

Toby Muse's Twitter Profile

((Referenced Article)

Why we hate the FARC (and not so the paramilitaries)


Episode #6

Raeford Davis served as a police officer for six years in North Charleston, SC. He's now one of the foremost leaders of the freedom movement. In this episode, he offers a number of critiques for police culture, the drug war, and much more.


Disposable Veterans and Moral Injury

Murder in Service of the Drug War: The Passion of Levonia Riggins

Raeford Davis LEAP Profile

Raeford Davis' Twitter Profile

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