Jim Axelrod
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think that Ms. Chandler never had an opportunity at a fair trial from the get-go.
The Kansas Supreme Court held that it's so bad that we're going to go ahead and overturn her conviction.
The Kansas Supreme Court held that it's so bad that we're going to go ahead and overturn her conviction.
The Kansas Supreme Court held that it's so bad that we're going to go ahead and overturn her conviction.
They just kind of hypothesized, well, she must have went up and went over from Nebraska. There was no evidence of that at all.
They just kind of hypothesized, well, she must have went up and went over from Nebraska. There was no evidence of that at all.
They just kind of hypothesized, well, she must have went up and went over from Nebraska. There was no evidence of that at all.
We argued insufficiency of evidence as an issue for appeal.
We argued insufficiency of evidence as an issue for appeal.
We argued insufficiency of evidence as an issue for appeal.
Jurors didn't have enough evidence before them if you took out all the evidence that should have never been presented or told to them incorrectly.
Jurors didn't have enough evidence before them if you took out all the evidence that should have never been presented or told to them incorrectly.
Jurors didn't have enough evidence before them if you took out all the evidence that should have never been presented or told to them incorrectly.
When a case gets reversed, like a case like this, we essentially have an innocent woman who's been convicted of crime because of the prosecutor, or we have a family that has now a reverse conviction that has to go through the system again.
When a case gets reversed, like a case like this, we essentially have an innocent woman who's been convicted of crime because of the prosecutor, or we have a family that has now a reverse conviction that has to go through the system again.
When a case gets reversed, like a case like this, we essentially have an innocent woman who's been convicted of crime because of the prosecutor, or we have a family that has now a reverse conviction that has to go through the system again.
Right. So that conduct is going to affect someone.
Right. So that conduct is going to affect someone.
Right. So that conduct is going to affect someone.
I don't think it was 48 hours. 2009 is a lot different than when they arrested her. They arrested her three or four years, three years later. I think the family was what kept it going. They believed that Ms. Chandler did this. It was the new prosecutor, and it was the family probably saying, hey, we need justice done in this.