Josh Dubin
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
In my wildest dreams, if someone would have said to me, the prosecutor that agreed to set these men free would be sitting next to you on the show, I would have I would have bet the house against it. And I think that this is just a remarkable forum to be able to tell these stories and to get into the level of detail where we can touch people.
In my wildest dreams, if someone would have said to me, the prosecutor that agreed to set these men free would be sitting next to you on the show, I would have I would have bet the house against it. And I think that this is just a remarkable forum to be able to tell these stories and to get into the level of detail where we can touch people.
In my wildest dreams, if someone would have said to me, the prosecutor that agreed to set these men free would be sitting next to you on the show, I would have I would have bet the house against it. And I think that this is just a remarkable forum to be able to tell these stories and to get into the level of detail where we can touch people.
And there's too many people in criminal justice reform that don't extend their hand to prosecutors and people in law enforcement. And I have... It's been an eye-opening and incredibly rewarding experience to get to know these folks that feel just as passionate about issues that are on the other side. And that's what, you know, has led me more to the middle.
And there's too many people in criminal justice reform that don't extend their hand to prosecutors and people in law enforcement. And I have... It's been an eye-opening and incredibly rewarding experience to get to know these folks that feel just as passionate about issues that are on the other side. And that's what, you know, has led me more to the middle.
And there's too many people in criminal justice reform that don't extend their hand to prosecutors and people in law enforcement. And I have... It's been an eye-opening and incredibly rewarding experience to get to know these folks that feel just as passionate about issues that are on the other side. And that's what, you know, has led me more to the middle.
And, you know, I thank you for your humanity, J.D. And I hope you do run for something again because we need more people like you in those seats.
And, you know, I thank you for your humanity, J.D. And I hope you do run for something again because we need more people like you in those seats.
And, you know, I thank you for your humanity, J.D. And I hope you do run for something again because we need more people like you in those seats.
I think the big problem that people have these days is you see something and you see it often and you see it replayed. And it's just like you said, it becomes a slideshow in your mind. And it's hard to know how frequent the occurrence is. I had an interesting thing happen to me recently. where my son Carter made the travel baseball team.
I think the big problem that people have these days is you see something and you see it often and you see it replayed. And it's just like you said, it becomes a slideshow in your mind. And it's hard to know how frequent the occurrence is. I had an interesting thing happen to me recently. where my son Carter made the travel baseball team.
I think the big problem that people have these days is you see something and you see it often and you see it replayed. And it's just like you said, it becomes a slideshow in your mind. And it's hard to know how frequent the occurrence is. I had an interesting thing happen to me recently. where my son Carter made the travel baseball team.
And I'm like, he's like the new kid on the team because we moved from New York. And we went to our first tournament and we're on the new dad hanging out because it's out of town. And I sit down at a table with these other three dads and they're introducing themselves. And we just struck up a conversation and we were talking about bias. And I said, you know, I would probably be the wrong.
And I'm like, he's like the new kid on the team because we moved from New York. And we went to our first tournament and we're on the new dad hanging out because it's out of town. And I sit down at a table with these other three dads and they're introducing themselves. And we just struck up a conversation and we were talking about bias. And I said, you know, I would probably be the wrong.
And I'm like, he's like the new kid on the team because we moved from New York. And we went to our first tournament and we're on the new dad hanging out because it's out of town. And I sit down at a table with these other three dads and they're introducing themselves. And we just struck up a conversation and we were talking about bias. And I said, you know, I would probably be the wrong.
We're talking about, you know, juries and jury service. And he I said, you know, I'd be like the wrong. Oh, someone asked me. One of the dads asked me, how do I get out of jury service? I said, tell the truth. Because we're all biased. We all have a bias against something. Like for me, I've done a bunch of cases where corrections officers did something bad to someone.
We're talking about, you know, juries and jury service. And he I said, you know, I'd be like the wrong. Oh, someone asked me. One of the dads asked me, how do I get out of jury service? I said, tell the truth. Because we're all biased. We all have a bias against something. Like for me, I've done a bunch of cases where corrections officers did something bad to someone.