Juju Chang
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So instead of giving up, despite the resounding legal defeat, in 2012, Doreen decides to double down.
So instead of giving up, despite the resounding legal defeat, in 2012, Doreen decides to double down.
So instead of giving up, despite the resounding legal defeat, in 2012, Doreen decides to double down.
That's right, Juca's one-time prison mate turned informant, John Evito, the prosecution's star witness. Remember, in damning testimony, he claimed that Juca admitted to him that he pistol-whipped Mark Fisher that night before his friend finished him off.
That's right, Juca's one-time prison mate turned informant, John Evito, the prosecution's star witness. Remember, in damning testimony, he claimed that Juca admitted to him that he pistol-whipped Mark Fisher that night before his friend finished him off.
That's right, Juca's one-time prison mate turned informant, John Evito, the prosecution's star witness. Remember, in damning testimony, he claimed that Juca admitted to him that he pistol-whipped Mark Fisher that night before his friend finished him off.
Doreen now sets her sights squarely on Avito to try to uncover why she believes he lied on the stand. This time, she turns to a professional, seasoned private investigator, Jace Alpeter.
Doreen now sets her sights squarely on Avito to try to uncover why she believes he lied on the stand. This time, she turns to a professional, seasoned private investigator, Jace Alpeter.
Doreen now sets her sights squarely on Avito to try to uncover why she believes he lied on the stand. This time, she turns to a professional, seasoned private investigator, Jace Alpeter.
The retired NYPD detective coaxes Evito into meeting him in his white SUV in this Bensonhurst neighborhood. All the while, his trusty tape recorder is rolling, just in case the ex-con has something he wants to get off his chest. But the jailhouse informant repeats his account that Juca was involved in Fisher's killing.
The retired NYPD detective coaxes Evito into meeting him in his white SUV in this Bensonhurst neighborhood. All the while, his trusty tape recorder is rolling, just in case the ex-con has something he wants to get off his chest. But the jailhouse informant repeats his account that Juca was involved in Fisher's killing.
The retired NYPD detective coaxes Evito into meeting him in his white SUV in this Bensonhurst neighborhood. All the while, his trusty tape recorder is rolling, just in case the ex-con has something he wants to get off his chest. But the jailhouse informant repeats his account that Juca was involved in Fisher's killing.
The wily PI has a hunch that Evito is suffering from a crisis of conscience. He's able to lure Evito back into his SUV two weeks later, where the ex-con suddenly comes clean. That so-called jailhouse confession Juca made never happened. Evito admits he fabricated the whole thing. And there's another bombshell admission.
The wily PI has a hunch that Evito is suffering from a crisis of conscience. He's able to lure Evito back into his SUV two weeks later, where the ex-con suddenly comes clean. That so-called jailhouse confession Juca made never happened. Evito admits he fabricated the whole thing. And there's another bombshell admission.
The wily PI has a hunch that Evito is suffering from a crisis of conscience. He's able to lure Evito back into his SUV two weeks later, where the ex-con suddenly comes clean. That so-called jailhouse confession Juca made never happened. Evito admits he fabricated the whole thing. And there's another bombshell admission.
Evito claims that in exchange for his testimony, the prosecutor and the detectives cut him a deal, helping him stay out of jail even when he violated probation.
Evito claims that in exchange for his testimony, the prosecutor and the detectives cut him a deal, helping him stay out of jail even when he violated probation.
Evito claims that in exchange for his testimony, the prosecutor and the detectives cut him a deal, helping him stay out of jail even when he violated probation.
In the years since Juca's conviction, that prosecutor, Anna Siga Nicolazzi, did all right for herself, even becoming one of those high-profile legal eagles on TV. I've been prosecuting murderers for 15 years. I've never lost a homicide case. But the Juca case raises questions about that perfect record. Was hers a win-at-all-costs mentality?
In the years since Juca's conviction, that prosecutor, Anna Siga Nicolazzi, did all right for herself, even becoming one of those high-profile legal eagles on TV. I've been prosecuting murderers for 15 years. I've never lost a homicide case. But the Juca case raises questions about that perfect record. Was hers a win-at-all-costs mentality?