Juju Chang
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So when Aloe started confessing that maybe he didn't belong on this jury and he had known some of the kids, what was your reaction as you were tape recording this?
Doreen thinks she's finally got the goods on Juror 8 and believes it can win her son's freedom. But in so doing, she may have lost something else. What did the undercover sting do to your marriage?
Doreen thinks she's finally got the goods on Juror 8 and believes it can win her son's freedom. But in so doing, she may have lost something else. What did the undercover sting do to your marriage?
Doreen thinks she's finally got the goods on Juror 8 and believes it can win her son's freedom. But in so doing, she may have lost something else. What did the undercover sting do to your marriage?
But can she get her son's murder conviction overturned? Still ahead. I'm going to show you this video of Alan. Oh, god. That juror now in the hot seat. This is a bunch of malarkey. You're going to want to hear this next.
But can she get her son's murder conviction overturned? Still ahead. I'm going to show you this video of Alan. Oh, god. That juror now in the hot seat. This is a bunch of malarkey. You're going to want to hear this next.
But can she get her son's murder conviction overturned? Still ahead. I'm going to show you this video of Alan. Oh, god. That juror now in the hot seat. This is a bunch of malarkey. You're going to want to hear this next.
Call her the undercover mother. After 11 agonizing months of surveilling and seducing juror eight, Jason Allo, Doreen Quinn Giuliano thinks she's sitting on gold, an admission she says Allo made on a secret recording that he should never have been on the jury that convicted her son.
Call her the undercover mother. After 11 agonizing months of surveilling and seducing juror eight, Jason Allo, Doreen Quinn Giuliano thinks she's sitting on gold, an admission she says Allo made on a secret recording that he should never have been on the jury that convicted her son.
Call her the undercover mother. After 11 agonizing months of surveilling and seducing juror eight, Jason Allo, Doreen Quinn Giuliano thinks she's sitting on gold, an admission she says Allo made on a secret recording that he should never have been on the jury that convicted her son.
October 2008. News of Doreen's undercover exploits become public and the press is in a frenzy. This has to be put down on the record. ABC News scores an interview with that juror, Jason Allo, for Nightline. With his attorney by his side, sometimes even in his lap, Allo denies to Martin Bashir the things Doreen claims she caught on tape.
October 2008. News of Doreen's undercover exploits become public and the press is in a frenzy. This has to be put down on the record. ABC News scores an interview with that juror, Jason Allo, for Nightline. With his attorney by his side, sometimes even in his lap, Allo denies to Martin Bashir the things Doreen claims she caught on tape.
October 2008. News of Doreen's undercover exploits become public and the press is in a frenzy. This has to be put down on the record. ABC News scores an interview with that juror, Jason Allo, for Nightline. With his attorney by his side, sometimes even in his lap, Allo denies to Martin Bashir the things Doreen claims she caught on tape.
And what about that recording, where Aloe seems to admit he never should have been on the jury at all?
And what about that recording, where Aloe seems to admit he never should have been on the jury at all?
And what about that recording, where Aloe seems to admit he never should have been on the jury at all?
And they did just that, filing a motion in 2008 to vacate her son's conviction on the grounds of juror misconduct. But after all those months, the whine, the wire, the wooing, Doreen's hopes are dashed. The judge shoots her motion down in flames, casting doubt on the reliability of the recordings and saying there was no evidence that Aloe intentionally lied.
And they did just that, filing a motion in 2008 to vacate her son's conviction on the grounds of juror misconduct. But after all those months, the whine, the wire, the wooing, Doreen's hopes are dashed. The judge shoots her motion down in flames, casting doubt on the reliability of the recordings and saying there was no evidence that Aloe intentionally lied.
And they did just that, filing a motion in 2008 to vacate her son's conviction on the grounds of juror misconduct. But after all those months, the whine, the wire, the wooing, Doreen's hopes are dashed. The judge shoots her motion down in flames, casting doubt on the reliability of the recordings and saying there was no evidence that Aloe intentionally lied.
He even slams Doreen personally, denouncing her for reckless and vigilante behavior. He said that you were guilty of extraordinary misconduct. Did you go too far?