STRANGELAND is a new series from audiochuck and that reexamines cases Was justice served in this case? Or was it somehow lost in translation? The suspect has a checkered past, but he never fit anyone’s description of what they imagined the stone cold killer would be. Was it a crime of passion? Financial opportunism? A professional hit by assassins from South Korea? No one knew the answer.įast forward to years later when out of the blue LAPD detectives arrest and charge a mild-mannered neighbor with the crime. For 5 years questions surrounding the brutal crime swirled. ![]() L.A.’s Koreatown neighborhood was shocked by the 2003 execution-style slaying of a mother, her 2-year-old son, and their nanny. Hosted by Ayman Mohyeldin, American Radical tells the story of how an ordinary citizen became a foot soldier for one of the most dangerous conspiracies in America-and what her transformation, and her death, mean for all of us. The quest for the truth takes Ayman back to his hometown of Kennesaw, Georgia, where he retraces the last six months of Rosanne’s life and picks up a trail that leads to missing boyfriends and down shadowy internet rabbit holes.Īnswers are just starting to emerge when a shocking autopsy report turns the investigation upside down and forces the family to rethink everything they thought they knew about Rosanne’s final days. Their quest for the truth begins with a Facebook message, a note from Rosanne’s brother-in-law, Justin Cave, to someone he hopes can help: his old high school friend Ayman Mohyeldin, now a journalist at MSNBC. How had she suddenly become obsessed with conspiracies? How had she died? And above all: who was responsible? From the depths of their grief, the family vowed to figure out what had happened to Rosanne. Capitol on January 6, in the heart of a mob trying to force its way into the West Front. But then her family got a call they couldn’t have imagined: Rosanne had died at the U.S. She made bad jokes, adored her nieces, worked hard at her sobriety, and on the rare occasion she talked politics, she’d usually call Trump a loser. Rosanne Boyland was a sweet, apolitical girl from a small town in Georgia. Data is currently being collected, check back soon! These personal accounts illustrate what was at stake for the nation and reveal unsettling echoes in the fight for political and social justice of today. Through them, you’ll hear voices from American history that have been muted time and time again. Using first-hand accounts from diaries, newspapers, letters, and speeches, this narrated docu- drama podcast will take you straight to the sources of lived experience. For twelve brief years of Reconstruction, Black Americans lay powerful claims to citizenship, dignity, and rights-despite brutal suppression. After the Civil War, Black Americans launched themselves into political careers, became newspaper magnates, entrepreneurs, Wall Street traders, and used their newfound mobility to reunite families torn apart by slavery. Black people battled for their own freedom, taking incredible risks for a country that had actively denied their right to it. You’ll hear stories of freedom taking and freedom making directly from the people who did both. Seizing Freedom is the personal history of the struggle to define freedom after 400 years of slavery. But ending slavery in America required so much more than battlefield victories or even official declarations. ![]() The story of the end of the Civil War you’ve probably been taught is that the slaves were freed by Northern white men (and maybe a handful of famous Underground Railroad conductors).
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