4.6 • 3.2K Ratings
🗓️ 5 April 2023
⏱️ 38 minutes
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Imagine the worst day of your life, when you did the one thing you are most ashamed of. Now imagine having to convince a panel of strangers — who suspect you might be lying — how sorry you are. After years of preparing for this moment, you get only minutes to make your case. And the stakes couldn’t be higher: The rest of your life depends on whether or not the strangers believe you.
This is how people seeking parole often describe the experience. Daniel Medwed, a law professor at Northeastern University, describes parole hearings as “a trap for the unwary,” where those who are mentally unprepared for the emotional complexities of the process can find themselves at a grave disadvantage.
Every year in the United States, tens of thousands of people appear before parole boards asking to be released from prison. These boards play an outsized role in the criminal justice system — how much time someone actually spends in prison, or in some cases, whether they get out at all, is often decided not by a judge or jury, but by a parole board. And yet, few people understand how they work.
Part 3 of Violation examines parole boards, largely secretive institutions that operate in many states with few rules and little oversight. These panels are supposed to be independent, but often do their work under pressure from the politicians who appoint them. In the best of circumstances, parole board members are assigned a virtually impossible task: to predict what human beings they barely know are going to do in the future. And they have people’s lives and the public’s safety in their hands.
What happens at parole boards is a huge part of Jacob Wideman’s story, and his story tells us a lot about the parole system in America. After serving 25 years behind bars for killing his summer camp roommate, Eric Kane, Wideman went before a parole board in Arizona for the first time. Starting with his first hearing in 2011, he was denied parole over and over.
Except for one time.
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0:00.0 | Hey there, just a heads up. This episode contains a brief mention of sexual assault. It also |
0:06.9 | mentions suicide and suicidal thoughts. If you're dealing with this issue, help is available. |
0:13.0 | You can dial 988 for the National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. |
0:17.9 | Take care of yourself and here's the show. |
0:21.5 | W-B-U-R Podcasts, Boston. |
0:27.0 | Last time on violation. |
0:30.0 | Rabi was a fugitive, wanted for armed robbery and murder. |
0:37.0 | The police were hunting him and his crime had given the cops license to kill. |
0:42.0 | And now Jake, Robbie's nephew... given the cops license to kill. |
0:42.8 | And now Jake, Robbie's nephew, John's son, |
0:46.9 | was also on the run, also in connection with a murder. |
0:51.9 | Just two years after brothers and keepers had been heralded as an important book. |
0:56.4 | No, there was no way that I could remain on the run and definitely I needed to figure out what I was going to do. |
1:06.0 | After a week on the run, what Jake did was turn himself in. |
1:10.8 | And that was the beginning of a long fight over what to do about a kid like Jake. |
1:16.0 | So they were always holding the death penalty over him to try to force a plea. |
1:20.0 | And many years later, when Jake began appearing before the parole board, he not only had to face the parole board members who would determine his fate, he also had to face the canes again and the canes would push the boundaries of the way parole normally works No eventual man. I'm instead asking you to voice him to see where he is in order to prevent |
1:46.2 | another father from feeling my pain and loss at his hands. If I'll say you've served 40 years of a life sentence you feel you've been rehabilitated? |
2:05.7 | Rehabilitated? |
2:09.2 | Well now let me see. You know I don't have any idea what that means. |
2:15.0 | For most people, if they've ever thought about a parole board, it was for about one minute |
2:22.0 | during the scene in the Shawshank Redemption when Morgan Freeman tells a white |
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