Undisclosed (podcast)
Undisclosed is a podcast about wrongful convictions in the United States. It is hosted by Rabia Chaudry, Susan Simpson, and Colin Miller. She started it with fellow attorneys Susan Simpson and Colin Miller.[1] The podcast started by investigating the conviction of Adnan Syed for the Murder of Hae Min Lee, which had previously been the focus of the first season of the podcast Serial.[2] Season two focused on the Georgia conviction of Joey Watkins for the murder of Isaac Dawkins, which, according to Undisclosed, was wrongful. According to the podcast, Watkins' cell phone records proved that he could not have committed the murder, because they showed that when the murder occurred, he was indeed on the divided highway where it happened, but going in the opposite direction, with a location constrained by the cell tower pinged by a call he made. According to the podcast, turning around before firing the shot would have required him to drive impossibly fast along the busy highway, recognize Dawkins' vehicle going the opposite direction in the dark, then turn around before he or a passenger fired the fatal shot.[3][4]
Undisclosed | |
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Presentation | |
Hosted by |
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Genre | true crime |
Created by |
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Language | English |
Production | |
Production | Undisclosed, LLC |
No. of seasons | 17 |
Publication | |
Original release | April 12, 2015 – present |
Website | https://undisclosed-podcast.com/ |
Undisclosed LLC v. State
Undisclosed wanted to copy the tapes from the Watkins trial, which they wanted to play so that listeners could hear Watkins saying he was innocent. The court initially agreed, then changed its mind before they actually copied the tapes. This led to further litigation, with the Georgia Supreme Court eventually ruling that the state did not have to allow Undisclosed to copy the tapes.[5]
Seasons
Undisclosed has covered many cases over seventeen seasons, but there are occasionally bonus episodes, addendum episodes, updates, or episodes between seasons.
Season titles
- Season One: The State v. Adnan Syed
- Season Two: The State v. Joey Watkins
- Season Three: The State v. Jamar Huggins
- Season Four: The Killing of Freddie Gray
- Season Five: The State v. Gary Mitchum Reeves
- Season Six: The State v. Shaurn Thomas
- Season Seven: The State v. Willie Veasy
- Season Eight: The State v. Terrance Lewis
- Season Nine: The State v. Chester Holman III
- Season Ten: The State v. Ronnie Long
- Season Eleven: The State v. Pamela Lanier
- Season Twelve: The State v. Dennis Perry
- Season Thirteen: The Case Against Adnan Syed
- Season Fourteen: State v. Keith Davis, Jr.
- Season Fifteen: State v. Rocky Meyers
- Season Sixteen: State v. Joseph Webster
- Season Seventeen: State v. Greg Lance[6]
Media
- Timber Media Profile
- Nieman Lab article that uses Undisclosed as a backdrop against other true crime podcasts
See also
References
- Dybis, Karen (March 2, 2020). "Detroit's Daily Docket: New podcast hopes to educate the public about forensics". University of Michigan. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
- Eric Krupke (April 7, 2015). "Adnan Syed's story continues post-'Serial' in new podcast". PBS. Retrieved June 10, 2019.
- Amelia McDonell-Parry (June 18, 2016). "'Undisclosed': Inside Gripping Season 2 of Unofficial 'Serial' Spinoff". Rolling Stone.
- "Time and Distance". Undisclosed (Podcast). Retrieved June 30, 2019.
- Bill Rankin (October 30, 2017). "Public has no right to courtroom recordings, Georgia justices rule". Retrieved June 6, 2018.
- Wheeler, Ben (September 13, 2019). "'Undisclosed' podcast covering 1998 Putnam County double homicide". Herald-Citizen. Retrieved 20 April 2020.