Justice Seekers Podcast
Two attorneys go beyond the headlines to shine a light on stories that hide, exposing the bones of legal cases left to molder in our hallowed halls of justice.
We find the claims that didn't make the news and the facts that didn't make the record—the questions that didn't reach the bench and the answers that didn't come from it—the voices of truth that never got their chance to be heard.
Join us, friends, as we venture into the underworld of long forgotten lawfare and learn how verdicts are really handed down.
Justice Seekers Podcast
Episode 17: Blood Will Tell: The Wrongful Conviction of Joe Bryan
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A small Texas town. A brutal murder. A husband with a solid alibi, and a conviction built on blood evidence that modern science now calls unreliable.
In 1985, schoolteacher Mickey Bryan was found murdered in her home. Prosecutors claimed bloodstain analysis proved her husband, Joe Bryan, was the killer — despite being over 100 miles away at the time.
What followed was a decades-long fight exposing junk forensic science, overlooked suspects, and a justice system determined to defend its own theory.
In this episode of Justice Seekers, we uncover how one piece of questionable evidence helped send an innocent man to prison for more than 30 years and why his conviction but not his imprisonment still stands today.
Because sometimes the most dangerous evidence… looks like science.
🎙️ Follow Justice Seekers for true stories of wrongful convictions and the fight for justice.