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Wrongful Conviction

#087 Jason Flom with Fred Clay

Wrongful Conviction

Lava for Good Podcasts

True Crime

4.45.8K Ratings

🗓️ 18 February 2019

⏱️ 67 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 1979, 28-year-old cab driver Jeffrey S. Boyajian was robbed and murdered when he was shot in the head five times after he picked up three men in a Boston, MA neighborhood. Several eyewitnesses identified Fred Clay as one of the three men who entered Boyajian’s cab. But Clay, who was 16 years old at the time, maintained his innocence. He testified that he’d been at his foster home at the time of the crime, which his foster mother confirmed. Despite his alibi, Clay was charged as an adult and convicted of first-degree murder. 

Wrongful Conviction  is a production of Lava for Good™ Podcasts in association with Signal Co. No1.

​​We have worked hard to ensure that all facts reported in this show are accurate. The views and opinions expressed by the individuals featured in this show are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Lava for Good.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This call is from a correction facility and is subject to monitoring and recording.

0:05.5

If I didn't hear you for it, I could tell you exactly 11,000,

0:10.0

9,000, that's 45 days.

0:12.0

Okay, 11,000, my 145 days I've been in here.

0:16.0

And it hasn't been easy.

0:18.0

A hundred years, I swear I'm a kid, I didn't do anything.

0:23.0

You know, and you know, that was a real pain for me.

0:28.5

No, because my life was discarded if, you know, like I was a piece of trash or something.

0:34.0

You know, a hundred years, and I had dreams.

0:37.0

I wanted to do things.

0:38.0

I wouldn't have come in and cry.

0:39.0

You know, that was a very good young man.

0:42.0

That is what happens in so many cases, the cops have a hunch

0:46.0

because they're so smart at the scene, they have a hunch.

0:50.0

And once they act on that hunch, they sort of develop tunnel vision.

0:54.0

And they take off marching in the wrong direction.

0:57.0

And that happens in so many of these wrongful convictions.

1:00.0

They open the cell door and I walk downstairs.

1:04.0

And I actually walk downstairs to be outside.

1:08.0

It felt very strange to be like I said, to be walking without no shackles on my feet.

1:13.0

I thought it was a dream, but then again, it wasn't a dream.

1:17.0

This is wrongful conviction.

...

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