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Let's Go To Court!

35: White Collar Crime

Let's Go To Court!

Let's Go To Court!

True Crime, History, Comedy

4.84.8K Ratings

🗓️ 26 September 2018

⏱️ 119 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kelli Peters was the heart of Plaza Vista School in Irvine, California. She was the PTA president and the volunteer director of the after school program. But then, one day, as she was filling in for a teacher, a police officer said he needed to speak with her. He took her out to the parking lot and asked for her car keys. Kelli was puzzled, but she handed them over. The officer dug through her car, and eventually pulled out a bag of pot, a pipe, some Percocet and some Vicodin. Kelli dropped to her knees. She sobbed. She pleaded with the officer. The drugs weren’t hers, she said. But if they weren’t hers, then why the hell were they in Kelli’s car?

Then Kristin talks about two things she knows inside and out: fine wine, and the perils of having millions of dollars in spending money. In the early 2000’s, Rudy Kurniawan was just a young, geeky-looking guy bidding on California wines at high-end wine auctions. Hardly anyone paid attention to him. But then his bids got bigger. And bigger. He spent millions on wine, and then began selling it. But over time, the people who bought his wines got suspicious. The wines didn’t taste quite right. And some of the labels looked a little funny. Had they been duped?

And now for a note about our process. For each episode, Kristin reads a bunch of articles, then spits them back out in her very limited vocabulary. Brandi copies and pastes from the best sources on the web. And sometimes Wikipedia. (No shade, Wikipedia. We love you.) We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the real experts who covered these cases.

In this episode, Kristin pulled from:
“Chateau Sucker,” by Benjamin Wallace for New York Magazine
The documentary “Sour Grapes”
“Prosecutors reveal evidence against accused wine counterfeiter,” Wine Spectator
“Counterfeit fine-wine dealer sentenced to 10 years,” Wall Street Journal
“Kurniawan to tell all in $3M settlement with billionaire Koch, as sentencing is delayed,” Decanter
“Rudy Kurniawan’s court date is set,” Wine Spectator
“Alleged counterfeit wines go on trial,” Wine Spectator

In this episode, Brandi pulled from:
“Framed: A Mystery in Six Parts” by Christopher Goffard, Los Angeles Times
“Former Irvine attorney convicted of planting drugs in the car of PTA volunteer disbarred” by Sean Emery, The Orange County Register
“Jury awards $5.7 million to Irvine PTA mom in drug-planting case” by Kelly Puente and Sean Emery, The Orange County Register
“Irvine mom Kelli Peters writes book about drugs being planted in her car” by Kelly Puente, The Orange County Register

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

One semester of law school one semester of criminal justice to experts I'm Kristen Pitts. I'm Brandy Egan. Let's go to court on this episode. I'll talk about a fine wine crime and I'll be talking about the real life dangers of serving on the PTA.

0:20.0

I am pumped. I am so pumped for yours.

0:25.0

Well you really settle in because as I just told you before we started recording I think this is going to be long and I did not intend it to be that way

0:35.8

But it's an it's the craziest case. I know we say that all the time like every week. We always mean it.

0:42.6

So crazy!

0:43.6

Well, so far we've never covered a lane one, so.

0:48.6

Okay, so when I decided that I wanted to do this case, I had just read like a little blurb about something

0:55.2

that happened at the very end of it.

0:58.1

And I was like, oh boy, I need to do this case.

1:01.3

And so I'm like, I hope there's enough stuff for me to be able to do this.

1:04.7

And then I stumbled upon in my research the best article.

1:08.3

This article is amazingly written.

1:11.3

It was written for the LA Times by Christopher G-O-F-A-R-D.

1:17.0

And it was like a series and it was told over six parts. The dude spent seven months researching for this

1:27.9

article and it is amazing. So almost all of the information that I'm going to give here today is pulled from this article, but I do not do it justice. Go and read this article. And I'll tell you the title of it at the end, but.

1:40.0

Okay.

1:49.0

Picture it. Irvine, California, February 16, 2011. Irvine,

1:48.0

2011.

1:50.0

Irvine nestled safely in Orange County, is a master-plan city covering 66 square miles, made up of big,

1:58.4

man-made lakes, 54 parks, 62, 912 trees, and 219,000 people.

2:09.0

Every park, lake, and bike lane

2:11.8

had been meticulously laid out on drawing boards as a crime deterrent.

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