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True Crime News: The Podcast

Boating accident or murder by Benadryl? Plus, did Gannon Stauch's stepmom kill him?

True Crime News: The Podcast

True Crime News

True Crime, Society & Culture

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 6 March 2020

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Lori Barnes Isenberg claimed her husband, Larry Isenberg, died after falling off their boat. Now, however, she has been charged with first-degree murder in his death. Autopsy results show Larry died from excessive amounts of Benadryl, and Lori is accused of giving it to him. Plus, the case of 11-year-old Colorado boy Gannon Stauch, who was reported missing by his stepmother Letecia on January 27. Now, Letecia has been arrested and faces multiple charges, including first-degree murder. With guest Ron Kaye.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

A word of warning. This podcast explores graphic and disturbing stories and includes some strong language.

0:06.3

It therefore may not be suitable for our young listeners or other folks who may find it disturbing. Hello and welcome to True Crime Daily, the podcast, covering high profile and under

0:20.0

the radar cases from across the country every week. We are recording this on March 4th, 2020.

0:26.3

I'm Anna Garcia and joining me today is civil rights lawyer, Ronnie Kaye, everyone else calls you Ron, but considering that we went to school together, we should probably tell everyone that.

0:37.0

We have to disclose all potential bias.

0:41.0

I think so. So Ron Kay is a civil rights attorney who specializes in criminal

0:47.2

justice cases not just murders and exoneration cases but I I think, you know, from the time that I've known you,

0:55.4

you've really specialized in these either wrongful imprisonment

0:59.7

or this abuse of police force is another specialty of yours?

1:05.7

Yeah, well, I do many different types of cases essentially holding police officers and prosecutors

1:14.1

accountable for violating the law for engaging in a manipulation of evidence but my but I think if I had

1:22.0

a specialty it would be representing people who have lost decades of their life in custody based on

1:31.0

efforts by law enforcement to hide evidence to present fabricated evidence and to

1:37.6

essentially set them up for a criminal conviction. They ultimately are exonerated in a habeas petition and then

1:46.5

I sue the agency for damages for the lost time that they spent.

1:53.0

And you get multi-million dollar settlements?

1:57.0

My clients do.

1:58.0

Okay.

2:00.0

Now, we've been talking a little bit on the side. We can't say much, but you have a

2:04.8

Netflix special that's going to be coming out soon. I know you can't really talk

2:08.8

much about it, but it's based on one of your cases? Well, it's not quite that true that it's my Netflix special,

2:17.5

but it's the, it's an entire two episode,

...

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