4.2 β’ 10.3K Ratings
ποΈ 14 October 2019
β±οΈ 45 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | Hi, and disclosed listeners, Rabia here. Thank you so much for tuning into our fall season and thank you for listening to all of our series and supporting us all these years. I want to ask that you please support our sponsors because our sponsors support us and a big thank you to them. Without them, we couldn't continue to do the work to help the wrongfully convicted. The second thing I want to say |
0:21.6 | before we dive into today's episode is this. Whether it's this case or any other case that we've |
0:27.4 | worked on, we've actually got a tip line. So if anybody out there has some information they think |
0:32.4 | could help us in our investigation into this case, the state versus Greg Lance, or any of the cases we've worked on, |
0:39.1 | please give us a call. The tip line is 4105-5563. Once again, the tip that Victor and Alec Kolesnik Howard murdered, investigators collected all the physical evidence they could from Greg Lance. His shoes and his socks, his truck, some of his |
1:11.9 | guns, they shaved his hands, and they swapped them for a GSR test. All of these items, along with |
1:17.8 | crime scene evidence, was immediately submitted to the TBI crime lab for testing. In the meantime, |
1:23.7 | as the awaited lab results, investigators continued to collect evidence in the form of |
1:28.2 | witness statements, phone records, and green rope from Greg's property, all of which managed to |
1:33.9 | incriminate him. Despite having forensic tests and witness statements in hand, and a motive they |
1:39.4 | were banking on, the authorities didn't charge Greg with the murders until April 5, 1999, |
1:46.0 | eight months after the murders. |
1:51.4 | And by the time they finally did arrest him, Greg was on the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations most wanted fugitive list for two counts of first-degree murder. |
2:03.6 | Thank you. The The Hi and welcome to Undisclosed. This is episode six in our series on the State |
2:33.8 | versus Greg Lance, |
2:34.9 | A Wanted Man. My name is Robi H. Joddy. I'm an attorney and author of the New York Times bestseller, |
2:39.4 | Adnan Story, and I'm here with my colleagues, Susan Simpson, and Colin Miller. |
2:43.5 | Hi, I'm Susan Simpson. I'm an attorney in Washington, D.C., and I blog at the View from LL2. Hi, this is Colin Miller. I'm an associate, dean, and professor at the University of South Carolina School of Law |
2:52.5 | and I blog at seek evidence against him. |
3:27.8 | In fact, he had little reason to know what was going on because shortly after the murders, |
3:28.7 | he left town. |
3:33.8 | Now, the state would have you believe that Greg took off scared, fleeing to Arizona to protect himself from the investigation because he was guilty. |
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