PLAY PODCASTS
74 Minutes
Season 1 · Episode 2

74 Minutes

Dan checks out JJ’s alibi and pours over the 2,000-page trial transcript. It’s clear to him the trial was strange and he’s left with more questions.

Letters from Sing Sing · Dan Slepian

February 20, 202342m 3s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (dts.podtrac.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

JJ Velazquez claimed he had an alibi: a 74-minute phone call on a landline with his mother, Maria Velazquez, that overlapped with the time of the crime. So Dan visits Maria. She lives in a town in New York on the Hudson River directly across from Sing Sing, the maximum security prison where her son is incarcerated. Maria talks to Dan about JJ’s childhood. And she recounts in detail her memory of January 27th, 1998, the day of Al Ward’s murder.

Meanwhile, Dan is still familiarizing himself with JJ’s case file. There are thousands of pages of documents that sit in a box by his desk. He starts to work his way through the trial transcript. Immediately, it’s clear to him that the trial was strange. As Dan unpacks what happened in the courtroom, he’s left with more questions than answers. Prosecutors say five people identified JJ as the man who killed Al Ward. Dan decides to find them.

 


Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Topics

true crime podcastmurderjon adrian velazquezdocumentarywrongful convictiondateline nbcprisondatelinedan slepianguiltcriminal justice systemtrue crimejj velazquezinvestigative journalismnbcjournalismincarcerateddistrict attorneyprisonernbc news studiosjusticenbc newssing singtrue crime documentarypodcast20 yearsinvestigativecriminal justice reformconvictedletters from sing singmanhattan da officeinvestigationtwo decadesmanhattan district attorneysing sing prisoninnocencetrue crime documentariesincarcerationbarry scheckletters from sing sing podcastcriminal justice