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Show overview

Telling Lives has been publishing since 2018, and across the 7 years since has built a catalogue of 23 episodes. That works out to roughly 15 hours of audio in total. Releases follow an irregular cadence.

Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 34 min and 54 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language True Crime show.

There hasn’t been a new episode in the last ninety days; the most recent episode landed 5 months ago. The busiest year was 2018, with 8 episodes published.

Episodes
23
Running
2018–2025 · 7y
Median length
41 min
Cadence
Irregular

From the publisher

Old Stories in a True Way

Latest Episodes

View all 23 episodes

S2 Ep 9Elise’s Story

The tragedies wrought by drunken and drugged driving continue, despite the knowledge and the ability to easily prevent them in today’s society. Still many believe they are only putting themselves at risk when they chance having a drink and then driving a short distance home. But what about when you are choosing to get behind the wheel of a company vehicle—or a 60-ton semi-truck—after having a few drinks or taking painkillers or other narcotics? That fateful choice by a repeat offender cost Elise Acosta everything.

Dec 2, 202531 min

S2 Ep 8Deanna’s Story

March 29, 2011, in Gulfport, Mississippi started out as a cool, breezy spring day along the beautiful Mississippi Gulf Coast. People were busy with springtime activities – proms, gardening and planning summertime vacations—and for Gulfport Police Chief Alan Weatherford, his family was looking forward to a wedding. But this day, one drunk driver changed everything.

Oct 6, 202539 min

S2 Ep 7Bill Kelly’s story

The Kelly and Cumberland families had a lot in common. Both “old Coast” families whose roots dated back decades in the Orange Grove area of Gulfport. Coincidentally, both had homesteads on the same rural road in the county. Unfortunately, years of the lack of accountability for the choices of one would have deadly consequences on the other.

Sep 18, 20231h 1m

S2 Ep 6Shayna’s Story

North Dakota passed legislation to strengthen DUI penalties in 2013. The deadly 2015 DUI crash you are about to learn about would be the precedent-setting case testing the mettle of the law. Three young women—two of them University of North Dakota students on summer break—met up for a night of fun. What they got was a parent’s worst nightmare. We will also explore why North Dakota and other sparsely populated midwestern states have some of the highest DUI numbers per capita in America—and why that isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

Jul 29, 20231h 3m

S2 Ep 5The Kentucky Bus Crash (and Charlie’s Story)

More than 35 years have passed since the crash that would go down in history as the worst DUI in American history. Thankfully, safety protocols have been installed since to prevent the type of horrific explosion that was ignited by a drunken driver that May 1988 day. However, all 67 people aboard the Ratcliff First Assembly of God’s Church bus lives were altered for eternity. Listen to Karolyn, Janet and Mandy tell you their memories of that day—and how their lives have been impacted by impaired driving.

Jul 16, 202339 min

S2 Ep 4Episode 4: America’s Story

For a nation that sprang from Puritanical beginnings, America moved quickly to one that glorified the rough and tumble, hard-drinking of the Old West. We moved into the 20th century and Americans fascination turned to the glitz and glamour of Hollywood movie stars with a drink in one hand and cigarette in the other…we followed their lead and culture shifted…. Adding automobiles to the mix brought a need for laws to curb some of our sins…. But, limiting civil rights in a country founded on freedom has not been an easy road. Neither are roads filled with impaired drivers, however. And we haven’t figured it out even still. What does it mean to be legally impaired? How much alcohol does it take? This is America’s journey to discovering that too much of this “good thing” during pioneer days is deadly combined with our modern lifestyles. Hear from a former Louisiana bartender about the “drive-thru” liquor store, from Mississippi’s renowned restauranteur and writer Robert St. John about how getting a DUI at 19 saved his life, and from a Mississippi man who explains why alcoholism and addiction are like fighting off the devil himself.  

Jun 9, 20231h 3m

S2 Ep 3Shelley’s Story

We all blame the driver in a DUI crash that injures or kills people or damages other’s property. But sometimes the problem isn’t just one person. With a DUI crash, we typically turn the other way if we aren’t directly affected. We read stories and we get angry at the person who was driving drunk. In this case, it was Shelley Rose who drove drunk and killed innocent people. It’s her fault, right? Well, the story is so much more complicated than that. No one dreams of growing up and becoming an alcoholic and killing people in a drunken or impaired car crash. But some of us—all of us, actually, at times in different circumstances of life—need roadblocks, boundaries, mentors, tough love—to save us from ourselves. Instead, Shelley Rose was her own worst enemy. Unfortunately, she had several partners in crime, including those sworn to protect us. This is the story of how Shelley Rose arrived at that fateful Thanksgiving Day 2018.

May 19, 202335 min

S2 Ep 2Jada’s Story

On Thanksgiving Day 2018, Jada Bright, a senior at the University of Southern Mississippi woke up early and headed south from Hattiesburg to spend the holiday with family outside New Orleans. It was Jada’s first trip home since her father died from cancer earlier that year. She had worked late the night before, waiting tables at Patio 44, and was excited to have a couple days off to spend with loved ones and not worry about classes or work. Also that morning, 45-year-old Alabama businessman Evans Vincent, who had long been estranged from his two teenage sons, headed west, planning to spend his first holiday in a decade with his sons in Texas. His car was loaded with Christmas and birthday presents for his boys. 48-year-old Shelly Rose, a Mississippi transplant living with friends in Lake Charles, had spent the previous two nights in jail—in two neighboring Mississippi towns, having been arrested for a 4th and 5th DUI-although the small town police chief made the decision—on Thanksgiving eve to charge her with the lesser offense of public drunkenness because it was far less paperwork to process. Shelly had only had her driver’s license back one month from it having been suspended for a previous DUI in Florida. A stumbling and still disoriented Shelly “bargained” her way out of lock-up in Ellisville, Mississippi. A police officer took her to the tow yard to retrieve her rented Dodge Caravan after hours. And she was released in the early morning hours of Thanksgiving—still over the legal BAC limit and handed the keys to the rented van she had damaged while driving intoxicated. At 10 a.m., she spoke to the family friend, Marsha, who had been expecting her for two days, not knowing she had been drinking again—and had been arrested. Marsha told Shelly when she got back to Lake Charles, it was time to find another place to live. Her patience had worn out. She would be the last person to speak to Shelly. Shortly after 10:20 a.m., Shelly got on the interstate at the off-ramp near Lumberton, Mississippi. Kristy Thompson, a Hattiesburg realtor, headed to Slidell with her boyfriend, saw Shelly headed straight toward them and veered into the other lane. Kristy quickly let down the window, waving frantically to get her attention to warn her she was headed the wrong direction. But Shelly never looked over. As Jason rounded the bend in I-59, Kristy was already dialing 911. “Someone is going to die right now,” she screamed, trying to explain to the dispatcher what was about to ensue. The traffic was heavy just a few hundred yards in their rear-view mirror. There was nothing they could do.

May 5, 202341 min

S2 Ep 1Season 2 Episode 1: Alcohol, Intoxicants, “Accidents” in America

The second season of Telling Lives, I chose to explore the continued societal problem of DUI and impairment in American culture and examine how to affect change. I’ll share stories from around the country—in Mississippi, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Kentucky and other states—going back to the worst DUI crash in American history that killed 27 in 1988—to a police chief and father who lost his own daughter weeks before her wedding—and a father out walking who was killed—and his own daughter was left without her father to walk her down the aisle at her wedding this year. I’ll also share stories of the good that can come from choosing the right course before tragedy strikes and what taking that path leads to—I talked to a nationally-renowned chef whose DUI at age 21 made him seek rehab and redemption in Christ and he hasn’t touched alcohol since. I have looked at data from a dozen states and talked to people involved in DUIs from every angle—victims, survivors, perpetrators, police, friends, doctors, bartenders and more. These stories bear witness to America’s drinking and drugged driving problem and how we got here—why don’t we treat impaired driving like the serious crime it is after the first or even second offense—and why we must, especially in the current political climate of more states every year legalizing the use of marijuana. My prayer is that listeners will empathize and be encouraged to make choices that don’t hurt themselves or kill others—-that choosing to do the right thing will become the American thing again. This season is dedicated to the memory of Jada Bright.

Apr 20, 202313 min

BREAKING NEWS: Case Goes to D.A.

Contact the team at [email protected]  

Sep 11, 20195 min

Episode 10: Awaiting Justice for Angela

Angela’s best friend shares her memories of Angela’s terrifying visit to the Mahned Bridge and the last few weeks before she went missing and the weeks afterward when it seemed so many mistakes were being made. Also, Debra has encounters with Stephen Lindsey and Larry Posey years after Angela’ disappearance, which couldn’t have been more different. Finally, where Angela’s case stands today and what law enforcement is currently doing in the case. Contact the podcast team at [email protected]

Mar 11, 20191h 3m

Episode Nine: New Millennium–new detective and technology come on scene

Nearing the new millennium, a new breed of detective coupled with major advances in technology impacted the Angela Freeman investigation. For a brief moment it looked like answers might finally be available to explain just what happened that night at the Mahned Bridge. Contact the podcast team at [email protected], or visit the website at tellinglives.blubrry.net. Join the Telling Lives FaceBook group!

Feb 19, 201952 min

Bonus Episode 2: Points of Clarity and Listener Questions

Join us for an in-between episode round table discussion! We take answer your questions and provide a couple of points of clarity about the content previously released. Contact the team at [email protected] or visit the website at tellinglives.blubrry.net.

Feb 12, 201921 min

Episode Eight: Friends Come Forward

Since the podcast began, we’ve had several more people who knew Angela Freeman reach out to us with information and memories that we will share with you in this episode—including a woman who has come forward with information she says she overheard when she was 12 years old about what happened to Angela. This is the first time she has spoken publicly about what she overheard.

Jan 29, 201940 min

Bonus Episode: Q & A with the Telling Lives team

Join us as we answer questions related to the disappearance of Angela Freeman. If you have questions about the podcast, or would like to share your thoughts on Angela, send us a message at [email protected]. We might answer your questions on a future episode! [email protected] www.tellinglives.blubrry.net

Jan 21, 201928 min

Episode Seven: Declaration of Death

After seven years, authorities urged Angela Freeman’s family to formally declare her deceased. A service was held, but the grieving process continued as Debra and Bill Stewart’s marriage crumbled. In this episode we’ll also look at statistics on missing persons and two other newly cold cases in Mississippi. Contact the podcast team at [email protected]. Visit our website at tellinglives.blubrry.net.

Dec 17, 201841 min

Episode Six: Cold Cases and Clairvoyants

One of the interesting things that seems to happen anytime a person goes missing or is killed in a mysterious way and the case remains unsolved for any length of time is the interest from psychics or people who believe they can help solve the case with help from otherworldly means. Angela Freeman’s case has been no exception. In Episode Six we will explore what psychics over the years have brought forth in the Freeman case, and we will discuss some cases where law enforcement has actually solved cases seemingly from evidence uncovered through psychic phenomena. Listen closely because some of the new evidence we will introduce in a forthcoming episode will require us to retrace some of the psychic visions from more than two decades ago. Contact us at [email protected]

Dec 3, 201840 min

Special Announcement

Nov 26, 20181 min

Episode Five: The Mahned Murders

Just 20 months after Angela Freeman went missing, two friends from work disappeared after leaving McAlister’s Deli in Hattiesburg. The next afternoon their truck and broken butcher knife were found at the Mahned Bridge. Four days later, three bodies were found in shallow graves nearby, catapulting this rural community and the Mahned Bridge into national news and putting the mystery of Angela’s disappearance back on the front page. Contact the podcast team at [email protected], or visit our website at tellinglives.blubrry.net  

Nov 6, 201835 min

Episode Four: Searching for Angela Freeman.

After Angela Freeman’s car was discovered at the Mahned Bridge in remote Perry County, Mississippi, days passed before law enforcement started any kind of investigation. Those first crucial hours were wasted by a rural sheriff’s department that was untrained in proper investigation as well as determined in their belief that Angela was just a wayward runaway. Once outside agencies got involved, it became clear that Angela was the victim of foul play, but the mistakes made in the first hours could not be undone. Contact [email protected] with questions about the podcast. Visit our website at tellinglives.blubrry.net

Oct 22, 201858 min