The 15-Year-Old Killer: Can Evil Be Outgrown?
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About this listen
At fifteen, Daniel Marsh committed a crime so depraved it defied explanation—then, he sat in an interrogation room and calmly explained it anyway. Now, a controversial California law is forcing us to ask: does a cold-blooded killer deserve a second chance just because they haven't reached their twenty-fifth birthday?
In the second installment of The Confession Tapes, we dissect California Senate Bill 1391 and the bone-chilling interrogation that defined the Daniel Marsh case. We explore the legal tug-of-war between a system designed to rehabilitate children and a public demanding justice for the irredeemable.
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The Secret Tape: Analyzing the calm, detached confession of a teenager who hunted his victims, and what it reveals about the "juvenile brain."
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The 25-Year Cutoff: Inside the legislative battle that mandates release for violent offenders by age twenty-five, regardless of the crime's brutality.
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Rehabilitation vs. Risk: Success stories of reformed youth meet the terrifying reality of the "violent psychopath" who may never change.
Is justice served by a date on a calendar, or by the weight of the crime? Subscribe to The Twisted Truth as we continue The Confession Tapes mini-series. If this episode made you rethink the legal system, please leave us a review and share your thoughts.