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Gone South

Gone South

Written by: Audacy Podcasts
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For years, Gone South has been a podcast about crime in the American South. But in Season 5, we’re widening the lens.Through deeply reported, narrative-driven stories—and conversations with journalists, historians, musicians, and people who’ve lived these stories firsthand—we’re digging into the myths, scandals, and power structures that still shape the South… and, in many ways, the country itself.From re-examining the cultural meaning of the Alamo to tracing the family history of Alex Murdaugh to investigating the federal indictment of New Orleans’s former mayor, each episode stands alone. Together, they paint a picture of what this region really is and how it came to be.Gone South is a show for people who want to understand how history lingers and why it still matters now.Written and hosted by award-winning journalist Jed Lipinski, Gone South is the recipient of the Edward R. Murrow Award for Outstanding Achievement in Journalism.Previous serialized seasons include:Season 1: Who Killed Margaret Coon?Season 2: The Dixie MafiaSeason 3: The Sign CutterFollow Gone South to get new episodes every week.© Audacy, Inc. Social Sciences True Crime
Episodes
  • The Murder of Lita McClinton, Part 1: The Marriage
    Jun 17 2026

    In January 1987, Lita McClinton answered her doorbell in one of Atlanta's wealthiest neighborhoods and was shot dead by a man holding a white flower box with a pink rose. She was 35, the daughter of one of Atlanta's most prominent Black families, and on her way to court that morning for a pivotal hearing in her divorce from her white millionaire ex-husband, Jim Sullivan. Police were sure Jim had ordered the hit. They just couldn't prove it.

    Writer Deb Miller Landau first reported on the case for Atlanta Magazine in 2004 — and never let it go. In this episode of Gone South, she walks us through her years-long investigation: an interracial marriage that began in 1970s Macon, a $2 million mansion on Palm Beach, a sloppy hit, a payphone call traced to a Georgia rest stop, and the long, twisting road to justice for Lita McClinton.

    Deb Landau's book is "A Devil Went Down to Georgia: Race, Power, Privilege, and the Murder of Lita McClinton​":
    https://www.amazon.com/Devil-Went-Down-Georgia-Privilege/dp/1639366830

    Subscribe to our newsletter:

    ⁠https://jedlipinski.substack.com/⁠

    Connect with Jed Lipinski:

    https://www.instagram.com/gonesouthpodcast/

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/gonesouthpodcast/

    ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/jed-lipinski/⁠

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    29 mins
  • Tommy Lee Walker: Executed in 1954, Exonerated in 2026
    Jun 10 2026

    In 1954, Dallas executed a 19-year-old Black man named Tommy Lee Walker for the rape and murder of a young white woman near Love Field. Walker had no criminal record, eight alibi witnesses placing him across town at the time, and he recanted his confession the moment he was returned to his cell. None of it mattered. Three months after his arrest, a jury sentenced him to die in the electric chair.

    Seventy years later, Innocence Project attorney Chris Fabricant set out to do something that had never been done before: exonerate a man who'd already been put to death. Jed talks with Fabricant about the coerced confession, the junk-science polygraph, the racial panic that swept Dallas in 1953, and what it took to finally clear Tommy Lee Walker's name.

    Subscribe to our newsletter:

    ⁠https://jedlipinski.substack.com/⁠

    Connect with Jed Lipinski:

    https://www.instagram.com/gonesouthpodcast/

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/gonesouthpodcast/

    ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/jed-lipinski/

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
  • Inside a Charleston Frat's Multimillion-Dollar Xanax Ring
    Jun 3 2026

    In 2016, nine men tied to the College of Charleston's Kappa Alpha fraternity were arrested in what police initially described as a 40,000-pill Xanax bust. The real number was closer to three and a half million, along with cocaine, LSD, weed, luxury watches, a fleet of cars, and a grenade launcher. The crew had spent years pressing counterfeit pills in rented beach houses and shipping them across the country in Skittles bags, fueling an unregulated drug economy that ran straight through one of the most beautiful college campuses in America.

    Jed talks with journalist Max Marshall, author of the book "Among the Bros," about how he embedded himself in this world, his hundreds of hours of late-night phone calls with an imprisoned ringleader, and what the case reveals about American fraternities and the lives of the men inside them.

    Max Marshall's book is "Among the Bros: A Fraternity Crime Story"


    https://shorturl.at/ynPGO

    Subscribe to our newsletter:

    ⁠https://jedlipinski.substack.com/⁠

    Connect with Jed Lipinski:

    https://www.instagram.com/gonesouthpodcast/⁠

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/gonesouthpodcast/⁠

    ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/jed-lipinski/

    Show More Show Less
    28 mins
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