• Writing From Behind The Wall with John J. Lennon [Part 1]
    Jan 8 2026

    John J. Lennon is serving his twenty-fourth year behind bars, currently in Sing Sing Correctional Facility. His writing has appeared in The New York Review of Books, The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Esquire, and New York magazine. His work has been anthologized in the Best American Magazine Writing, and he’s twice been a finalist for the National Magazine Award, in feature writing and reviews and criticism. Lennon recently published his first book, The Tragedy of True Crime: Four Guilty Men and the Stories That Define Us, which was named a "best book of the year" by the New York Times and NPR. Lennon will be eligible for parole in 2029.

    To learn more about John, and to purchase his book, visit https://johnjlennon.net/

    This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Innocence Project of Florida. Visit www.floridainnocence.org for more information.

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    21 mins
  • Bard Prison Initiative: College Behind Bars with Max Kenner and Elias Beltran [Part 2]
    Nov 27 2025

    Max Kenner is the founder and director of Bard Prison Initiative which he launched 25 years ago. At Bard College, he is Vice President for Institutional Initiatives and advisor to the President on Public Policy and College Affairs. Currently, he sits on the New York State Council on Community Justice. His awards are many: JFK Presidential Library's New Frontier Award and the Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award in Education. B.P.I. has been featured on "60 Minutes", PBS News Hour, the New York Times Magazine, the Washington Post and the docuseries "College Behind Bars" by Ken Burns which was shown on PBS. This 4 part documentary is the inspiring, deeply human story of men and women struggling to earn college degrees while in prison for serious crimes.

    Elias Beltran graduated from B.P.I. in 2017 having been incarcerated for 29 1/2 years. He earned a B.A. in Literature and the Humanities. He is now a PhD candidate at Cornell University. He has been a writing fellow with Bard's MicroCollege at the Brooklyn Public Library as well as at the Harlem Children's Zone and at Cornell for the English Language Support Organization (ELSO). He continues studying Mandarin Chinese. He is also a T.A. at Cornell, teaching a class on Crime and Punishment. He was awarded a prize given to Teaching Assistants at Cornell. In the Fall of 2025, he will be teaching at Albion Correctional Facility for Women, a prison in upstate New York. At the age of 16, Elias was sentenced to 30 years-to-life.

    BPI on 60 Minutes: https://bpi.bard.edu/news-stories/news/bpi-on-60-minutes/


    Max Kenner with Deidre Faughey: https://bpi.bard.edu/news-stories/news/max-kenner-with-deirdre-faughey/


    Plus, you can find a lot more about BPI here: https://bpi.bard.edu/news-stories/

    This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Innocence Project of Florida. Visit www.floridainnocence.org for more information.

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    29 mins
  • Bard Prison Initiative: College Behind Bars with Max Kenner and Elias Beltran [Part 1]
    Nov 20 2025

    Max Kenner is the founder and director of Bard Prison Initiative which he launched 25 years ago. At Bard College, he is Vice President for Institutional Initiatives and advisor to the President on Public Policy and College Affairs. Currently, he sits on the New York State Council on Community Justice. His awards are many: JFK Presidential Library's New Frontier Award and the Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award in Education. B.P.I. has been featured on "60 Minutes", PBS News Hour, the New York Times Magazine, the Washington Post and the docuseries "College Behind Bars" by Ken Burns which was shown on PBS. This 4 part documentary is the inspiring, deeply human story of men and women struggling to earn college degrees while in prison for serious crimes.

    Elias Beltran graduated from B.P.I. in 2017 having been incarcerated for 29 1/2 years. He earned a B.A. in Literature and the Humanities. He is now a PhD candidate at Cornell University. He has been a writing fellow with Bard's MicroCollege at the Brooklyn Public Library as well as at the Harlem Children's Zone and at Cornell for the English Language Support Organization (ELSO). He continues studying Mandarin Chinese. He is also a T.A. at Cornell, teaching a class on Crime and Punishment. He was awarded a prize given to Teaching Assistants at Cornell. In the Fall of 2025, he will be teaching at Albion Correctional Facility for Women, a prison in upstate New York. At the age of 16, Elias was sentenced to 30 years-to-life.

    BPI on 60 Minutes: https://bpi.bard.edu/news-stories/news/bpi-on-60-minutes/


    Max Kenner with Deidre Faughey: https://bpi.bard.edu/news-stories/news/max-kenner-with-deirdre-faughey/


    Plus, you can find a lot more about BPI here: https://bpi.bard.edu/news-stories/

    This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Innocence Project of Florida. Visit www.floridainnocence.org for more information.

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    26 mins
  • Second Chances: The Transformative Relationship Between Incarcerated Youth and Shelter Dogs by Joan Dalton [Part 2]
    Oct 30 2025

    Joan Dalton taught in the Portland, Oregon public schools and then became an administrator at Oregon's strictest juvenile correctional facility~MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility. With experience and learning from experts in the field of the "Human Animal Bond", she founded an on-site program pairing boys and dogs to address the troubling behavior of both. In Second Chances, she shares the hurdles that led to positive outcomes for the boys and dogs in the program she calls : POOCH. The dogs found forever homes and the boys continued their education or found employment.

    To learn more about Joan Dalton and purchase Second Chances, visit https://joandalton.com/

    This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Innocence Project of Florida. Visit www.floridainnocence.org for more information.

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    29 mins
  • RE-RUN | Justice for C.J.Rice - Accused of a Crime He Did Not Commit
    Oct 28 2025

    This episode is a re-run of a previously aired episode of Pursuing Justice, highlighting stories for Wrongful Conviction Day.

    C.J. Rice was born in 1993 in Philadelphia. At the age of 17, he was wrongfully convicted of a crime he did not commit. His sentence was 30-60 years. While in prison, he earned his High School diploma in addition to being certified as a brick layer. He also was certified by

    OSHA. In 2023, he was released on bail after his Federal Habeas Corpus petition was granted by the Federal Court of the

    Eastern District of Pennsylvania and his conviction was vacated. On March 18, 2024 he was exonerated and the

    Philadelphia District Attorney's office dropped all charges.

    This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Innocence Project of Florida. Visit www.floridainnocence.org for more information.

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    51 mins
  • Second Chances: The Transformative Relationship Between Incarcerated Youth and Shelter Dogs by Joan Dalton [Part 1]
    Oct 23 2025

    Joan Dalton taught in the Portland, Oregon public schools and then became an administrator at Oregon's strictest juvenile correctional facility~MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility. With experience and learning from experts in the field of the "Human Animal Bond", she founded an on-site program pairing boys and dogs to address the troubling behavior of both. In Second Chances, she shares the hurdles that led to positive outcomes for the boys and dogs in the program she calls : POOCH. The dogs found forever homes and the boys continued their education or found employment.

    To learn more about Joan Dalton and purchase Second Chances, visit https://joandalton.com/

    This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Innocence Project of Florida. Visit www.floridainnocence.org for more information.

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    25 mins
  • RE-RUN | A Teen's False Confession - Huwe Burton's Story
    Oct 21 2025

    This episode is a re-run of a previously aired episode of Pursuing Justice, highlighting stories for Wrongful Conviction Day.

    Huwe Burton Spent 18 years in Prison from Age 16-34 for a crime he did not commit

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    51 mins
  • Infinite Hope: The Story of One Man's Wrongful Conviction, Solitary Confinement and Survival on Death Row with Anthony Graves [Part 2]
    Oct 16 2025

    Arrested in 1992 for a heinous crime he did not commit, Anthony Graves was sentenced to death at the age of 27 in Texas. He was incarcerated for 18 years. He was finally exonerated and released in 2010 and works tirelessly for change in our justice system. He created the Anthony Graves Foundation and is Director of Community Outreach for the Harris County Public Defender's Office in addition to operating a nonprofit called: Peer Navigation Project. His story was shown on "48 Hours" entitled: "Grave Injustice".

    Learn more about the Anthony's non-profit, Peer Navigator Project

    Watch 48 Hours' Grave Injustice
    Read Pamela Colloff's articale in the Texas Monthly called Innocence Lost

    This podcast is proudly sponsored by the Innocence Project of Florida. Visit www.floridainnocence.org for more information.

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    23 mins