『Both Sides of the Bench』のカバーアート

Both Sides of the Bench

Both Sides of the Bench

著者: Shaun Yurtkuran
無料で聴く

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

State’s Case (Prosecution)

How cases get built—and where they break.
Former prosecutor breaking down the strategy, the spin, and the shortcuts.
Not every “slam dunk” is real.

Defense (Reality Check)

This is where the State gets tested.
Real defense strategy. Real courtroom pressure.
It’s not what they say—it’s what they can prove.

Copyright 2026 All rights reserved.
政治・政府 政治学
エピソード
  • They Didn’t Read You Your Rights? That Doesn’t Help You.
    2026/04/18

    Everybody thinks they know how criminal law works… until they’re the one in the system.

    In this episode, I break down some of the biggest misconceptions I hear every day—things people believe that actually end up hurting their case. From Miranda rights to DUI refusals, to the idea that a victim can “drop charges,” we walk through how these situations really play out in court.

    I’ve handled these cases from both sides—as a former prosecutor and now a defense attorney—and I can tell you this: most people don’t get in trouble because they’re guilty. They get in trouble because they rely on bad information.

    If you’ve ever said “they can’t do that,” this episode is for you.

    Listen in and learn how the system actually works—before you find yourself in it.

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    41 分
  • He Didn’t Steal Anything… What He Did Was Worse
    2026/04/11

    Most people think they understand how criminal cases work. They don’t.

    In this episode, I break down three real scenarios that show how quickly things fall apart between what seems obvious and what the law actually requires.

    First, an aggravated DUI case where the driver was well over the legal limit, caused a crash, and the victim died—but that still wasn’t enough to guarantee a conviction. The missing piece? Causation.

    Then we get into why juries hang up on cases. It’s not always about the evidence. It’s about doubt, personalities, and the one issue jurors just can’t get past.

    And finally, a burglary case that makes absolutely no sense on its face—a neighbor breaks into a woman’s home, goes through her personal items, and is later caught wearing her clothing. No theft. No logical motive. Just a reminder that real cases are often stranger than anything you see on TV.

    This is how the courtroom actually works.

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    45 分
  • My First Trial was a Disaster
    2026/04/10

    I kicked off my new show by telling the story of how my legal career actually started—and it’s not what you think. At 25 years old, fresh out of law school, I walked into federal court to try my first case with no file, no partner, and no clue what I was doing. The client? A man who had killed two cops and was now suing the State of Mississippi.

    From there, I get into how I first met Robert Shuler Smith back in Jackson Municipal Court, my initial reaction to him, and how that encounter eventually pulled me into a DA campaign—and into one of the most chaotic, dysfunctional environments I’ve ever seen inside the criminal justice system.

    This show is going to be different. I’ll be breaking down real cases, talking about how the system actually works, mixing in news and politics, and taking your calls along the way. If you’ve ever wondered what really goes on behind the scenes in courtrooms, prosecutor’s offices, and criminal cases—you’re in the right place.

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    38 分
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