Transcript
A (0:00)
There's a difference between liking a house and actually getting it. Redfin is built to close that gap. Redfin agents close twice as many deals as other agents, so when you find a home you love, you're not a step behind when it's time to make an offer. That means less watching great homes disappear and more zeroing in on the one you'll actually end up calling home. Redfin helps turn saved listings into real addresses. Get started@redfin.com own the dream
B (0:30)
Amazon presents jeff versus taco truck salsa Whether it's verde roja or the orange one, for Jeff, trying any salsa is like playing Russian roulette with a flamethrower. Luckily, Jeff saved with Amazon and stocked up on antacids, ginger tea and milk. Habanero. More like habanero. Yes. Save the everyday with Amazon. It's a ridiculous notion, really, the idea that 12 adults selected because a judge deemed them relatively honest and lawyers thought them sufficiently malleable that they should decide someone's fate with a show of hands. Bias and prejudice don't disappear when deliberations start. Of course they don't. Logic and reason don't always reign supreme. In truth, many verdicts are little more than good faith guesses based on the evidence jurors are allowed to see. But for the most part, it's a system that works, if not always consistently. And that, of course, is the rub. Had butterflies in my stomach the first day I ever tried a case 35 years ago, and I had butterflies in my case. On this date, it took more than 10 hours for the jury to decide the fates of Chris Latham and Wendy Moore. We couldn't understand why some didn't feel the same way as the others felt. In this episode, you'll hear from some of the jurors who rendered those verdicts. Sounds like that might have been a debate. Am I right about that? Yes, you'll hear a remarkable moment of jailhouse redemption. Nancy Latham doesn't owe me forgiveness at all whatsoever. It's very emotional. It is, and you may be surprised to learn what's become of some of the people we've met over the course of this podcast.
A (2:39)
The only person I have to make happy is me, and man, is that liberating.
B (2:48)
I'm Keith Morrison, and this is the sixth and final episode of Murder and Magnolias, a podcast from Dateline. It was one of those February mornings in the south that seems to offer a hint of spring. Temps in the 50s, light, velvety breeze. The sun was a blurry white promise behind the morning haze Just like the light at the end of a very long tunnel. Or so it may have seemed to the jurors filing into the federal courthouse that Wednesday morning. They sat through nine days of testimony. 50 witnesses, more than 100 exhibits. But all that was over now. Closing arguments had wrapped up the night before. This day was to be judgment day. When we started into deliberation, we tried to pick out the first charge and take a vote on one of the two defendants in this case. It was Chris Latham. That's the voice of juror Bill Hogan. I think once we realized that we weren't together there, then we moved to the next one. The next one. Well, that was Wendy Moore. And there seemed to be little disagreement about her. They'd kept their eyes on her throughout the trial, and several jurors felt she looked guilty.
