Primary Topic
This episode explores the complexities of the Alford plea, a legal option where the defendant maintains their innocence while acknowledging that the evidence presented by the prosecution would likely lead to a guilty verdict if taken to trial.
Episode Summary
Main Takeaways
- The Alford plea presents a legal paradox, allowing defendants to plead guilty while asserting innocence, highlighting issues in the justice system.
- Greg Brown's case illustrates the potential misuse of forensic science and its implications for wrongful convictions.
- The episode raises critical questions about the reliability of witness testimony and the potential for coercion in plea deals.
- It showcases the emotional and legal turmoil experienced by those who take Alford pleas, particularly when new evidence emerges.
- The story emphasizes the importance of judicial transparency and the need for reform in forensic methodologies.
Episode Chapters
1: The Fire
The episode opens with the 1995 fire that led to Greg Brown's conviction. Initial investigations labeled the fire as arson, based on dubious evidence and pressured witness testimonies. Latif Nasser: "The case began with a devastating fire, originally ruled as arson based on flimsy evidence."
2: Legal Battles
This chapter discusses the legal proceedings that followed the fire, including Brown's trial and the controversial use of the Alford plea in his case. Latif Nasser: "Greg's use of the Alford plea was a pivotal moment in the case, reflecting the complexities of our legal system."
3: The Fight for Innocence
Here, the focus shifts to Brown's efforts to overturn his conviction, highlighting the challenges of fighting a legal battle from within prison. Latif Nasser: "Despite overwhelming odds, Greg continued to fight for his innocence from behind bars."
Actionable Advice
- Educate Yourself on Legal Rights: Understanding your legal rights can provide significant protection in judicial proceedings.
- Seek Transparent Legal Counsel: Always ensure that your legal representation has your best interests at heart and is transparent with you.
- Support Legal Reform: Advocate for reforms in forensic science and the legal system to prevent wrongful convictions.
- Document Everything: Keep thorough records of all interactions and documents related to legal proceedings.
- Be Skeptical of Plea Deals: Understand the full implications of any plea deal, particularly an Alford plea.
About This Episode
In 1995, a tragic fire in Pittsburgh set off a decades-long investigation that sent Greg Brown Jr. to prison. But, after a series of remarkable twists, Brown found himself contemplating a path to freedom that involved a paradoxical plea deal—one that peels back the curtain on the criminal justice system and reveals it doesn’t work the way we think it does.
People
Greg Brown
Companies
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Books
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Guest Name(s):
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Content Warnings:
Mentions of arson, wrongful conviction, and the complexities of legal battles that may be distressing to some listeners.
Transcript
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Latif Nasser
Hey, this is Latif. Just quick. Fair warning, this episode is not for children. It's true. Crimey gets a little grisly onto the show.
Oh, wait, you're listening. Okay, all right. Okay. All right. You're listening.
Progressive
I'm listening to radio lab. Radio lab wny. See? Yep.
Latif Nasser
Hey, I'm Latv. Nasser. This is radio lab. No, Lulu, today I hit record. I hit record instead.
I'm gonna be joined. All right, here we go. By reporter Peter Smith. So, yeah, we go back a couple of years and maybe even a couple of years on this idea. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, like, honestly, I'm. I've been waiting to do this story and I couldn't do it myself. And it took you, Peter, a superior. Reporter to me, or just a more serendipitous reporter, maybe. So, yeah, maybe I can tell you how I sort of, like, stumbled into this story.
NetCredit
Just right there. Just tell me. Okay. Yeah, so I'm a reporter who covers forensics and science, and I spent a lot of time researching dogs. And I think, you know, that you.
Latif Nasser
Pitched us so many stories about dogs. Like, yeah, I was reporting on dogs for probably more years than I'd like to admit, but this is not a story about dogs. And anyway, in the course of that reporting, I talked with an investigator, and after our conversation, he forwarded me some documents and I took a look at them. And I learned about this case, which seemed unusual and interesting for a lot of reasons. And I thought I would keep tabs on it.
NetCredit
And so I flagged it. And eventually I got this update that the case had settled out of court with a plea called an Alfred plea. Okay, that's the thing. That's the thing I've been obsessed about with for years. The only thing I knew about it was that you had set some Google alerts for Alfred pleas.
Latif Nasser
Yes, that's right. That's right. I mean, I did it because when I first came across it, like, I couldn't believe it was a thing. I couldn't believe I had never heard of it before. You get charged with a crime in the United States, there's only so many ways you could plea.
You could say you're guilty. You could say you're not guilty if you say nothing. That's called a no contest plea. But it turns out there's a fourth option, which is, like, completely strange and totally paradoxical. Right?
NetCredit
No, I mean, this plea is the complete opposite of what you would hope or expect from the justice system. We expect the justice system to be able to separate truths from lies and to, like, show us who's guilty and show us who's innocent. And I feel like this plea shows you at the heart of the system. It actually doesn't do any of those things. Hmm.
Yeah, I probably got ahead of myself there, right? I mean, well, kind of. But eventually, I think eventually we'll get to the plea. But I first wanna start with this case that led me to the plea. Great.
So about a year ago. Okay. I went to Pittsburgh with producer Mount Keelty. Okay. Man, everything's on a hill to meet the guy who's at the center of this case.
Latif Nasser
Hey, I'm Matt. Nice to meet you. Greg. Nice to meet you. Peter.
NetCredit
Nice to meet you. What's up, Pete? Greg Brown, Junior. How you doing? My brother, Fred.
Peter, nice to meet you. What's your name? Peter. Peter, nice to meet you. Nice to meet you.
Greg. How you doing? How are you? Greg is in his mid forties. He's a short guy.
He's wearing a steeler shirt. No, I'm a stealing guy. Uh oh. Are those all your papers? That's my brother's Mandev.
I'll let you, man. We actually met Greg at his brother's house, and we all kind of just took seats in the living room. All right, so Peter was gonna record himself. I'll just move this thing back and forth between us. Let's get right to it.
So, basically, this all starts the day before Valentine's day, February 13, 1995. Right? I was at my cousin's house, chilling. Playing some video games, talking shit, you know, but it was late at night. It was a school night.
Greg was 17, and it's freezing that night. Icy out there. So he leaves his cousins, hurries home. About a 1520 minutes walk. I got home, and I'm in the process of cooking.
His mom, Darlene, she's in the kitchen making a tuna salad for a family. Repass for a funeral. And I realized I was short of ingredients. And she wants to finish the salad for the next morning. But, you know, it's super late at night, like, 1130, and it's not the safest neighborhood.
So she decides to bring Greg with her and drive to the supermarket that's still open. We were only in there no longer than 20 minutes. We get back in the car, and they drive home. You with me? Yeah, so far.
Okay. So they're driving back into their neighborhood. And you can see, like, flash of. Lights, smoke, fire trucks. But I'm joking.
Greg Brown
Like, is that our house? The drive a little closer. It was our house. Now we're panicking. We want to know if everybody's out the house.
My sister, her daughter, baby brother, my. Stepdad, Greg just jumps out of the car, runs up this hill to the. Back of the house. Darlene drove around to the front, but. It was blocked off.
Darlene Buckner
And I told the firefighters or police, whoever was there. I said, hey, that is my. I said, something's going on at my house, and then left my car up there, and I just struck out, running down the street. When she gets to the house, she sees the rest of her family. Everybody was safe.
NetCredit
But since it's so cold out that night, they walk over to a neighbor's house and just, like, wait there. Now it's like, damn, now they gonna be able to save the house. Everything you got is in there. Everything, you know, everything. And for the next couple of hours, they're just in their neighbor's living room, when eventually this detective walks into the living room, and he tells the family, three firefighters are dead.
Latif Nasser
Oh, my God. And it was just. I couldn't. It was just terrible.
NetCredit
Around, like, three in the morning. Someone comes in and tells them, like, you're gonna have to stay at a hotel. You can't go back to the house. So people gave us stuff with mostly. Whatever they have on them, pitched in.
Darlene Buckner
And bought, like, underclothes and stuff like that. But right as they're doing that, as they're starting to pick up the pieces, a very different story about what actually happened that night is starting to emerge. This is the accident investigate, investigation tape. So hours after the fire gets put out, check, one, two, test, test. The deputy fire chief, he shows up and does a walkthrough of the burnt out house.
NetCredit
Okay, we're in the hallway now. And he starts in the front hallway. You can see where the fire came. Up through the walls and scorch the size of the walls up there. He and the cameraman start making their way down the hall towards the steps, then descend this, like, collapsed flight of stairs, which goes into the family room, where you can see, like, on the walls, the hand marks of the three firefighters who died in this room.
They were basically trying to feel their way out. Oh, man, them poor guys. And then they make their way down another flight of stairs, step out of the water. You all right? Yeah.
Greg Brown
Okay, you ready? Yeah, go ahead. Where they enter. Okay, we're now in the basement. The basement.
NetCredit
This is crazy. And the basement is, like, scorched. It's. It's a mess. There's, like, 16 inches of water on the floor.
And the first thing that they notice is that. And this is something that becomes a real focal point of the investigation, is that if you look up at the ceiling, you can see the heavy char on the. The ceiling beams in this area. It's almost like there's a big hole. Some of these beams have completely burned away.
Where these wooden beams used to be, some are completely burned through. And what it tells them is there must have been a fire that started on the floor and reached these ceiling beams about 8ft high, and essentially burned them all away. Once I had some preliminary feelings, I called. So the person who got called in to figure this out, to figure out how the fire had gone from the floor to the ceiling, was a federal investigator named Bill betrayed us. So it's not our first.
We could only talk to him over the phone, over speakerphone. But he explained that when he showed up at the scene that morning, his job was to draw a fence around reality, to basically say, like, okay, what in the world as we know it, with the laws of physics and fire dynamics, like, what could have happened here? Saying inside this fence. This could happen outside the fence. It can't happen.
And so, yeah, let's see if we can get some good shots of this furnace. All right, we're rolling. Bill takes a look at the furnace, and he pretty quickly rules that out as a potential cause. He also notices that there's no damage that's consistent with a natural gas leak, which likely would have caused an explosion. And so, like, in order to put up his fence, he's got to, like, rely on flame height calculation, mathematics, essentially, mass burn rate and heat combustion rate.
And basically what Bill is trying to conceive of is, like, what could have been in this basement that burned. Laundry chairs, books. Yeah, anything that could burn. And anything that burns burns in a certain way. And when it does, it releases a certain amount of heat.
So when you draw the fence, when you start to do these mathematical calculations, what those calculations show is that, like, whatever material was in this room prior to the fire, there's no way in the world any of that stuff could get a fire to reach those wood ceiling beams and even dream of igniting them, unless you added something like gasoline. Gasoline. You have to have a product in this room that has the same characteristics as gasoline. According to Bill's calculations, it's not just like, a little bit of gasoline. You'd need, like, a whole gallon of gasoline to get a fire that's that big, that can burn that hot for that long to burn out that ceiling.
And to Bill, it's clear that, like, a gallon of gas spread across the middle of the basement floor in the middle of the night, like, this fire could not have been an accident. This is an orphan fire. And if it's an arson fire, that means the deaths of those three firefighters. That isn't just some horrible tragedy, it's also triple homicide.
Latif Nasser
More in a minute after the break.
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Latif Nasser
Luthiff radio lab. We're back with Peter.
Okay. So we left off where an investigator had determined the fire was actually an arson. Yeah. Investigators determined that this thing that looked like an accident was actually a crime. Once they tell me it's a crime, I'm moving.
NetCredit
This is when federal agent Jason Wick gets pulled in. I start running down a road to try to figure out who did it. And we had a couple things going. Not a whole lot, but a couple things. One were the holes in the basement window.
So investigators had learned from the firefighters that when they first arrived, one of the basement windows had, like, two softball sized holes in it. So it's possible that, you know, somebody had broken out the window and torched the place. Like, thrown in a Molotov cocktail kind of thing. Yeah, yeah. Well, not exactly that.
I mean, the other thing is, like, pretty early on, investigators were searching an alleyway next to the house, and they found this sort of rolled up newspaper, and part of it was, like, singed. So they thought maybe that had been used as, like, a torch. The torch and the broken window. We possibly have somebody introducing flame from the outside to the inside into the basement. So we decided to go down that road, of course.
Jason Wick
Okay. We had learned through some interviews that Greg Brown was possibly involved in gang activity. So could this be an attack from the outside to their home for some reason? That was a theory, but investigators never really found any evidence that Greg belonged to a gang. That path now comes to a dead end.
Latif Nasser
What happens? Listen, we're kind of stuck. I mean, it happens. Investigations kind of cool off. This one did.
Where are we at? Probably in this, like, how far removed from the fire? I would say we are probably almost a year. Eight months to a year, Bill. Yeah, I'd say eight months, easy.
Jason Wick
Yeah, eight months. Eight months or so. When suddenly the investigation shifts to Darlene, because investigators learned that a couple months before the fire, she had been laid off from her job as a nurse. And we're getting insurance information back now. So what comes back from the insurance company is she was a renter for most of her life.
And, of course, when you rent, you can't buy insurance on the home. Cause you don't own the home, but you can buy renter's insurance on your contents, what you own inside the house, your furniture, your clothes, your jewelry, whatever. And after years of renting her home. For the first time in her life. Not long after getting laid off, took.
Out a renter's insurance policy and received the confirmation of that policy three weeks before this fire. The policy was for $20,000. On top of that, Darlene has also taken out a life insurance policy on her one year old step granddaughter, who was in the house at the time of the fire. Meaning if your one year old dies. You collect a big sum of money.
NetCredit
Darlene would have received $10,000 for the death of the one year old. Whoa. That's weird. So. And that was also recent?
Yeah, like, not long before the fire. But when you get this information, you. You start. The gears start turning. You're like, this is a possible motive.
Jason Wick
Absolutely. Yeah. Money motive. Absolutely. You know, as investigators see it, it's like Darlene is unemployed.
NetCredit
They also learned that around that time, she's also apparently trying to buy a. House, but it was divulged to her what closing costs would look like, how much she would need to put down to buy this home and did not have it. And all of this is happening, like, right before she took out these insurance policies. A coincidence? Maybe.
Jason Wick
Maybe not. I mean, there's an old saying, an investigation. There are no coincidences. And just as they're sort of, like, figuring out the possible motive, investigators also got this tip that a neighbor says he has information about this fire. In a nutshell, what he says is he's at home that night, he hears.
NetCredit
A noise, looks out his window, notices. Smoke in the street, sees Greg Brown, his neighbor. He says his neighbor, kid from two doors down, is on the street looking at the house. And most importantly, is there were no. Fire or police out on scene yet.
And if you remember, Greg and Darlene's story is that they're driving back from the grocery store together, and you can. See, like, flashing lights, fire trucks and stuff. But according to this neighbor, Greg is out there before any firefighters have arrived, which means he wasn't at the grocery store with his mom before his fire began. We are breaking their alibi. We are breaking that story.
And then another break. One day, I receive a phone call. Hey, listen. Greg Brown has been arrested for possessing a gun and drugs, and he is in a juvenile detention center in eastern Pennsylvania. I said, really?
Jason figures that Greg isn't going to talk to him. So you look up cellmates of your. Target, they end up talking to a bunch of different kids, and they finally find this 15 year old kidde who had bunked with Greg. And he said that Gregory had bragged to him about setting a fire at his home in Pittsburgh for his mother and that three fire heads were killed. I never heard that term before, you know, firemen were fire heads.
Jason Wick
And for setting the fire, mom was supposed to buy him a Lexus, I believe, a car. And with that, I get a knock at my door. I'm like, well, you know, what's going on? Pittsburgh police arrest Darlene. I'm like, what?
Greg Brown
One day I get to school, and they got all the doors closed, all. The doors to the classrooms, right? And two federal agents arrest Greg. I knew what it was for, though. I already knew it.
NetCredit
They were arrested on charges of arson, insurance fraud, conspiracy, and triple homicide. And, you know, at this point, Greg and Darlene maintain their innocence. They say they're totally innocent. We had nothing to do with this fire. We were at the grocery store at the time of the fire.
But, you know, the state sort of pursues them and says, you know, because this is a felony, and three firefighters died of, they're gonna be charged with second degree murder. And actually, this is, like, not where the plea comes in at all. Like, this is where they're brought to trial. Oh, so they don't wanna take a plea? Actually, the plea wasn't even an option.
The prosecutors didn't even put a plea on the table. They didn't even offer them a deal. And so, like, for Greg and Darlene, who maintain their innocence, the only option. Is to fight it. Right?
To fight to take it to trial and to prove. Well, actually, not to prove, because at trial, the onus is on the state to prove beyond reasonable doubt that you did the crimes that they're accusing you of. And so the defense's job, your job as a defendant, is to undermine that case, the argument against you, and sort of present the story that says, no, we didn't do that. And so the first thing the defense does is really, they go after the arson investigation. I mean, the long and the short of it is, in this investigation, there's no science here.
So I talked to this guy, Craig. Beiler, technical director emeritus at Jensen Hughes. He was later brought on as a defense expert. So Jensen Hughes is a fire protection engineering consulting firm. It does anything to do with fire and then some.
And Craig explained that a hallmark of the scientific method, and indeed, a cardinal rule of, like, fire arson investigation, is that when you walk into a scene, you have to collect as much data as possible. You have to keep an open mind. You have to come from a place of not knowing. But Craig said, when he looked through the investigative notes, when he looks at Bill Petritis, the arson investigators report, he. Didn'T do an electrical investigation.
Latif Nasser
He didn't do an investigation of the natural gas system or the appliances. He didn't interview the firefighters who saw. The fire, fought the fire. He didn't interview the family about how. This room was configured, what was there, how it was.
NetCredit
Craig says what Bill did is when he went into the basement and saw those burned out ceiling beams, he developed this hunch that likely gasoline was involved, and he used some calculations to confirm his hunch. And that's not okay. Any fool, you know can multiply a couple numbers together and come up with an answer. That's not science. It's not how you get the right answer.
Latif Nasser
And he didn't get the right answer. What do you think the right answer is? I don't know, and neither does he. That was the right answer is I don't know. Yes, based on the data they collected.
The only thing you can say is it's undetermined. Okay, so you don't think this was arson? I think I already told you it's undetermined. So that's the argument against the arson investigation. But there's also this question of motivation and of the insurance money.
NetCredit
And so if you look. Wait, should I pull up the trial? Yeah, sure. So, yeah, if you look up the trial transcript, you can see that the insurance investigator is called to the stand, and he basically says that after the fire, they talk to the family, they talk to Darlene, and they're also trying to determine the total value of everything that's inside the house, the contents of the house, how much was lost in damages. And so the thing that they come up with this number is, like, $52,000 worth of possessions were lost in the fire.
And the insurance policy. I don't know if you remember this, but it was $20,000. Right, right. And so the defense's argument is, like, basically, this doesn't really add up. Like, why would you torture your own home if you end up, like, losing an enormous amount of money?
Latif Nasser
Sure, I can see that. But then what about. There was the life insurance policy on the baby, which felt very suspicious. Yeah. I mean, so the life insurance didn't really come up at trial, but it is sort of, like, in there a little bit.
NetCredit
And, like, the defense's argument is essentially, like, you know, the one year old who had this life insurance policy, she's still alive, she didn't die in the fire, and so there was no payment made. I've never heard of someone insuring a one year old before. Has she said why she did that or what? Like, I've never even heard of that. It does sound unusual.
So, okay. I did end up calling Darlene, Peter. Ron, and I speaker one, so that. I could talk to her and her husband Ron, because Ron said basically everybody in the house had license except my granddaughter. Ron had insurance through his work.
And over the years, like, he and Darlene had basically decided to take out policies for everybody else in their family. That's just something that you do. We do is, you know, you get life insurance for your whole family just so that in the event something happened, you know, you can bury your loved one without having to do a GoFundme. Well, I don't even know if they. Were go fund me.
Darlene Buckner
They wasn't even having to go fund me now or having to bag people, you know, for something that you, as a family, should be able to take care of yourself. But there is this other big thing, which is Greg and Darlene's alibi. They claim they were at the grocery store that night, and sort of remarkably, one thing that they submit as evidence is the receipt. Wow. That Darlene has kept from her trip.
Latif Nasser
To that grocery store. So lucky. Yeah. But also maybe suspect. Like, why did she save this receipt and not all of her other receipts?
NetCredit
But anyway, she has this receipt of. It's time stamped, and it's for $36.22 for the ingredients that she needed to make this salad. Green pepper, celery. Wow. But at the same time, it's not like they paid cash, so it could have been somebody else.
None of the security footage, the video tapes from that night of the grocery store, they never turned up. So there's nothing to confirm that Darlene and Greg were actually there. But it's not nothing. It's like, something. It's saying somebody was there at that exact time.
Yeah, right. But I think the question is, like, was Greg there? Right? So, at the trial, the prosecution is also calling on their two key witnesses. And you have this neighbor guy who placed Greg at the scene of the crime, and then you have this.
This 15 year old kid from juvie who said, I he heard Greg bragging about setting this fire. First of all, who's bragging about setting fires in the black community? I'm just being honest. Greg is like, who does that? Nobody does that.
Greg Brown
You understand what I'm saying? It's not even a cool crime. Like, name a rap lyric. Tupac, anybody? Ooh, that's a cool crime I committed.
I set a fire. But I'm saying I can't say that in court. Who's the jury that want to hear that shit? The defense says, you know, why are you gonna trust this kid? Like, he's a juvenile delinquent, you know, like, he's a jailhouse snitch and also.
Dude, like, a fat, awkward kid. We didn't. We just didn't. We didn't click. They sort of implied that Greg had bullied him.
NetCredit
So basically, he's here to get revenge. Like it's payback or. Right. He's trying to get back at Greg for making fun of him while they were bunkmates. But the problem is, the prosecutor asked the kidde when he's testifying, they're like, you know, what brought you here today?
Why are you testifying? And he said he'd talked to his mom about it. He's doing it. Cause his mom told him this is the right thing to do.
The trial lasted, like, three weeks, and at the end of it, the jury deliberated for two days. And when they came back to jury Foreman, he read out Darlene's verdict first. And it's like, you know, to wit, February 21, 1997. We, the jurors and Pendleton above case, find the defendant, Darlene Buckner. As to arson.
Not guilty. Criminal conspiracy, not guilty. Then they read the three murder charges. Not guilty. And then on the last charge, insurance fraud.
Guilty. That was it. I said, they gonna get me. Jury Foreman continues. Gregory Brown, junior.
As to the charges of arson. Guilty. Insurance fraud. Guilty. As to murder.
Guilty. Guilty. Guilty. That was just numb. I can't.
Greg Brown
I wasn't there. I just. I just, like, blacked out. I melted down. Darlene was eventually sentenced three years probation, 500 hours of community service, and a $5,000 fine.
NetCredit
Greg was sentenced to life in prison. No chance of parole. But the system spoke. System spoke. Yeah, it made no sense.
Greg Brown
I knew my thing was just. All this is irrelevant for me, you know, now it's just a pill. Pill. Yeah. I don't even know why I'm here.
Me, personally, I don't even know why I'm even in the courtroom. What? I'm not going to say nothing. Greg gets sent to a maximum security. Prison, to the biggest jail in the state.
NetCredit
Cell blocks the length of a football field. Four or 500 people to a block. You gotta get nervous. You just telling yourself you should be scared. You seeing big dudes, they out on the tear, they walking around, come to find out it wasn't that bad.
Greg Brown
Cause everybody in there is not bad. You know, majority of people got the same goal, to get out. And so what happens next is I. Started my appeals immediately. The first appeal is denied so is the next one and the next one and the next one and the next.
One represented years dragged by my pill. Rights are like dead when in 2005, voila. Serves as last guest. Hail Mary, Darlene. We start off with a letter with.
NetCredit
Everyone sends a letter off to this guy, Bill Mooshe. I was an investigative reporter for 25. Years in Pittsburgh, and he started this innocence institute in Pittsburgh so I could. Teach kids how to do investigative reporting in the criminal justice system. And Darlene gave Bill the case is so massive.
Of every single document she had relating to the case. I read volumes and volumes. You know, boxes full of stuff. Records our students went through, poured over stuff. But we couldn't get to the point of proving actual innocence, which that's what the project's motto was, wasn't reasonable doubt.
Greg Brown
It was actual innocence. And if we can't prove actual innocence, then we're not going to do anything with it. Right, but you did stick with this case. Well, I mean, Darlene was a convincing. Person, and frankly, I liked her, you know, but also, Bill had gotten this tip.
NetCredit
You want the whole thing? A tip from Greg's lawyer? All right. My name is Al Lindsay. I represented Greg Brown back in 1997.
And basically, like Al told Bill that during Greg's trial, he had always had this hunch that somehow, as improbable as it sounded, I thought that these witnesses, the two key witnesses who testified against Greg, the neighbor and the kid from juvie, were actually paid, bribed to provide evidence implicating Greg Brown. And this is because he had heard from one of Greg's friends that he was offered $7,000 for any information that tied Greg to the fire. That's right. And the prosecution had always denied this. Once we got the idea that they.
Latif Nasser
Had paid witnesses, we just started sending letters. Matt Stroud was one of Bill's students. To Ibrahim Abdullah and Keith Wright. Keith Wright was the neighbor. Ibrahim Abdullah was the kid from the juvenile detention center.
But we didn't get anything in response to any of those letters. And so Bill and I went driving all over creation, just knocking on doors, trying to find people. And then one night after, like, spending the whole day knocking on doors, I. Was tired, started making dinner for my wife. And then I got a call from a number I didn't recognize.
Picked it up. Hello, mister Abdul? And he said who it was? Yeah. Okay, good.
NetCredit
So what we. What we needed to find out, first of all, is it all right if I record this conversation? You already was recording it. No, I gotta let you know if I'm doing that. What we're trying to find out is who contacted you from the ATF after that fire?
Greg Brown
It was Jason Wick, especially. Okay. And that's who I basically dealt with the whole time. Okay. And the other thing we're trying to find out is we've heard that there was a reward offered to people who were willing to speak out in this case.
NetCredit
And, like, remember back in the trial, this sort of came up. Ibrahim was asked, like, were you given anything for your testimony? And he's like, no, I just talked to my mom. Like, this is the right thing to do. But now, were you paid a reward?
Latif Nasser
Yeah, he admitted to it. What was the reward you were paid? It was supposed to be 15,000, but it was 5000. Now, what happened? What happened in that situation?
Greg Brown
I got it in cash. You got it in cash? Yeah. They just showed up one day out of the boo. I didn't even know they were coming.
Latif Nasser
Who? Who showed up to give you the cash? Jason Wick and. Jason Wick and somebody else. And we hit the jackpot with that one day bill.
Greg Brown
This was in all. This was like, in the summer of 2010. I'm on the phone with him one day. He said. He said, greg, I got some mail coming.
You're going to want it. I'm like, all right. Yeah, man. Greg opened the envelope, and in it was a photocopy of two checks. One check for 5000 and another check for 10,000.
But they had the names blacked out. Redacted, so you couldn't see who the checks had been written out to. But Ibrahim said that he'd gotten $5,000. And presumably Keith Wright, the neighbor, got 10,000 some. Holy shit.
This is it. Yeah, man. I'm getting emotional thinking about it. I couldn't believe it. Cause you just like, yeah, I shedded some tears.
I didn't even know. Like, I was happy, though. I didn't break down. I just. They just came.
NetCredit
I was happy because to Greg, like, after 14 years of being guilty, of. Being found guilty, I said, I got him now. In his eyes, this was physical proof of his innocence. It's over. I got their ass.
Greg Brown
Got their ass. Go ahead. So just to be clear, did you pay witnesses when we talked to Jason Wick about this? Oh, absolutely. He was like, yeah, of course we paid witnesses.
Jason Wick
We have receipts of us paying him. We're not trying to hide anything. But Jason says the payments got made well after the trial, and they were given essentially, to the witnesses for a job well done. But, oh, they paid him. So therefore.
Oh, he must have promised the money throughout or before the trial, right? It's an assumption. It's a false assumption. But you're saying the possibility of payments didn't even come up in these conversations with these witnesses? Never, not one time.
I promised them no money. Listen, so let me pose a question to you guys, right? So let's say hypothetically I did, which I did not. Does that change the outcome of this case? Does it change what Ibrahim Abdullah said?
No. And in fact, neither witnessed Keith Wright, the neighbor, or Ibrahim Abdullah. Did he say that he started that fire? Recant their testimony? Man, that was 15 years ago.
Greg Brown
I'm not going to even say that was. I can't remember most of it, be honest with you. But in 2014, these payments, this whole issue of paying witnesses was basically the focus of a mini trial where the judge ultimately ruled there was a, quote, avalanche of evidence, unquote, that showed these witnesses knew they were going to get paid and that information should have been given to the defense, but it wasn't. Which meant I looked over, he looked at me. In 2016, a guard tells Greg, come.
On, you out of here. You're free to go home. God bless him. In the time that he's going to have with his family. Greg.
NetCredit
After like, 20 years of prison, Greg finally stepped and out into this, like, parking lot where he's greeted by, you know, lights, cameras, reporters, and he's standing there with his lawyers, his arm around his mom. People in the firefighter community who still have strong feelings about this case, and they think that you're still the guy. I would like to, you know, thank the fireman for saving my, you know, my family and I did a job. But I want everybody to know that I'm innocent. I'm happy to be out.
Greg Brown
I'm innocent, me and my family. Nobody had nothing to do with this. Matter of fact, it wasn't even a crime committed. It wasn't even the arson. And right here, this moment, that's a dead say.
NetCredit
And at that point, because we, the attorney cuts him off, because prosecuting attorneys for the government have already filed a motion to retry the case. What? Why? I think the argument is really that they believe that they got it right and they got it right the first time. The jury got it right.
Greg is guilty and the sentence was life in prison, and Greg belongs back in prison. Wow. But I guess, like, this time around is a little bit different because Greg is about to find himself with this really unusual offer. And this offer will plant Greg, like, right in the middle of these two opposing versions of the truth and right between, like guilt and innocence.
Latif Nasser
All right, we're gonna leave you in an in between space for about a minute and a half and then, yeah, come on back.
Progressive
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Greg Brown
Subscribe to reveal wherever you get your podcasts.
Latif Nasser
I'm Latif Nasser. This is Radiolab. We're here with Peter Smith telling us the story of Greg Brown Juniore, who, after nearly 20 years in prison, has been let out, but now is facing another trial. And this isn't double jeopardy. You know, this is a different, slightly different charge.
Why is it not double jeopardy? Well, in Pennsylvania state courts, it might have been double jeopardy, but he's charged with a different crime in federal court. These are new charges. So it's not a retrial, technically. Right.
Greg Brown
So the summer of 21, Greg has. Been out of prison for about five. Years, trying to start my life. I'm around family. I mean, I was on straight and narrow.
But long story short. So I met up with the attorneys. We had a meeting here at Dave's office. Dave Fawcett was going to be Greg's lead attorney on this new trial. I've been working three plus decades as a trial lawyer.
NetCredit
So Greg goes to meet Dave and all the other attorneys at Dave's, you know, fancy law firm on the rooftop, on this patio. And the rooftop conversation was, would he consider a plea? This is another one of Greg's attorneys, Liz Delosa. Does that start with you all? So I can't go in too much to detail because plea negotiations are protected.
This is, this is the frustrating part about pleas. They sort of exist in this black box. We don't know exactly what happened, and the prosecutors in this case declined to comment on the plea. But the best we can tell is they were like, you know, we've been gearing up to take this to trial and just putting this out there. Like, would you ever consider a deal where Greg agrees to plead guilty?
Yeah. Yeah. That just started us, you know, saying to Greg, you have to start to think about whether it's even something that you would consider. And if so, what would that look like? So they all went around the table and said how they felt.
All the attorneys are going around the. Table, and they're nervous as hell. Yeah. Like, the criminal justice system is flawed, and we can't guarantee that if we go back to trial, we will win. A and so there is a huge risk.
I mean, they're basically telling him, like, look, you already lost at the first trial. And if we go back to trial, even if there's this new evidence, there's still this chance that you're gonna lose. And if you do, that probably means you're gonna go back to prison for the rest of your life. Dude, do you wanna go back? Do you wanna risk this, literally putting.
Progressive
Your life on the line? But Dave, I was saying, I'm gonna win this case. He didn't wanna take a deal. Dave is like, no, no. Hell no.
NetCredit
We are gonna win this case. Either they drop the damn check, or we're going to trial. I wanted to try the case in the worst way, right? And I was like, that, too. That's what Greg wanted to do.
Greg Brown
That's all I ever wanted to do. Fight back, hold the prosecutors accountable, show. Him they wasn't going to break me. And clear his name for good. But then as the conversations kept going around, I heard two things.
NetCredit
One, the federal defender, Lisa Freeland, is her name. She said, dave, when the prosecutor walks into court and you got a black guy sitting in a chair and the prosecutor says he's guilty, you're 90, 90% of the way there, regardless of what the evidence shows. And Jason, my partner, who I respect highly, his view was, if there's any chance, any chance of a conviction, why the hell wouldn't you take a deal? And, you know, I'm waiting on to see what Dave say. And Dave, I thought, damn, Dave just said, man, just.
Greg Brown
It's too much of a risk. Yeah. So I like, damn Mandy. And at this point, all of Greg's lawyers are essentially like, look, we know this isn't great. It's hard, but we think we can get you a deal where you walk, where you don't get any more prison time, and all of this would finally be done.
And I'm like, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not. Never. I said, I'm never gonna admit that I did this. Greg was like, no, I would rather risk it all than have to say. I set the fire, say all or nothing.
Then either I'm gonna be free or get convicted again.
NetCredit
And here's where the story gets unusual in the extreme. I mean, we don't know the exact back and forth, but eventually one of Greg's attorneys must have said to him something like, look, there's this other way out. Like, you can plead guilty but still say you're innocent. What the hell? He's like, yeah, you're taking the deal, but you're maintaining total innocence, right?
Latif Nasser
Exactly. This is it. This is. We are. We have arrived.
NetCredit
This is what's known as an Alfred plea. This always throws me, actually, to be honest, even though I've, like, I've been obsessed with this and thought about this so much. Like it always is such a weird. It's like a little logic puzzle. Yeah, it really is.
I mean, you're getting a conviction because the person is pleading guilty, but at the same time, you get a conviction where the defendant is standing up and saying, I'm not guilty. Wait a minute. How is this allowed? Like, is this a thing? So I ended up calling a bunch of people, legal scholars and experts, and I was just trying to figure out, like, how does this plea make any.
Johanna Helgren
Sense, starting with, I kind of vary it. Johanna. For a long time, I would just be like, Joanna, but that's not my name. Johanna Helgren, who has. Has for years, been researching this Alfred plea.
Yeah. So can we just start, like, where did the Alfred plea, where did it even come from? Yeah, I mean, the way it came to be, this guy, Henry Alford, was accused of first degree murder. This is like the early 1960s. So first degree murder meant he was facing the death penalty, but he took.
A plea for, I believe, second degree. Murder, which meant instead he'd get life in prison. Yeah, but when he gets up to enter his plea in front of the judge, Alfred says, and I'll quote from the transcript right here, hold on 1 second. He says, I just pleaded guilty because they said if I didn't, they'd gas me. I'm just pleading because I don't want to get the death penalty, but I didn't do it.
NetCredit
And then later he said, I'm not guilty, but I plead guilty. Right now, we have no way of knowing whether Alfred did or didn't do it, whether he's actually guilty or nothing. But what we do know is that people plead guilty even when they're innocent. And we have, you know, the data is really imperfect. We don't know how often, you know, innocent people plead guilty, but we know it happens.
But, like, basically before Alfred, nobody had ever come out and, like, blurted it out. Like, I plead guilty, but I'm I maintain my innocence. And, like, up until that point, it wasn't even clear if, you know, if the courts would accept that if you could legally do that. Right? And so after a series of, like, appeals and arguments and, you know, sort of running up the food chain, the question eventually landed on the docket of the Supreme Court in 1970, and they.
Johanna Helgren
Were essentially like, listen, you can say whatever you want. We don't need you to say that. You'Re guilty, because, yeah, they were basically like, whatever. You can say whatever you want about whether you're guilty or innocent, as long as the two sides agree and the judge, you know, sort of sanctions that, officially, fine, go for it. But in the 1970s, and actually for a while now, the criminal justice system had been starting to pivot from the system of trials into something else entirely.
NetCredit
Basically, what happens between 1970 and today is you get all these things. Good evening. Tonight, there's something special to talk about. You get. Drugs are menacing our society.
The war on drugs. I have one goal, one objective. Rockefeller laws, and that is to stop the pushing of drugs. You get mandatory sentencing, life sentence for pushers. You get street level drug dealing, the prostitution, the graffiti, broken windows, policing kids.
Progressive
That are called super predators. This theory of super predators, first we have to bring them to heal and take back our streets from crime, gangs, and drugs. And all of this means more and more people are getting arrested, so much so that the system can't handle it. Like, if all these cases went to trial, the system would collapse. And prosecutors aren't just gonna, like, let everybody go.
NetCredit
There needs to be some sort of pressure relief valve, and that is essentially the plea deal, guilty pleas. But today, we're at the point where. Plea bargaining accounts for about, like, 97% of all cases. Wow, very interesting to me, when you hear people talk about kind of high profile cases, and it's like, oh, he took a plea. He's, like, copping out.
Johanna Helgren
It's like, no, that's what everyone does. This basically is the justice system. Now, despite that, we, you know, the normal person would think, legal system, trial, right? Like, two lawyers in court, the whole thing. But.
NetCredit
But really, at this point, like, the justice system is essentially like, facilitating plea deals. It's essentially like lubricating pleas. And Johanna says, like, you can see the Alfred plea as just another tool in the toolbox to avoid going to trial. Legal scholars have argued that the Alfred plea increases the number of innocent people taking pleas, because where the traditional plea, where you have to admit guilt might be enough of an obstacle for some innocent people to say, no, I'm not going to plead the Alfred plea could get some people over that and be like, okay, fine. At least I can still say that I'm innocent.
Or it might be appealing to somebody who's actually guilty because they can also say they're innocent. But either way, according to Johanna, Alfred. Pleas are actually more common than jury trials, which is pretty crazy. Crazy, yeah. So, really, Alfred pleas are more common?
Johanna Helgren
Yes, they are more common than jury trials. What, despite the fact that you think this thing that's totally usual. The trial, the trial by jury. I mean, I feel like that's written into the constitution. And at the same time, this thing that's totally unusual.
NetCredit
Like nobody's ever heard of Alfred. I mean, that seems like a contradiction, right? It does feel like, for me, the. Like, I almost see it. Like the plea deal became a shortcut for the trial, and then it almost feels like the Alfred plea became a shortcut for the plea deal.
Latif Nasser
So it's like a shortcut to a shortcut. And now what we've weirdly created is a system where you have someone literally saying out loud, I'm innocent, and then they don't get a trial, and they go, it's like, go straight to jail. But they just said they're innocent. It's an absurd thing. It's like, we've created that path in.
Elie Mystal
The system, and we should be horrified by that. So one of the other people we turned to was Elie Mistall. He's a writer and thinker on legal matters, who we often turn to when we don't understand a legal issue. Right. So let's start here.
An Alford plea is fundamentally a form of coercion, because it's basically telling a person, admit to this crime, or else we'll kill you. But why is it coercive, if there is a chance in the trial that you. That you won't be found guilty? Well, his own lawyers tell him, we're gonna lose. Ellie says, take Henry Alfred, for example.
NetCredit
Here was a black man likely facing an all white jury. And we can talk about systematic racism, and we can talk about all these things, but fundamentally, he's gonna lose. Like, how are you, the non lawyer citizen, really in a position to be like, no lawyer? You're wrong. I'm gonna go to trial.
Elie Mystal
If they kill me, they get me. But at least what? Who does that? Your actual lawyer is telling you, and your lawyer is probably not wrong, that they can't prove your case. And as much as we might want to talk about how, like, oh, well, he still gets to claim his innocence.
Legally, he doesn't. Legally, the Alfred plea is a lie. When you take an Alford plea, you lose your legal right to appeal. Legally speaking, it does not preserve the legal points of maintaining your innocence. But never forget that the Alford plea is the smart play, that the.
That it is the rational play, that it's not. For the most part, it's not people who have been tricked or duped by attorneys. Right. It's not people who have gotten unreliable advice of counsel. A lot of times they've gotten great advice of counsel.
And that great advice is to fold, is to give up because the prosecutorial advantages are such. But that doesn't mean that they actually did. I was like, I gotta discuss this with my family. I'm like, cause this is bigger than just me. And so for someone like Greg, who has always maintained his innocence and essentially spent 20 years trying to prove that he's innocent, he's in this place where he's being told by his legal counsel, like, you should probably take this deal.
Greg Brown
I called Fred. He works downtown. I'm like, Brian, I just met with the lawyers. I need to talk to you. Fred is Greg's little brother.
So he said, it'll be over. He said, it'll be all the way over. You could just move on with your life. I was like, yeah. And then he googled Alphabet right there with you.
Yeah. And then he's like, yep, this is what it is. Damn. Just he like, I guess we just gotta get it over eventually. Greg does decide to go ahead and take the Alfred plea.
NetCredit
And so, yeah, they have this hearing before the judge. Obviously, his conviction, guilty, you know, stands on the record. But there are sort of other consequences or concessions that you make in sort of foregoing your constitutional right to a trial. There's no chance that he can appeal this. He's never got a chance to dispute the science.
You know, there's all these things. Does Greg get to make a speech or anything like that? No, it's just basically yes or no questions. Do you agree? I mean, do you understand your rights?
Do you agree to this plea? And then both sides read into the record, like, what they believe is their version of the truth. And, you know, but I don't know. I guess for me, it's like, if you believe that, like, courts are this place where people come to tell the whole truth and nothing but in the end, the Alfred plea allows both sides to exist in this weird. Maybe not weird, but they allow both sides to tell their version of the truth coming back.
Latif Nasser
You're pulling up some videos. Yep. And these versions of the truth continue to exist sort of in parallel, and they never get resolved. The first part about my presentation is the fire. So one of the federal investigators, this guy Matthew Ragnton, he presents this case, Greg's case, at conferences for other fire investigators.
And we put the heat flux data into simplified ignition correlations for wood surfaces. Now, this is where he basically says, like, look, we got this, right? Science is on our side. But I will say this until I can't talk anymore, and Jason will say this and Bill will say this, there are never two sides to the truth. And we.
We have an absolute belief in what. The truth is that Greg is guilty. He committed a violent felony, and three people died. Now, like, at the same time that Matt is giving these presentations, you just went to Arizona, right? Yes.
NetCredit
That was last weekend. Yes. Greg, for the first time since 96, left Pennsylvania, flew to Arizona to this innocence network conference. It was amazing. I mean, I met people from Montana, Michigan, all over the state, hundreds of his honor rigs.
And Greg said it was fun. You know, he was in his element. He felt like he totally belonged there. But, like, inwardly, this is something he told me and something his attorneys have told me. Like, a lot of these other people have truly proven their innocence, at least in the eyes of the law.
You know, like, they're exonerated. Whereas Greg took this plea. And that shit hurt because some guys did. Some people did fight it out, and they got exonerated. They got exonerated.
Greg Brown
Some people got money. Yeah. They're like, a friend told me, he said, call me from jail. I said, I got missed villains. It's over, but it's nothing.
And he said, you know what it is? He said, you got a decision instead of the knockout you wanted to knock out. I said, that's exactly how I felt. And so if you pull up Greg's record, it will always show, technically on paper, that he is guilty. So, yeah, it hurt.
That's something I'll deal with the rest of my life.
The rest of my life.
Latif Nasser
This episode was reported by Peter Andre Smith and Matt Keelty and produced by Matt Keelty. Original music and sound design contributed by, once again, Matt Keelty with mixing help from Jeremy Bloom. Fact checking by Emily Krieger edited by Becca Bresler and Pat Walters special thanks to John Lentino, Amanda Galuli, Fred Buckner, Debbie Steinmeier, Jason Hazelwood, Meredith Kennedy, and Marissa Bluestein. I'm glad you all now know about the Alford Plea and hopefully you will never have to use it. That's all for us.
Thanks so much. Hi, I'm Rhianne and I'm from Donegal in Ireland. And here are the staff credits. Radiolab was created by Jad Aboumrad and is edited by Soren Wheeler. Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are our co hosts.
Greg Brown
Drinkief is our director of sound design. Our staff includes Simon Adler, Jeremy Bloom, Becca Bresler, Ikedie Foster, Kees W. Harry Fortuna, David Gable, Maria Paz Guterres, Cinder Nan, Isambadan, Matt Keelty, Annie McEwan, Alex Neeson, Saru Cari, Valentina Powers, Sarah Sambak, Arianne Wack, Pat Walters, and Molly Webster. Our fat checkers are Diane Kelly, Emily Krugmandhe, Natalie Middleton.
Latif Nasser
Hi. This is Beth from San Francisco. Leadership support for Radiolab science programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Science Sandbox Assignments Foundation Initiative and. The John Templeton foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P.
Sloan foundation.
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Latif Nasser
Sponsorship dot wnyc.org.