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Justice Seekers Podcast

Justice Seekers Podcast

By: Justice Seekers
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Two attorneys go beyond the headlines to shine a light on stories that hide, exposing the bones of legal cases left to molder in our hallowed halls of justice.


We find the claims that didn't make the news and the facts that didn't make the record—the questions that didn't reach the bench and the answers that didn't come from it—the voices of truth that never got their chance to be heard.


Join us, friends, as we venture into the underworld of long forgotten lawfare and learn how verdicts are really handed down.

© 2026 Justice Seekers Podcast
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Episodes
  • Episode 22 When Parents Are Prosecuted: The New Legal Theory of Criminal Liability
    Mar 23 2026

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    What happens when prosecutors charge parents for their child’s school shooting?

    In this episode of Justice Seekers, we break down the landmark Crumbley case, a recent Georgia murder conviction, and emerging cases where parents are charged before an attack occurs.

    We explore criminal negligence, parental liability, gun access, warning signs, and how prosecutors are redefining responsibility in mass shooting cases.

    Can failing to act become a crime? And where does the law draw the line?

    Mixed & Edited by Next Day Podcast

    info@nextdaypodcast.com

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    25 mins
  • Episode 21: A Drop of Trust: The Legal Case Behind Theranos.
    Mar 16 2026

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    Theranos promised a revolution in blood testing: hundreds of lab results from a single drop of blood.

    The idea made Elizabeth Holmes one of Silicon Valley’s most celebrated founders and brought Theranos machines into Walgreens pharmacies across the country.

    But behind the promise, the technology wasn’t working.

    In this episode of Justice Seekers, Natalie and Katrina break down the Theranos scandal through the lens of criminal fraud law. Why did so many sophisticated investors believe? What happens legally when a company claims a product works when it doesn’t? And why did prosecutors focus on investor fraud instead of patient harm?

    Because fraud cases rarely look dramatic in real time. They look like emails, meetings, pitch decks—and small decisions that slowly compound.

    By the time the law steps in, the trust has already been broken.


    Mixed & Edited by Next Day Podcast

    info@nextdaypodcast.com

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    21 mins
  • Episode 20: The Supreme Court and True Crime: Landmark Criminal Procedure Cases That Shape Your Encounters
    Mar 9 2026

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    In this episode of Justice Seekers, attorneys Natalie Stubbs and Katrina break down the constitutional rules behind some of the most important criminal procedure cases in American history. These decisions define what police can do, what your rights are, and what happens when the government crosses the line.

    But this isn’t a law school lecture.

    It’s a plain-language guide to the constitutional guardrails that apply when real people encounter law enforcement—from interrogations and searches to roadside traffic stops.

    If you’ve ever wondered:

    • When do police have to read Miranda rights?
    • What does “I want a lawyer” actually do legally?
    • Can officers search your car without a warrant?
    • What is reasonable suspicion vs. probable cause?
    • How long can a traffic stop legally last?

    This episode walks you through the landmark cases that answer those questions.

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    26 mins
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