Listen Bitch Presents TELL ME WHY YOU'RE SPECIAL
In this gripping episode of Listen Bitch Presents: Tell Me Why You’re Special, I sit down with Gregg Owen — former Chicago murder prosecutor, former touring rock musician, and author of Convergence — to talk about high-profile murder cases, courtroom corruption, criminal psychology, and the hidden realities of the justice system. Gregg shares his unbelievable journey from performing music on tour in the 1960s and 70s to prosecuting homicide cases in Chicago during one of the most corrupt eras in the city’s legal history. We discuss murder trials, witness intimidation, Operation Greylord, courtroom strategy, legal corruption, jury psychology, missing evidence, prosecutorial pressure, criminal justice reform, and the emotional toll of handling homicide cases for decades. Gregg also opens up about the psychological impact of trying 61 murder jury trials, how courtroom tactics influence juries, and why defense attorneys play a crucial role in preventing miscarriages of justice. This episode dives deep into true crime, corruption inside the legal system, criminal investigations, high-profile murder cases, human behavior, trauma, ethics, and the reality behind media portrayals of the courtroom. We also discuss Gregg’s book Convergence, his transition from musician to prosecutor, and how his life experiences shaped his understanding of justice and human nature. If you love true crime podcasts, courtroom drama, criminal psychology, legal corruption stories, and behind-the-scenes murder investigations, this conversation is going to hook you immediately. Gregg Owen has lived two completely different lives. I’m a former Chicago murder prosecutor who took a very unusual path to the courtroom. Before law school, I was a touring rock musician who performed across the Midwest and opened shows for bands like The Doors. But a personal turning point led me to leave music, cut my hair, and apply for an internship with the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office. Within a few years I was prosecuting murder cases in Chicago’s 26th and California courthouse, eventually trying more than sixty jury trials — most of them homicides. My book Convergence tells the true story of a brutal double murder that was solved in days but didn’t go to trial for four years. The case unfolded in the middle of a courthouse culture so corrupt it would later trigger the FBI’s historic Operation Greylord investigation. Today I share the behind-the-scenes realities of homicide trials, courtroom corruption, and the strange path that took me from rock stages to murder prosecutions. In the late 1960s he was a touring rock musician, performing with major bands including The American Breed, whose hit “Bend Me, Shape Me” climbed the Billboard charts. Within a few years he traded the stage for a courtroom. Gregg became a prosecutor in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office in Chicago, where he tried 64 jury trials — 61 of them murder cases. He later became the first Chief of the Gang Prosecutions Unit in Illinois, handling some of Chicago’s most violent criminal organizations. Today Gregg writes true crime drawn from the cases he personally prosecuted. His debut book Convergence tells the extraordinary true story of a brutal Chicago double murder and the four-year legal battle that followed.
103 episodios
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