Lock'd Up with Copville
For years, people repeated the same story: “The case was dismissed because Detective Dilks was Brady-listed and couldn’t testify.” There was just one problem with that narrative… according to the appellate court, it wasn’t true. In this episode, we break down the court’s findings after a trial judge originally dismissed a major case while blaming delays tied to investigative materials involving Detective Dilks. The lower court claimed the state failed to provide information connected to Dilks and that the defense was prevented from using it because of a gag order. But the appellate court completely dismantled that reasoning. The ruling stated: * The FBI investigation into Detective Dilks ended with no charges * The state did not possess the investigative materials initially * The documents therefore did not qualify as Brady material * The state was not the primary cause of the delay * The defendants never properly asserted their speedy trial rights * And the defense failed to prove actual prejudice Bottom line? The appellate court ruled the case should be reinstated and sent back for further proceedings. So why did the public spend years hearing that the case collapsed because Detective Dilks supposedly couldn’t testify? We examine: * How narratives get manufactured inside the justice system * The misuse of the term “Brady” in public discussion * Whether people intentionally distorted the facts * And how reputations can be damaged through repeated claims unsupported by the actual ruling This episode dives into court records, contradictions, and the question nobody wants to answer: Was the “Brady-listed Dilks” story ever true… or was it a convenient excuse? https://flcourts-media.flcourts.gov/content/download/2485130/opinion/Opinion_2024-0546.pdf Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]
76 episodios
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