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Ashley Flowers (born December 19, 1989) is an American podcaster, writer, and entrepreneur. [1] She is best known as the creator and host of Crime Junkie, a weekly true crime podcast that garners 10 million listeners a week.
Laura Barcella of Rolling Stone magazine named Crime Junkie among her favorite true crime podcasts for 2018. [13] Jenni Miller of Vulture.com wrote that Flowers was "particularly passionate" in her coverage of the murder of April Tinsley with interviews with Tinsley's mother in a previous podcast and an interview with one of the people responsible for the arrest of the killer. [14]
In today’s podcast news roundup, Ashley Flowers and Audiochuck (“Crime Junkie”) ink an advertising and content deal with SiriusXM; Slate’s “Slow Burn” returns next month with an ...
Alison Flowers is an American journalist who investigates violence, police conduct and justice. She was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize for Audio Reporting in 2021 for her work on the podcast Somebody , which tells the story of Shapearl Wells, mother of Courtney Copeland who was killed outside a Chicago police station in 2016. [ 1 ]
Claims of a horrifying murder-carjacking. The saga began in October of 1989, when Charles Stuart told police that he and his pregnant wife Carol, 29, were attacked as they left a birthing class.
The Mississippi Attorney General’s Office dropped quadruple murder charges against Curtis Flowers, a Black man who had been tried six times by a white prosecutor for the 1996 crime.Flowers had ...
Somebody is an American true crime podcast, hosted by Shapearl Wells, that investigates the shooting and death of her son, Courtney Copeland. [1] The series premiered on March 31, 2020 and is hosted by Copeland's mother Shapearl Wells, Alison Flowers, and Bill Healy. [2] [3] The podcast was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 2021.
In 1988 a 17-year-old client, Arnel Salvatierra, was "found guilty of voluntary manslaughter—down from first-degree murder—in the death of his father," according to the Los Angeles Times.