This is an eye-heart podcast, guaranteed human.
In 2023, Bachelor Star Clayton Eckerd was accused of fathering twins, but the pregnancy appeared to be a hoax.
“"You doctored this particular test twice in selling stretch."”
"I doctored the test once." It took an army of internet detectives to uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing. "I'm like a lesbian, I can imagine it." "My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young. This is LoveTrap." "Laura, scusty up a leash." As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences. Listen to LoveTrap podcast on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts. When a group of women discover that they've all dated the same prolific con artist. They take matters into their own hands. "I vowed. I will be his last target."
“"He is not going to get away with this."”
"He is going to get what he deserves."
"We always say that trust your girlfriends."
"Listen to the girlfriends." "Trust me, babe." "On the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." Bloodtrills is a true crime podcast born in the outdoors. Where the terrain is unforgiving, the evidence is scarce, and the truth gets buried under
the brush, and silence. "I've seen something in the road. I instantly thought it was a sleeping thing that there was a full of blood. Somebody somewhere knows something." I'm Jordan Sillers.
Season two is out now with new episodes every Thursday. Listen on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. "On a recent episode of the podcast, Money and Weld, with John Ho Bryant, I sit down with Tiffany, the Budgeonista, Alicia, to talk about what it really takes to take control of your money."
"What would that look like in our families if everyone was able to pass on wealth to the people when they're no longer here?" "We break down budgeting, financial discipline, and how to build real wealth starting with
the mindset shifts too many of us were never, ever taught."
If you've ever felt you didn't get the memo on money, this conversation is for you to hear more. Listen to Money and Weld, with John Ho Bryant, from the Black Effect Network on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." If you're watching a latest season of the Real Housewives of Atlanta, you already know
there's a lot to break down. "Sure, accusing Kelly of sleeping with a merry man. They hold and came a show back from fighting Drew. Pinky has financial issues." On the podcast, Reality with the King, I, Carlos King, recap the biggest moments from
your favorite reality shows including the Real Housewives franchise, the drama, the alliances, and the tea everybody's talking about. To hear this and more, listen to Reality with the King on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." Before we begin, please be aware.
This episode contains discussions around infant deaths and other difficult topics. Please take care while listening. Let's take this very slowly.
“Did she have her back towards a direction you were coming from?”
"No, she definitely was facing in my direction. I can't remember whether she was directly face on or slightly angled towards the incubator, but she wasn't looking at the monitor. And as I approached, I looked up and I can't remember my exact words, I just said, "What's happening?" and Lucy looked up and said, "Oh, it looks like she's de-saturating."
"What kind of a story is that? You call a doctor of hell, and the doctor walks in, and she's monitoring the baby. You go and do your doctor thing at that point.
It's not a story, but somehow that peace never got told in court."
"It can't have happened the way he described it, it happened in court, which has changed the problem. It's been nearly a year since Lucy Latbe was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. But during the first trial, the jury couldn't settle on six of the charges, including one that led to a retrial, the charge for the attempted murder of baby K.
But this retrial is about much more than what happened to baby K. It's about whether a story can hold up in court a second time. And in this courtroom, the prosecution's case leans hard on a single "vivid" account. One you've already heard, that of Dr. Ravi Jairam. At moment, he says he walked into a neonatal room in the early hours, and saw Lucy
Latbe standing by a cot as a baby's oxygen levels fell, while she did nothing.
It's the most direct allegation in the entire case.
compelling enough to convict, but the crown was willing to try again.
“Yet as time passed, serious questions would be asked about that testimony, questions about”
timing, about memory, about what was written down at the time, eventually one piece of evidence would surface, an email at odds with the account the jury was asked to believe. I'm Amanda Knox, and from Vespucci and iHeart Podcasts, this is doubt, the case of Lucy Latbe. Episode 7, the retrial. Breaking news in the last hour, and nurse Lucy Latbe, who was given a whole life sentence
for the murder of seven babies, and the attempted murder of six others, is to face a retrial on an outstanding allegation that she attempted to murder a baby girl.
“This time, the world around the courtroom is different. After the first convictions, reporting”
restrictions tightened. But as we saw in Episode 6, Rachel evives article in the New Yorker would be released the month before the retrial began. The UK courts did their best to suppress anyone in the UK reading the article, but in the void left by the media restrictions, her words only rang louder. For UK calmness John Robbins, her article signified that
there were finally more eyes on the case, and now the retrial.
From my perspective, there was this appetite in America to kind of understand the potential of mistakes in our justice system. But regardless of who was now watching, the retrial was still taking place in the backdrop of those first convictions, and the dominant media story that Lucy was the angel of death. In fact, this was the only media story the court had allowed before the restrictions. So any kind of nuance, any kind of inaccuracies, a
sealed forever in the trial, and the prosecution story, becomes the story, the truth, very hard to get the genie back into the bottle. And there's this one story that it is. She is a serial killer. For the crown, this retrial was a chance to close a loose end, and to reinforce the integrity of the wider case. But those stakes cut both ways. With that, what's the thing we all agree? Lucy, let be should be free. What's the thing
we all agree? Lucy, let be should be free. And emerging group of supporters believe Lucy let be is innocent. One, even turns up outside the courthouse holding a huge banner that
reads justice for Lucy let be. For them, this retrial matters, because a second acquittal
wouldn't undo the verdicts, but it would change the conversation, forcing uncomfortable questions about the wider case into view. Journalist Clucy de Oliveira followed the entire retrial.
“And the case of baby K, she was born very, very premature. I believe that 25 weeks in February”
of 2016. And she was not supposed to be born at the countess, you know, the countess wasn't really prepped. The doctors didn't have the right experience of dealing with like super premature babies on a constant basis in order to be able to care for the baby appropriately. She wasn't supposed to be born there, but there were concerns when the mother was already in labor of transferring her out to another hospital that there was a fear that the baby could be born in the back of
an ambulance, you know, and so the baby was born at this hospital, which wasn't qualified for this kind of birth of a very, very vulnerable baby. When baby K was born, the countess was already on edge. By that point, three babies had died the hospital in just one month alone in a unit that
Typically saw two or three deaths in an entire year.
had taken place. But crucially, no allegation of deliberate harm had yet been made to police.
“Questions were circulating among doctors. Patterns were being discussed.”
Associations were being noted, but there was still no crime scene, no suspect, no police investigation. That all changed when Dr. J. Ramm came forward with his shocking account.
There's two golden rules that any man should live by. Rule one never mess with a country go.
He plays stupid games, you get stupid prizes. And rule two never mess with her friends either. We always say that trust your girlfriends. I'm Anison Field, and in this new season of the girlfriends. Oh my god, this is the same man. A group of women discovered they've all dated the same prolific con artist. I felt like I got hit by a truck. I thought how could this happen to me. The cops didn't seem to care, so they take matters into their own hands. I said, oh hell no,
“I vowed I will be his last target. He's going to get what he deserves.”
Listen to the girlfriends. Trust me, babe. On the I-Hot Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your
podcast. In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckard found himself at the center of a paternity scandal. The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story. This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth. You doctor this particular test twice in selling stress. I doctor the test once. It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case. I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for. Some likes the greatest
disinfectant. They would uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing. Greg Olespie and Michael Marancini. My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trap.
“Laura Scott's new police. As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces”
consequences. Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news out of Maricopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges. This isn't over until justice has served in Arizona. Listen to Love Trap podcast on the I-Hot Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. You can have opinions. You can have like a strong stance. And then there's your body having its own program. I'm Dr. Maya Shanker, a cognitive scientist and host of the podcast
a slight change of plans. A show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans. We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation. There is one finding that is consistent and that is that our resilience rests on our relationships. I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long. The need to change. We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the I-Hot Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. I feel like it was a little bit unbelievable until I really start making money. It's financial literacy month and the podcast eating while broke is bringing real conversations about money, growth and building your future. This month here from top streamer, Zo Spencer and venture capitalist Laquisha Landroom Pierre as they share their journeys from
starting out to leveling up. If I'm outside with my parents and they see all these people come up to me from pictures. It's like what? Today now obviously it's like 100% they believe everything
but at first it was just like you got to go get a real job. There's an economic component to
communities thriving. If there's not enough money and entrepreneurship happening communities, they fail. And what I mean by those, they don't have money to pay for food. They cannot be their kids. They do not have homes. Communities don't work unless there's money falling through them. Listen to eating while broke from the black effect podcast network on the I-Hot Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Blood Trails is a true crime podcast
born in the outdoors where the terrain is unforgiving. The evidence is scarce and the truth gets buried under brush and silence. I've seen something in the road. I guess the late dog was being sleeping that there was a full of blood. Somebody somewhere knows something.
I'm Jordan Sillers.
Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. What follows is what was presented to the
“court read by actors. Lucy Levy was we use the term babysitting. So it's when the name nurse is”
called away another nurse goes to supervise. At this time February 2016 we had had a number of unusual instance with babies and a number of colleagues and myself had noted the association with Lucy Levy being present at these things. At this stage we've had a thematic review and external review which hadn't found any other obvious factors. I was sitting and I'll be very honest. I felt very uncomfortable. Objectively you could say that was completely irrational but I just had a feeling
because of knowing what it happened before and my internal dialogue was very much stopping stupid
get on with your work. Nick Johnson, the prosecuting lawyer, asks Dr. J. Ramm to describe what he saw on BabyK's monitor. What I saw on the screens was that BabyK's oxygen situations were dropping. They're in the low 80s and going downwards. Next to the incubator so sort of around where just at the top of the A is where the ventilator sits and the pumps to give intravenous fluids. And Lucy Levy was standing at point B next to the incubator. She wasn't looking at me. She didn't
have hands in the incubator. Let's take this very slowly. Did she have her back towards a
“direction you were coming from? No, she definitely was facing in my direction. I can't remember”
whether she was directly face on or slightly angled towards the incubator but she wasn't looking at the monitor and as I approached I looked up and I can't remember my exact words. I just said what's happening and Lucy looked up and said oh it looks like she's desaturated. What was of note is usually the monitors are set to alarm if the saturation's dropped. Usually below a level of 90 percent and they alarm immediately. I didn't look to see whether the button that caused the alarms
to be suspended was pressed but the saturations were going down and continued to go down. What's there the sound of the alarm? No, there was no alarm. Had an alarm gone off that would have been my prompt to walk in and although if you look at the layout of the unit the alarms allowed and where I was sitting had an alarm gone off I would have heard it. The picture that the prosecution is trying to paint here is very deliberate. A room full of machines designed to
scream when something is wrong. A baby's oxygen level is falling and yet no alarm. No call for help. Did you hear while you were either sitting at the nurse's station or your progress into nursery 1 any call for help from Lucy Leppi? No, must all. I was surprised that the alarm wasn't going off although my priority was baby K and I didn't question it at the time and in retrospect I was I'm surprised that help hadn't been called given that baby K was a 25 week gestation baby
and her saturations were dropping. Dr. Jeremy suspected something was wrong with baby K's breathing
tube. So having established that there was an issue with the tube I removed the tube so basically
took the tube out of baby K's mouth connected the T-piece to a small mask which I then put over baby K's nose and mouth and ventilated through the mask. She picked up extremely quickly. Within a few breaths her color improved her saturations improved and I could see that her chest was moving normally. Baby K stabilizes but she is still critically premature. Baby K would spend the next six hours at Countess Hospital waiting to be transferred to another
hospital better equipped to care for her and here is where the stories become important in terms of what actually happened and what the jury was asked to consider. A transfer note written at 55 AM reads, "Call received from Dr. Jram. Baby dislodged the tube and had to be re-intubated." When asked about that wording in court Dr. Jram was careful. I probably framed it as the
“tube was dislodged. So what was it? Did the baby dislodge her own tube or did someone else?”
We know that Ravi is saying Lucy excavated the baby dislodge the tube but we know that also that baby self dislodge the tube on two more occasions during that same six hour period. This is former neonatal nurse Michelle Warden. Baby's wriggle, they move. If you think these tubes, they're tightened and not what's called cuffed which is what happens in an adult
Or a child where it's fixed.
move their head and move half a centimeter. Although Dr. Jram makes an excuse for the difference
“between what the hospital note said and what he meant, other times he was much more certain that the”
tube had been dislodged deliberately. The nurse would have called for help and Lucy let me was standing by at the top of the incubator. She didn't have her hands in the incubator. This is from an interview Dr. Jram did with ITV between Lucy's first trial and her retrial. What are she doing? What are she just she was just standing there? Now tubes become dislodged but this was a 25 week gestation baby. He wasn't kicking around. He wasn't vigorous.
The only possibility was that that tube had to have been dislodged deliberately.
This has never sat well with Michelle. He vocally said the only explanation for a 25 week
gestation baby is that somebody's deliberately dislodged it. Well that's just rubbish. It also didn't sit well with Lucy's defense lawyer. In fact Ben Myers would play the interview that Dr. Jram gave in court. Here's court transcripts of that cross-examination read by actors. Dr. Jram, the only possibility is of the tube being dislodged deliberately. Yes? Bear in mind this interview was a long way after the events. You're telling the truth.
And at that time we also knew Lucy let thee have been convicted of several charges of murder and attempted murder. We all know that. But you said the only possibility you're talking about that night. Yes? The only possibility is the tube must have been dislodged deliberately.
“So you'd got her. Yes? Haven't you? Haven't you? You'd walked in on her, hadn't you?”
Well I walked in and there were a number of things that should have been happening but didn't happen. That weren't happening. Yes? Except, after all this certainty that the tube had been deliberately dislodged, Dr. Jram would later go on to tell the court that in actual fact he didn't witness the tube being dislodged. He's also on record of saying he walked in and she didn't have a hands-in
the incubator. So she didn't have a hands-in the incubator. How did she actually dislodge the tube? Now, some have argued that Lucy let thee may have deliberately avoided being seen with her hands inside the incubator that she was careful to cover her tracks. But the central fact remains.
“No one ever testified to actually seeing her harm a baby. And yet, Dr. Jram's account”
came to be treated as if it were eye-witness evidence. A doctor from that unit later told the court at retrial that if she had been born there, she would have had access to the specialists she needed and might have survived. But by the time she reached them, she was already two fragile and there was no chance of saving her. But for Dr. Jram, there was one clear answer as to what happened to baby K and he would
distill his account against Lucy Letby to three points of suspicion. One, up until the point he saw Lucy at the incubator, Baby K had been stable. Two, the alarms didn't sound. And three. I hadn't actually been called or nobody had actually been called to come and look at the baby. Except in actual fact, he had. There's two golden rules that any man should live by.
Rule one never mess with a country girl. He placed two big games, you get stupid prizes.
And rule two never mess with her friends either. We always say that trust your girlfriend's I'm Anna Sinfield and in this new season of the girlfriends. Oh my god, this is the same man. A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist. I felt like I got hit by a truck. I thought how could this happen to me. The cops didn't seem to care. So they take matters into their own hands. I said, oh hell no. I vowed. I will be his last target. He's going to get what he deserves.
Listen to the girlfriends. Trust me, babe. On the eye hot radio app, Apple podcasts or whatever you get your podcast. In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckard found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in h...
This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth. You doctor this particular task twice in
“selling stretch. I doctor the test ones. It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case.”
I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for. Some likes the greatest disinfectant. They would uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing. Greg the Westby End, I command you in it. My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love
Trapped. Laura Scott still police. As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at AmeriCorps County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges. This isn't over until justice has served in Arizona. Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. You can have opinions. You can have like a strong stance. And then there's your body.
“Having its own program. I'm Dr. Maya Shanker, a cognitive scientist and host of the podcast,”
a slight change of plans. A show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans. We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation. There is one finding that is consistent and that is that our resilience rests on our relationships. I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long. The need to change. We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Blood Trails is a true crime podcast born in the outdoors. Where the terrain is unforgiving, the evidence is scarce and the truth gets buried under brush and silence.
“I'm Jordan Sillers. Season 2 is out now with new episodes every Thursday.”
Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. I feel like it was a little bit unbelievable. Until I really start making money. It's financial literacy month and the podcast eating while broke is bringing real conversations about money, growth and building your future. This month here from top streamer Zo Spencer and venture capitalist Laquisha Landroom Pierre as they share their journeys from starting out to
leveling up. If I'm outside with my parents and they see all these people come up to me from
pitches it's like what? Today now obviously it's like 100% they believe everything when I first
it was just like you got to go get a real job. There's an economic component to community thriving. If there's not enough money and entrepreneurship happening communities, they fail. And what I mean by sales they don't have money to pay for food. They cannot be their kids. They do not have homes. Communities don't work unless there's money falling through them. Listen to eating while broke from the black effect podcast network on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcast. Ravi Jairam had sent an email to his colleagues. This is reporter Clucy to Oliveira again and there's just one line in it where he says where he's describing the incident and he says Lucy let be at caught and called Dr. Jairam for help when the baby started deteriorating. So this is the earliest recorded piece of evidence
of Ravi Jairam describing the events of that night and it is completely completely different, black and white different from what he came to testify about at trial. Unbeknownst to the defense and prosecution at the time, there was one piece of evidence that complicated the picture Dr. Jairam had painted. An internal email that would surface in September 2024. It had been written before the trials even before the police investigation had started
and it directly went against Dr. Jairam's claim that Lucy had never called for help.
The email was written when the doctors were putting together their case in a document for the police. In this email Dr. Jairam was clear about the goal. The document he said was meant for the police to have their interest peaked and he suggested the cases should quote "highlight explicitly for these cases that L.L. was in attendance and in close proximity to the incubators." He stressed that this should be done hopefully more in a stating the facts way than a subjective
Finger pointing way.
to inform of low saturations. In this telling, it was let be who called him not a doctor acting
“on instinct or suspicion as he testified in court. He also recorded that baby case collapse”
and eventual death was consistent with complications from extreme prematureity, not from a dislodged breathing tube. More striking still in a final report that the doctors at the county sent to the police, the report that started the whole police investigation, this information was absent. For Sarah Napton, science editor at the telegraph, it was clear it couldn't have happened the way he described that it happened in court, which is hugely problematic for the prosecution.
The problem is this email would emerge one month after the retrial was over,
a retrial that L.L.L.C. would lose. Although L.L.C's defense was never able to bring up Dr. Jairam's email in court,
“it raised a very important question. Whether Dr. Jairam's account,”
so central to the investigation and to both trials had been fully and consistently told. There was another detail about Dr. Jairam that was brought up during the retrial and which made those following the case even more concerned about the validity of his testimony.
Because on the eve of the second trial, the Guardian newspaper reported something that
took Dr. Jairam's interest in this case to a whole other level. They reported that the man who was already well-known to the UK public from his reality TV student had become involved in what many could imagine to be a very lucrative project.
“Producers were interested in making a TV drama about the L.L.L.L.C.”
that case and Dr. Jairam was involved. This latest discovery only added fuel to a fire that started way back when Rachel evives article was published. A public that had started to question
the legitimacy of her conviction had only more questions. On the first day of the retrial,
Lucy's lawyer requested that the judge get a statement from Dr. Jairam to ask whether he had commercial involvement with the TV production. Because to Ben Meyers, this would cause a significant issue that the doctor would quote portray himself in a particular way in a story that is being developed. The judge declined. It's hard to understand why. This was a story so compelling that it was already being shaped for the screen, but it was an ongoing story and new questions were emerging
about one of the prosecution's most pivotal witnesses and it was that exact witness who would be shaping the way the story would be told. As scrutiny rose, production on the TV drama would eventually be halted, with creators saying that the case was more complicated than first thought. I'd be amazed if that didn't form a significant part of the criminal case's release commission to the bucket of trial. And it's not about the course of appeal because there isn't any evidence
apart of what he says. And now what he says is being called his question. Sarah Napton was wrong. The court would deny her appeal. Thank you Madam Deputy Speaker. I am not in the habit of issuing trigger warnings, but I must warn the house in this case that this speech covers deeply distressing events. But just because the court had decided they were done deliberating the case, others were not. Conservative member of Parliament David Davis stood up in the House of
Commons and publicly demanded answers. But my central argument today, which comes back to what the right time was going to last me, is what to do about a trial, which in my view is a clear miscarriage just is by judicial citizens. In May 2025, Davis wrote to Mark Roberts, "Chief Constable of the Cheshire Police to make a formal complaint, calling for Dr. Jayram to be investigated for perjury." He argued that the jury in the re-trial reached their verdict
on the basis of misleading testimony. And that, quote, "This matter goes beyond the outcome
Of a single trial.
I think I've lost a lot of faith in the criminal justice systems I've looked into this.
“For journalist Guy Roland, the issue of Dr. Jayram's testimony was just one aspect of a case”
riddled with questions, questions surrounding stories that began with the doctors. The moment those doctors walked through the door to their police station, their doctors, they felt like, "Right, okay, we believe these doctors and that's given the benefit of the doubt. They did believe those doctors. They just believed what they were told. They didn't look at the history of the fact that they'd lost a grievance against this lowly nurse that they'd accused
to the most terrible things." And then, though he Evans walks in and he's amazing gift at being able
to spot what no one else has spotting 10 minutes over a cup of coffee and then that seals that. The system itself seems to work in a certain way that once you're on a track saying, "Right, we think this is a winnable case now." It's just extraordinary how fast it went from there's no evidence here to Dr. Stella's story and the other doctor comes in the spot's murder in ten minutes over
“a cup of coffee and right, we're off to the races and I'll stand by this. I think that the”
vast majority of us people really believe they're doing the right thing. That belief in the doctors, it mattered because once it took hold, it narrowed the frame, shaping what was questioned, what was pursued, and what was quietly set aside. What Guy Roland is pointing to isn't a single missing detail. It's a pattern.
A series of facts, reports, and expert opinions that never made it into the courtroom at all.
And once he began to lay them out, a different picture starts to emerge. Not of what the jury decided, but of what the jury was never asked to consider. There is a great deal of evidence demonstrating that there are much more likely alternative causes
“these tragic deaths than those put up by the prosecuting team.”
This is David Davis again, speaking in the House of Commons. One of the problems we face is that much of the evidence was available at the time, expert analysis of the case notes, which were there at the time, but it was simply not presented to the jury. This means the Court of Appeal-- Once you start asking what the jury didn't hear, the focus inevitably shifts from who was present
to what actually happened to the babies themselves. Because beyond patterns, beyond charts, beyond suspicions, there were detailed medical records, there were post-mortems. There were alternative explanations. The consultant in charge took a decision to insert a needle into the abdomen to release what they thought was pressure in the abdomen, gas pressure in the abdomen. However, this was wrongly
inserted into the right side of the baby's abdomen. As a result of this error, the needle penetrated the liver causing serious internal bleeding. That's later on doubt, the case of Lucy Letby. Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby is brought to you by Vespucci, I-Heart Podcasts, and Knox Robinson Productions. I've been your host, Amanda Knox.
This episode was written by Natalia Rodriguez. The co-producer was Lucy Ditchman. The assistant producer was Ami Gil. Senior producer is Natalia Rodriguez. Story editing by Kathleen Goldhardt. The sound designer is Tom Vittel. The theme was also written by Tom Vittel. Boy s acting by Tobias Davies, Paul Leaming, and Kenny Blithe. Legal advice was provided by Jack Browning.
The producers at I-Heart Podcasts are Chandler May's and Katrina Norvel. The executive producers were Joe Meek, Amanda Knox, Christopher Robinson, Daniel Turkin, and Johnny Galvin. Thank you for listening. In 2023, Bachelor Star Clayton Eckard was accused of fathering twins,
The pregnancy appeared to be a hoax.
"You doctor this particular test twice in silence, correct?"
“I doctor the test once. It took an army of internet detectives to uncover a disturbing pattern.”
Two more men who'd been through the same thing. "We're like a lesbian and I can imagine it." "My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is love trapped." "Lora, scustle police." As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences. Listen to love trapped podcast on the I-Heart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
"When a group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
“They take matters into their own hands. I vowed. I will be his last target."”
"He is not going to get away with this. He's going to get what he deserves."
"We always say that trust your girlfriends. Listen to the girlfriends. Trust me, babe.
On the I-Heart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." Bloodtrills is a true crime podcast born in the outdoors. Where the terrain is unforgiving, the evidence is scarce, and the truth gets buried under brush and silence. Played on it was a sleeping death that there was a full of blood. "Somebody somewhere knows something."
“I'm Jordan Sillers. Season 2 is out now with new episodes every Thursday.”
Listen on the I-Heart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. "On a recent episode of the podcast, Money and Wealth with John Hope Ryan, I sit down with Tiffany the "Budgeon-East-a-Leach-A" to talk about what it really takes to take control of your money." "What would that look like in our families if everyone was able to pass on wealth
to the people when they're no longer here?" "We break down budgeting, financial discipline, and how to build real wealth,
starting with the mindset shifts, too many of us were never ever taught."
"If you've ever felt you didn't get the memo on money, this conversation is for you to hear more. Listen to Money and Wealth with John Hope Ryan, from the Black Effect Network on the I-Heart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." "If you're watching the latest season of the Real Housewives of Atlanta, you already know there's a lot to break down."
"Or should accusing Kelly of sleeping with a merry man. They hold and came a show back from fighting Drew. Pinky has financial issues." "On the podcast, Reality with the King, I, Carlos King, recap the biggest moments from your favorite reality shows including the Real Housewives franchise, the drama, the alliances, and the tea everybody's talking about. To hear this and more,
listen to Reality with the King on the I-Heart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts."


