Wondery Plus Subscribers can binge all episodes of Criminal Attorney early and ad-free, join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. There was nothing discreet about the inside of 79 Worcestreet. The Massive Manhattan law was decorated like a Moroccan Casper, lots of sofas, pillows on the floor, and 18-foot ceilings. This was the home of New York Confidential, a very exclusive, very expensive, very illegal escort service.
It was 2004 and Ron Spurling was seated at a big oak table, underneath the crystal chandelier, a petite woman with glossy dark brown hair sat on his lap. And I go, look, we have some points we need to cover. First of all, you know, I got to get everybody in here to sign off. Ron was an acclient, he was trying to make a deal. Ron had come by to hammer out the logistics for a reality show he wanted to make about the inner workings of New York Confidential.
The woman sitting on his lap was at star escort, Natalia. Ron had gotten the meeting because of Natalia. He knew her when she was a struggling actress, before she was charging clients $2,000 an hour. The negotiations seemed to be going well. Jason Itzler, the owner of this establishment in Natalia's boyfriend, seemed to really crave the spotlight. He referred to himself as King of the Pemps. He was a flashy guy with thick black eyebrows and a custom fur coat.
He wanted to grant Ron all kinds of access to the fancy loft and to his clientele. There were a couple of presidents of networks that I knew very well. A couple of guys from the NBA, maybe whoever was in town, playing the nicks that night. The list goes on and on. But Ron had plenty of experience in television and film. He knew he'd never get any of the customers to agree to appear on camera. I said, now, it's not the first reality show I've done. It's very simple.
If you don't sign a release, I can't put you on camera. Ron had a lot riding on this. He was self-financing the production and he didn't want to take unnecessary risks. Besides, he wasn't aiming for a splashy, gossipy expose. He wanted to paint a more intimate picture. I said, the story that I want to tell is really the relationship between you and the top. And he goes, oh yeah, you have to make Natalia's got to be the star of the show.
So he's kind of blowing himself up by saying, that's why I'm going to let you do this. When Jason went a step further, signed releases beat Dan. Why not just show everyone in everything in New York confidential? Jason wanted to completely open up the operation to Ron's cameras. There was a fourth person at the table with them. Jason's lawyer, Paul Bergrin. During this conversation, he was mostly holding back and listening. After a while, he chimed in to back Ron's vision of telling a love story.
When Paul heard my plan, he was like, okay, Jason, if you want to do this, if you want to do this, then you know, yeah, I think it's a good idea. But not Jason's version. Be clear. When he heard Jason's version, he was like, this is fucking nuts. Ron was glad for the support. But he would come to understand just how much power this lawyer held. What was it scary to do? He was forced to be recognized. You know, let's put it this way, if Paul asked you to do something, it wasn't a request.
It was an order. This episode is brought to you by Audible, your destination for best selling audio books, exclusive, audible originals, and more. New members can try Audible free for 30 days. Visit audible.com slash attorney or text ATTORNEY. To 500-500. This is episode three, business stuff. Ron Spurling was back in New York Confidential, but this time with his crew, they were getting ready to film. But he made sure to keep the client out of the frame.
There was a big Wall Street guy there and I had to put the camera down on the coffee table, but aim that where Jason was talking to the guy, I just, I let it roll. Just let it roll. Leave it on a walk away. For a TV producer, staking your own project is a huge gamble, especially if you haven't got a buyer. But this was the era when explicit TV shows, like HBO's Real Sex and Cathouse, were shooting up the ratings charts. Ron's New York Confidential project would have everything those had.
Plus a lead character who really liked to talk. The game is to the first hour who cares, it's bullshit, get extra hours off these people. Dividing, conquering, pulling away from their friends and getting them to keep doing that. And from the Scissor Real from Ron's reality show. By this point, Ron had shot a ton of hours of Jason it's their talking to the camera, laying out the details of his business. In some scenes he looked professional. He's wearing a suit jacket and a white t-shirt.
Other times, he's wearing a shirt that says your girlfriend's pimp. Or he's shirtless. And he's always on. We're exceptional with the best. One out of 50 girls are of high enough qualities superficially in their brains to work from New York Confidential. The only way to pull that off is for me to hire girls that have no experience being escorts, being strippers. Girls have to be fresh new. According to Jason, they were offering their clients the girlfriend experience.
This is like, oh, let's order some room service. Sure you want to have a champagne. They'll make out with you. They'll just cuddle with their arms all over you. That's the girlfriend experience. The more Ron filmed, the more he began to understand how New York Confidential operated. And there were two sides of the organization. Jason was a show bone in the live wire. He did things to get attention. Jason had these business card mains.
They were made out of titanium and they were engraved and they said New York Confidential rocket fuel for winners. There's a shot of them cutting cocaine with it. It was great for that. That's why everybody loved them. Not that I've ever done that. But I've watched and shot many people doing it. But Jason couldn't just do whatever he wanted. There were limits and parameters in place at New York Confidential. For one, there was actually very little sex happening at the loft.
The escorts were sent out to me clients in hotel rooms and apartments across the city. I did some cool shit with the camera like followed Natalia into the hotel lobby. Then it would cut to Natalia in the limo on the way back to the loft after two or three or four hours, saying, oh, wow. As for the bill? So when you went to New York Confidential and used it on your credit card, your credit card bill came back as New York steakhouse.
It was actually called Gotham Steak, which is equally ridiculous. But nonetheless, it was a pretty tight ship. There was a level of organization and discretion that didn't seem to fit the owner's profile. But it did fit the profile of Jason's lawyer, Paul Pagrant, the other side of New York Confidential. Paul and Jason met after Jason had been caught in the New York International Airport after smuggling ecstasy from Amsterdam.
Jason was on parole and had to wear an ankle monitor, which meant he was required to report back to his New Jersey apartment every night at 9 p.m. He had heard that Paul could fix any problem, so Jason met up with him and fixed the problem he did. Paul claimed that Jason was working for him as a paralegal, which got him out of the curfew. Now, Jason did attend law school, the same one as Paul as a matter of fact. But obviously he didn't do any real legal work.
The reality was, the late hours at Jason claimed he worked for Paul, he was running New York Confidential and enjoying the life that came with it. But Paul kept his distance from the titanium business cards and the snorting. Paul wasn't there that often. Our as often as you think he would be. Paul would typically call ahead to see if they were filming. If Ron was there with the cameras, then Paul would usually avoid the loft. Ron had agreed not to film or record Paul.
But one day Paul came by to talk with the star escort, Natalia. And we were there shooting and Paul kind of took her in her bedroom and closed the door behind her. Ron and Natalia were good friends and she often confided in them. Ron knew full well she was afraid of Paul, who she was now alone in the room with. This all happened so fast that Ron didn't have time to remove Natalia's mic pack. She was still mic'd up and everything that was said was being recorded.
I thought about calling and knocking on the door and then go, you know what, I'm going to shout out, but just see where this goes. Now, listen, as much as the next, I'm going to listen. You know, not like I turned the level down on the mixer. When Ron heard was Paul telling Natalia, she needed to go out on a job. And he wanted her to go and work and do something and she wasn't up for it. Natalia pushed back. She told Paul she didn't want to do it.
Typically, she was asked if she wanted to work before jobs were booked. But Paul was not asking. You knew whenever Paul talked to you that there was an agenda beyond the agenda he was presenting to you. And then, he said, you know, attorneys have like distinct ability to lead you down a deceptive act for their own benefit. Natalia tried to argue a case with Jason later. He was just like, be ready at midnight or whatever. And he's like, you got to get your shit together and go take care of this.
So she left and did the job Paul had insisted on. He was using the girls to take care of other business stuff that he was doing. He would call Jason and say, I need two girls to go see these two New Jersey state troopers to make a problem go away. There was a lot of that kind of shit that went on. It was never clear exactly what this business stuff was, according to Ron.
But it was obvious that Paul was using his connections at New York Confidential to influence powerful people, the kind of people who could keep his clients out of jail. That's just say from time to time, as far as I knew it mostly on Paul's behalf, there were people who got serviced and did not have to pay for it. And some of those people may have been involved in law enforcement, government, whatever.
During his time filming in New York Confidential, Ron came to realize that Paul was a bully who was used to getting his way. Ron didn't capture much of this on tape, but that's no surprise. That was absolutely forbade. He was smart because he knew it was my footage of her got subpoena. He didn't want to be on any of it. Paul was getting pretty good at staying in the shadows, using other people to do his dirty work. A few weeks after Kimo got made, Sean got some bad news.
She learned that Kimo hadn't been totally straight with her. Kimo had helped Sean make multiple arrests. One in particular involved Richard Hauston, the man who ended up in a cell talking with Will Baskerville. Richard was arrested with another man when they were charged with conspiracy to sell drugs, because presumably they were working together. Only there was a problem. After we had arrested both individuals that they were adamant that they just weren't working together.
But on the recording, Kimo made for the FBI. He was manufacturing that conversation to make it sound like conspiracy when it was not a conspiracy and we did not know that. The way to sell drugs is a way worse charge than just individual drug dealing. Was he trying to jam them up? Sean went and got Kimo and brought him into the office where she confronted him with the evidence.
We sat him in the arrest room and he wrote a statement out and never forget it because he was just, you know, he was extremely apologetic. He felt like he let us down. It was almost like it was personal and he wrote out this one page confession. He hand wrote it. He signed it. I signed it. Kimo admitted he would wanted them in on the recording money. That's why he made it look like a conspiracy. If the guy was in jail, he didn't have to pay him.
After he signed this confession and gave it to Sean, she delivered some hard news. I said, this is it. You've lied. Your word is no longer credible. You know, make no mistake. You can be arrested for this. Sean gathered up the team that had been working with Kimo. There was a couple other agents, a task force officer and a couple assistant US attorneys. We went back and huddled with the prosecutors. Hey, where do we go from here? What do we do?
And, you know, ultimately we decided not to charge Kimo, but we also decided that he could no longer work for us as an informant. They were terminating him. He would no longer be a confidential informant for the FBI. He'd betrayed a dangerous crew running his neighborhood. And now we had lost the trust of the FBI. Kimo was running out of allies, running out of options. And soon he'd be running out of time. Thanks to Audible, our presenting sponsor. Hey, it's me, your host, Brandon Jinx Jenkins.
Now if you're listening to this show, I know you like a good story. Come with Audible. Every listen opens up a whole world of storytelling. Dive into new worlds, new possibilities, new ways of thinking, and any genre you love. One title that has me in the edge of my seat is Do Not Disturber by Freedom of Fatton. With its complex characters and shocking twists, this novel will have you racing to the finish, desperate to uncover the truth.
With Audible, you can explore best sellers, find new releases, and enjoy thousands of audio titles and originals whenever you want. The best part, you can easily fit Audible into your daily routine. Listen while commuting, exercising, or winding down before bed. No need to set aside extra time. Just select the title and let your mind wander. Remember, there's more to imagine when you listen.
As an Audible member, you'll get one title each month to keep from their entire catalog, including the latest best sellers and new releases. And here's a special offer. New members can try Audible free for 30 days. Audible.com slash attorney protects attorney to 500-500. That's Audible.com slash attorney protects ATT-OR-NY to 500-500 to try Audible free for 30 days. Audible.com slash attorney When everyday people commit shocking crimes, our first question is often, why?
Whether it's the inner workings of a serial killer or a normal person driven to extraordinary acts, the engine that drives them is more exciting than the clues that a crime scene. On Killer Sikie, retired FBI agent Candace DeLong draws on her decades of experience to reveal why murderers and criminals perpetrated their acts of violence. She reveals fascinating new details about famous cases and even ones she was close to.
Candace shares specific psychological methods and profiling techniques that expertise to understand the deepest part of the most complex, fascinating, and twisted minds from the unibomber. To Dr. Death, to Rex Huerman. Follow Killer Sikie on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts. Join Wondry Plus and enjoy exclusive episodes of Killer Sikie early access to new ones and all episodes are always at free. Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
Start your free trial today. Even though Kimo McCray was no longer a confidential informant, the threat against his life remained very real. Sean Prokos knew she and the FBI still had a responsibility to keep him safe. She wanted to get him out of town as far as he was willing to go. We had talked about him going to Florida, down to Georgia, just different areas. A couple years back, standing in front of his mother, Sean had offered Kimo a devil's bargain with two options.
To become a confidential informant and go to work for the FBI or go to jail. Now, she offered Kimo a choice that was just as impossible. Give up his friends, his kids, his family, and his life as he knew it to enter witness protection or stay in Newark knowing his life was in danger. I think he was torn between leaving his family and everything he knew and starting over. Look, Witsack is a very regimented, serious program. You have to cut all ties. You're by yourself.
You're not talking to your mom. You're not talking to your kids. You are, sense somewhere, new name, new identity, no ties with your old life. If he went with the first option, he'd be all alone in a brand new place. But if he stayed in Newark, he'd have a target on his back. This risk had always been right there in the fine print.
Whether or not Kimo had truly understood that becoming a C.I. could lead him here, and whether Sean had tried her absolute hardest to make it clear for him, did not matter now. It had never been a simpler, easy choice. And this next one was even more difficult. He was close to his family. He'd been born and raised in Newark and per him to go to elsewhere. It was just not something he was open to doing. And he wasn't going to leave. He just was not going to leave this area. So Sean pivoted.
If Kimo wasn't willing to move to Florida, maybe he'd at least go a few towns over. We gave him money to relocate, and he relocated, I believe, to West Orange. That's a town about eight miles west of Newark. That was not great. He told us, look, I'm off the street, I'm doing my own thing, I'm working on jobs. And that wasn't great, but it was good enough. It was as good as it was going to get. And it worked for a time, but eventually Kimo ran out of money. And then he'd get spooked.
Maybe he saw a car following him, and he called Sean for help. At first, it was very much okay. This is a real threat. This is a real threat. Then it became, all right, we paid him a little bit more just to kind of keep him away, or keep him out of sight. But this kept going on. So this is where the lines get blurred. Because Kimo had lied about that conspiracy, it was really hard to trust him.
And when he would call me and say, hey, I think I'm being followed, or hey, I think this has happened, you know, the cynical part of me took that as he's looking for more money. Maybe Kimo wasn't wrong to ask for that money. Sure, he lied and got caught by the FBI. But they'd put him in a dangerous situation. And he was playing the game to the best of his ability. But the FBI made the rules. And Kimo wasn't playing by that. And we had told him, this is what you get.
It's a lump sum, you know, be smart with what you're doing. And the money ran out. And of course, he came back home, came back to Irvington. And was doing our jobs. On March 2, 2004, Kimo's work in construction job in Newark with a stepfather. They were tearing down drywall inside the house. Kimo was about five years old when his stepfather married his mom. So we had always thought of him as his dad. They were close.
According to his stepfather, Kimo would go over and have Sunday dinner with him every week. In a recent conversation, Kimo had mentioned he wanted to learn how to renovate houses like his stepfather. He thought this could be a potential career path, a chance to get away from selling drugs, and a way to stay clear from the danger. He knew that Kim Curry's crew was out to get him. He said to his stepfather, daddy, they're gonna kill me.
There was talk on the streets about another informant who was supposed to testify in a curry related case, who had been killed just two days before. So a stepfather brought Kimo on this job with it. It was their first time working together. They spent the morning demoing the interior of the house. It was Kimo's job to run the pieces of wall and flooring out to the dumpster. He had him face masks and gloves to protect himself from any dust and debris.
Around lunchtime, Kimo's stepfather wanted to treat him to lunch for all his hard work. They walked the Cooper's, a little sandwich shopped down the street from the house. According to Kimo's stepfather, they were just wrapping with each other, talking about this, that and the other. After a stepfather got the sandwiches, Kimo told him he didn't have any cigarettes on them, because they walked down the streets to buy some. They headed over one more block to a corner store.
Kimo's stepfather ran inside and bought some looses. He came back out and handed Kimo the cigarettes. Then they walked about a block towards the house. When someone who had been watching Kimo stepped up behind them. Sean was sitting down in the Newark FBI office. I had a desk right in front of the window looking out at the river. And we always had the radio on because we were always monitoring what was happening. It's way of the radio on, and somebody said there's been a shooting.
Shooting's weren't rare in Newark, but Sean had a bad feeling about this one. Simultaneously, I'm getting a call from switchboard, so our main number coming down to my desk phone, saying, Sean, there's a woman crying hysterically crying. She needs to talk to you immediately. And I said, who is it? What's happening? It was Kimo's mom. She's screaming. They killed Kimo. They killed Kimo. He's dead. They shot him. He's dead. Sean was in shock. She's screaming at me.
And I said, what are you talking about? What are you talking about? And then right there, I was able to piece together that the call I had heard on the radio was the execution of Kimo. Just days before his 33rd birthday, Kimo had been shot dead on a busy street in broad daylight. He was shot three times in the back of the head. Sean got in her car and raced down to the crime scene as quickly as she could.
By the time we got out there, they had already taken the body, but there was blood in the street. And there's just the markings of shell casings and that sort of thing. The police were still milling around the crime scene. Sean looked around for any potential witnesses. They couldn't hear her. It was almost as if nothing had happened, which was the craziest feeling. She told one of the new detectives on the scene that Kimo had been her informant.
As the consequences of that fact started to creep up on her. The first that I had is what could I have done? Did I was this? Is it my fault? If he had become an informant, we'll do everything and our power to protect you forever. Could I have protected him better? I'm responsible. You started having that conversation with yourself that I'm responsible for his death.
When Sean saw there was nothing she could do at the crime scene, her next stop was Kimo step by this house, whereas family was waiting. And I got to his father's house and they let me in, but they didn't want me there. They were very accusatory of me that I'm the one who got him killed. This is all because of you. He worked for you. You couldn't protect him. He's dead. Sean stood there and took it. She promised Kimo's mother that she would do everything in her power to keep Kimo safe.
But apparently, her power did not extend that far. The man in front of Sean had just seen his steps un-murdered. There was nothing she could say. They're yelling, screaming, crying, and his father just berated me and talked about feeling awful. I said, I know he was a good person. I want you to know that because he was trying to do the right thing and he was a good person. They just weren't open to hearing anything I had to say. They just lost their son. I mean, what could you expect?
So I remember being in the house for a couple minutes and just then yelling and crying, and screaming, and blaming it on me and I thought, all right, this is not going to be. It's not a good place to be right now. Sean was asked to leave. We reached out to Kimo's family, but they declined to participate. All these years later, Kimo's death still weighs heavy. In the days that followed, she kept thinking about Kimo and his death, kept turning it over in her head.
That was the defining moment in my life. It made me step back and really think it might be the right person for this job. Am I really the person who's cut out to do this? Because I've just put somebody in the crosshairs and they were brutally murdered in broad daylight. Sean was feeling a bit lost, but she knew one thing. She wanted to find Kimo's killer and bring them to justice. Even though this shooting happened in Newark City Center, there was no camera coverage.
Kimo's stepfather didn't get a good look at the shooter. The getaway was clean. Sean knew that whoever pulled the trigger was acting on behalf of her team Curry. But after that, she had nothing, no one was talking, no one saw anything. The Curry organization had people killed, they had people murdered, those murders went unsolved. They were good at what they did. I was somewhat resolved to the fact that we know this group was behind it, but will we ever get to the shooter?
I honestly, I didn't have much hope that we would. Kimo, getting people who had committed crimes, civilians, anyone to talk to her about what they've seen, about what goes on in their world, that was central to Sean Brokos work. The irony was, she now needed someone else to restore life as Kimo had done to help bring it to the bottom of his death. And while Sean Brokos was enduring the lowest point in her career, Paul Pagrand was rising to his highest.
In the 1970s, the FBI had weathered one scandal after another and implemented a mandate to regain the public's trust, but in doing so, they opened up Pandora's Box to one of the most controversial missions in FBI history. Abscam, as it came to be known, was a sting operation to root out white collar crime. Spirited by a lifelong con man, the FBI staged a lavish party on a yacht, set up illegal deals for casinos with federal agents pretending to be middle eastern businessmen.
From the creators of American history tellers, business wars, and ties of history comes American scandal, where we take you deep into the heart of America's dark side. Every scandal begins with a lie, but the truth will come out. Follow American scandal on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad free and be the first to binge the newest season only on Wondry Plus. Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial today.
Paul was far from Newark, where he represented drug kingpins and murderers. Even farther from the Manhattan Escort Agency where he was on retainer, leaning on frightened escorts and babysitting a shirtless pen. In 2004, Harborgren was standing in the military courtroom in Forthead, Texas, representing a soldier named Javald Davis. On October 22nd, 2004, motion hearings were held for the cases of Sergeant Jevelle Davis
and Specialist Charles Granger. Two military police soldiers accused of abusing detainees at the Baghdad correction facility Abu Ghraib. The defendant's name may not ring a bell, but the charges might. Jevelle was one of the American soldiers accused of torturing detainees at Abu Ghraib Prison in Iraq. It was a shocking human tragedy and a global public relations nightmare for the US. With American military being exposed for committing human rights violations and war
crimes, Jevelle was named as one of the torturers. He had five charges, including maltreatment of detainees and assault. He was accused of stepping on the hands and feet of a group of handcuffed detainees, as well as falling on top of them with his full 220 pound weight. Paul had been contacted by Jevelle's family. He said when he met with them, he felt a duty, as someone who had been in the military himself, to protect and defend his fellow
soldier. And Jevelle was a hometown boy. He had grown up in Rosalind, New Jersey, not that far from Newark. He would start off every single time with, it is my honor and privilege, he would say, booming voice to defend Jevelle Davis. Steep on Mestrovic was an expert witness for Paul Pogren. He's a professor of sociology at Texas A&M, and his main area of study is war crimes. It's kind of unusual to be doing war crimes. It's not a common theme in sociology.
Steep on watch Paul present his case. He hit on the severity of what Jevelle was charged with, one more accurately, how not severe it was. He was guilty of their looks and duty, conspiracy, and outtreatment, but it ended up being a few seconds less than a minute of stomping on some prisoner's toes. I was it. He didn't hit anybody, he didn't torture anybody. I was all they had on him. For Paul, it wasn't about the degree of the assault, but what
could have driven Jevelle to it? And for that, Paul turned to Steep on. Paul had brought him there to give a deposition about the conditions at Abu Ghraib. How it would place like that could get someone like Jevelle to do the things he did. Look, this is the atmosphere, a very stressful, hellish sort of environment where everyone is in constant fear and nerves are in edge. People have PTSD. This is the context in which you have to look at Jevelle Davis.
When he took the case, Paul actually traveled to Iraq to meet him, and he'd been digging around. And that led him to setting his sights much higher. According to Paul, almost immediately after speaking with Jevelle, he knew he would have to reveal the White House and the United States government's involvement. He didn't believe that Jevelle should be held accountable for what he did at Abu Ghraib. Paul thought Jevelle was being scapegoated, that there were people at the top who gave the orders.
And he just wanted to go for the jugular, like he wanted to bring up the CIA presence and the interrogation rules and how they came from Donald Rumsfeld. And he was dropping these names. He wanted to bring him under witness stand. Not only Donald Rumsfeld, who was a secretary of defense at the time, he also wanted to force the top military commanders to testify. He even wanted to subpoena President George W. Bush. Paul McGrin was taking his fight to the very top of the federal government.
He was like out of that movie a few good men, they're like Tom Cruise. Paul argued his case in both the courtroom and the press. I thought that I unequivocally proved beyond any shadow of a doubt whatsoever that Rumsfeld had knowledge of the interrogation techniques in this case. When there were breaks in the action, Paul would go out and monologue to the reporters shoving Mike's in his face.
I think that Jevelle Davis would be acquitted. I think that he'll be vindicated and that the individuals who are responsible for what happened in this particular case. That's high level individuals within the United States government. Hopefully, it will be brought to justice. For someone who had been iced out of the assistant US Attorney's office and then indicted by that very office, this had to feel good.
He was kind of like that moment in a breakup where he got to show his ex exactly what they had given up. Paul was wrong about the outcome though. Jevelle Davis was not vindicated, but Paul helped him get an incredibly light punishment. Jevelle pleaded guilty to dereliction of duty and making false statements. He was given six months of military prison and given a bad conduct discharge. Nobody in the higher levels of government was prosecuted or held accountable.
Paul would have to wait until another opportunity to expose the administration. While Paul Bergren was talking loudly to reporters about military justice, Sean Brokos was sitting in relative silence. No one who knew anything valuable would talk to her about who would kill her in a form. Because nobody cooperated. They didn't cooperate against Curry or any of those folks because they knew if they did, they'd get killed. So I knew it was going to be a high hurdle finding the killer.
Months and months passed with no progress. As Sean came to grips with her new membership, a very exclusive, but undistinguished club. If you go through the history of cases, how many agents have lost their sources, there's probably not many of us. It's not a badge of honor. Let me tell you that. It's an awful, awful, awful feeling that never goes away. That feeling might never go away, but one day Sean did get some good news.
She was at the office when she got a phone call from the agent who was assigned to answer the phones. And hey, somebody wants to talk about Kimo's murder. He asked her if she wanted to talk to the guy. Sean said yes, absolutely. So I take the call and he says, I know who killed Kimo. And I'm saying, you know, here we go. This is another bullshit rumor. Sean was skeptical at first, but she was already reeling from having lost one in form. So what the caller said next made her snap to attention.
He goes, I know who did it, I know where it happened, I need to talk to you about it, but I am in danger. And I'm thinking, okay, all of a sudden, this got very real for me. That's on the next episode of Criminal Attorney. Follow Criminal Attorney on the Wondering App, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcast. You can binge all episodes early and ad-free right now by joining Wondering Plus in the Wondering App, or on Apple Podcasts.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondering.com slash survey. From Wondering, this is episode three of six of Criminal Attorney. Criminal Attorney is hosted by me, Brandon James Jenkins. This series is reported and written by Matthew Nelson. Senior producers are Chris Siegel and Stephanie Joaquin. Senior story editor is Rachel B. Doyle. Associate producer is Malachai Lee. Consulting producer is David Fox, with additional writing from Neil Drumming.
Fact checking by Anika Robbins. Sound design and mixing by Jeff Schmidt. Audio assistance by Daniel William Gonzalez. Sound supervisor is Marcelino Villopondo. Music supervisor is Scott Velosquez for Free Sansink. Senior managing producer is Lutta Pandia. Senior producer is Heather Beloga. Development producer is Olivia Weber. Executive producer is Matthew Nelson. Executive producers are Nigel Eden, George Lavender, Marshall Louis, and Jim Sargent for The Wondering Wondering Wondering.