2025-09-15
45 分钟This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.
In 1984, a 14 year old boy called Ron Bishop was the main witness in a murder trial.
When they told me to make identification in the roles those three guys played then I remember I had to point to Andrew and he was like Like ask me
like he's lying and it hurt so much
because after that everything was a lie just almost everything was a lie and Then you had to look at these three guys in their faces and and just tell one lie after the next The lies Ron told in the witness box in Baltimore that day would help condemn three black teenagers Alfred Chestnut,
Andrew Stewart and Ransom Watkins to life in prison for a crime he knew they didn't commit.
Their conviction was one of the biggest miscarriages of justice in US history.
The reasons this happened are multi-layered,
complex and absolutely shocking and left many lives in tatters.
Ron would carry a life-altering guilt for the role he played.
Withhold your judgement and listen on.
This is Lives Less Ordinary from the BBC World Service.
I'm Jo Fidgen.
The story starts in an all-black neighborhood of West Baltimore where all the kids affected by these events were growing up.
So I had a nice group of friends, crazy group of friends, and we just lived for each other.
These small, simple things, so just hanging out on the corner, talking, sitting on the steps.
We know we didn't have a lot or much.
But we had each other, friends, and we had family, and the neighborhood was your family, actually.
It was a close-knit community, but it had its dark side.
When Ron was thirteen,