Eugene Bickley: Plausible Denial of Liability — Part 3
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In Part Three of Plausible Denial of Liability — When Silence Becomes Strategy, host Madeline-Michelle: Carthen continues her in-depth conversation with Eugene Bickley, who has spent nearly 28.2 years incarcerated following a St. Louis City conviction.
This episode moves beyond procedural filings and into the structural realities of long-term incarceration. The discussion examines evidence preservation, access to original case records, witness reliability over time, and the transparency of post-conviction review processes. It also addresses the psychological weight of pursuing legal remedies across decades when judicial pathways narrow and procedural barriers increase.
Rather than relitigating facts, this conversation focuses on institutional responsibility and the long-term implications of silence within the justice system. What happens when evidence becomes harder to access? When review processes lack clarity? When time itself becomes an obstacle?
Part Three invites listeners to consider the endurance required to seek accountability in prolonged cases and the importance of preserving the public record even when formal reconsideration is uncertain.
Resilience2Redemption remains committed to examining justice carefully not as an attorney but with human dignity, questioning silence thoughtfully and encouraging informed civic awareness rooted in documented facts.
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