Part 1 of “Drugs on the Docket” podcasts on fake stash-house stings now available
In this post earlier this week, I previewed that the Drug Enforcement and Policy Center at The Ohio State University was about to start releasing episodes from Season Two of the “Drugs on the Docket” podcast. Excitingly, as detailed on this podcast webpage, today brought the release of the first episode of this new season. (And all of the first season’s episodes are all still available via Apple Podcasts and YouTube.) This first episode to kick-off Seanson 2 is actually part of a extended discussion that was so chock full of content that it became a two-part series described this way at the podcast webpage:
Season 2 Episode 1 – Stash house stings with Alison Siegler and Erica Zunkel (Part 1 of 2)
Host Hannah Miller and co-host Douglas Berman, executive director of the Drug Enforcement and Policy Center, kick off Season 2 with guests Alison Siegler and Erica Zunkel from the University of Chicago. Part 1 of this two-part episode focuses on clients ensnared in undercover stash house sting operations carried out by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and how the Federal Criminal Justice Clinic at the University of Chicago Law School sought to prove that the ATF violated the 14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause by discriminating on the basis of race when selecting its targets.
Alison Siegler is Clinical Professor of Law and Founding Director of the Federal Criminal Justice Clinic at the University of Chicago Law School; Erica Zunkel is Clinical Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School and teaches in the school’s Criminal and Juvenile Justice Clinic.
The many remarkable legal and policy stories that surround the fake stash-house stings continue to amaze me, and I am extremely grateful to have been part of this effort to tell parts of the story via these podcasts. I encourage everyone to have a listen.