A Murder At La Casa Green: How An Ex-Cop Saved, Then Doomed, Two Wrongfully Convicted Men, Part 4
On the morning of July 4, 1993, a Connecticut bodega owner named Eugenio "Gene" DeLeon Vega was found murdered. Two men were tried and convicted, but that was just the beginning. Part 4 of a four-part look at a case that has baffled and frustrated for over 20 years.
A Murder At La Casa Green: How An Ex-Cop Saved, Then Doomed, Two Wrongfully Convicted Men, Part 3
On the morning of July 4, 1993, a Connecticut bodega owner named Eugenio "Gene" DeLeon Vega was found murdered. Two men were tried and convicted, but that was just the beginning. Part 3 of a four-part look at a case that has baffled and frustrated for over 20 years.
A Murder At La Casa Green: How An Ex-Cop Saved, Then Doomed, Two Wrongfully Convicted Men, Part 2
On the morning of July 4, 1993, a Connecticut bodega owner named Eugenio "Gene" DeLeon Vega was found murdered. Two men were tried and convicted, but that was just the beginning. Part 2 of a four-part look at a case that has baffled and frustrated for over 20 years.
A Murder At La Casa Green: How An Ex-Cop Saved, Then Doomed, Two Wrongfully Convicted Men, Part 1
On the morning of July 4, 1993, a Connecticut bodega owner named Eugenio "Gene" DeLeon Vega was found murdered. Two men were tried and convicted, but that was just the beginning. Part 1 of a four-part look at a case that has baffled and frustrated for over 20 years.
A Murder At La Casa Green: How an Ex-Cop Saved, Then Doomed, Two Wrongfully Convicted Men
Ronald Taylor and George Gould were jailed for murdering a New Haven bodega owner in 1993. They were exonerated thanks to the efforts of a cop-turned-private investigator, only to be ordered back to prison — along with the investigator himself. And in the middle of it all were the victim’s troubled son and a heroin addict whose changing testimony has been the most mysterious part of a case that has baffled and infuriated for over 20 years.
Murder And Manifest Destiny On The Mosquito Coast
Fifteen years ago, a mysterious Greek entrepreneur bought and resold a series of tiny islands off the coast of Nicaragua, setting off a bizarre and tragic chain of events that included a reality-TV sensation and allegations of an insidious murder plot. The ensuing chaos brought to light a centuries-old question: Who does land really belong to?