『Aaron Spencer: Hero Dad on Trial』のカバーアート

Aaron Spencer: Hero Dad on Trial

Aaron Spencer: Hero Dad on Trial

著者: Hidden Killers Podcast
無料で聴く

Aaron Spencer’s 14-year-old daughter was abducted by the same man who had already been arrested for sexually abusing her. That man—67-year-old Michael Fosler—was facing 43 felony charges, including rape, grooming, and possession of child pornography. But instead of being held behind bars, Fosler was released on a $5,000 bond.

When Spencer discovered his daughter missing, he did what any parent would do: he went after her. Within minutes, he found her in the predator’s truck. When Fosler refused to stop and then allegedly lunged at him, Spencer opened fire. He saved his daughter’s life.

And now, the state of Arkansas is charging him with murder.

Hero on Trial is a deep-dive true crime series exposing the legal and moral failure behind one of the most infuriating prosecutions in America. Why is a father being treated like a criminal for protecting his child? Why was a known predator allowed to walk free? And why did the court try to silence the public with an illegal gag order?

This podcast unpacks every disturbing detail—from the courtroom maneuvers to the political power plays—raising urgent questions about who our justice system really serves. It’s a story about parental instinct, systemic failure, and a community fighting back against a legal system that got everything backwards.

If saving your child makes you a criminal, what’s left of justice?

Real Story Media
ノンフィクション犯罪 政治・政府
エピソード
  • Aaron Spencer's Murder Charge Dismissed — His Detective Fired Two Days Later
    2026/06/14


    A judge signed a nineteen-page order calling the lead detective's conduct "intentional" and finding "the appearance of a coverup." Two days later, the Lonoke County Sheriff's Office fired Detective Robbie McCain. They cited "policy violations." The judge's order already told the public everything the sheriff's office wouldn't say.

    Aaron Spencer shot and killed sixty-seven-year-old Michael Fosler after finding him with Spencer's thirteen-year-old daughter. Fosler had been charged with 43 felonies involving the girl and was out on bond with a no-contact order. Spencer has maintained he was protecting his child. The murder charge is dismissed.

    Judge Ralph Wilson Jr. documented every step of how McCain handled the one piece of evidence that could have settled the case. The dashcam in Fosler's truck was the only potential neutral record of what happened that night. McCain pulled it off the windshield without photographing it. Removed the SD card and viewed it on his personal computer — violating protocol that electronic evidence goes untouched to the AG's forensics unit. Stored the camera in an untaped envelope in his office for over a year. Never logged it. Never documented it.

    The SD card vanished. When the AG's special agent opened the package, the card wasn't there. Twelve other SD cards were found across Fosler's property. None was the dashcam card. No copy was ever made. No record of what was on it exists. Wilson found a "reasonable possibility" the detective didn't see what he testified he saw.

    Wilson didn't use the word negligence. He used intentional. Bad faith. Due process violation under federal and state constitutional law. He flagged a one-month gap in the chain of custody the state called clerical error. Wilson wasn't buying it.

    Sheriff John Staley — the thirteen-year incumbent Spencer defeated in the Republican primary — fired McCain the day after the dismissal. The prosecutor who pushed the case is retiring. The order Wilson left in the public record documents every violation, every date, and every failure with a specificity that reads like a roadmap for a federal investigation nobody has opened yet.

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #AaronSpencer #LonokeCounty #DetectiveFired #Coverup #CaseDismissed #JudgeWilson #DashcamEvidence #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #Arkansas

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    38 分
  • Did Lonoke County Cover Up What Really Happened in Aaron Spencer’s Case?
    2026/06/10


    A father charged with murder. A 19-page ruling from a judge who used the word “coverup.” A detective fired. A sheriff who says he takes responsibility. A prosecutor who went quiet. And the defendant — who is now favored to become the next sheriff of the county that tried to put him away.

    This three-part conversation with an outside legal analyst covers the ruling, the road to the sheriff’s badge, and the institutional questions that won’t go away.

    Part one breaks down what Judge Wilson wrote. Eleven documented failures by the lead detective. A dashcam SD card from the night of the shooting that was removed, viewed on a personal laptop, stored in a desk drawer for a year, and ultimately lost. Wilson found bad faith, rejected the state’s negligence defense, and dismissed the murder charge. He called it “extraordinary and extreme” — and did it anyway.

    Part two confronts the institutional collision. Spencer won the Republican primary with 53.5 percent. He’s about to take over the department whose detective was fired for mishandling evidence in his case. He’ll work alongside the prosecutor who filed the charges. He promised to build a unit dedicated to protecting children. Now he has to do it from the inside.

    Part three pulls back to the pattern. Lonoke County’s evidence problems didn’t start with Aaron Spencer. An unarmed teenager shot with a body camera off. A jail detainee allegedly harmed and silenced. Federal cases where video vanished. The same department, the same leadership, the same result.

    An outside legal analyst maps the ruling, the political dynamics, the institutional rot, and what accountability looks like now that a judge has made the pattern impossible to ignore.

    Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePod

    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #AaronSpencer #LonokeCoverUp #CaseDismissed #SpencerForSheriff #TrueCrime #JudgeWilson #EvidenceDestroyed #Accountability #ArkansasJustice #HiddenKillers

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    55 分
  • How Deep Does the Institutional Rot Go in the County That Charged Aaron Spencer?
    2026/06/10


    A judge used the word “coverup” in a signed order about evidence handling in Aaron Spencer’s case. But the evidence problems in Lonoke County didn’t start with Spencer. They go back more than a decade — and they follow the same pattern every time.

    In 2021, a Lonoke County deputy shot and killed Hunter Brittain, a seventeen-year-old, during a traffic stop. Brittain was unarmed. The deputy’s body camera was not activated until after the shooting. Sheriff John Staley — the same sheriff Spencer defeated in the Republican primary — fired the deputy for a policy violation. The department didn’t even have dashcams in patrol cars.

    In 2024, a federal civil rights lawsuit revealed that jail staff under Staley’s supervision allegedly harmed a detainee and retaliated against her when she reported it. Video evidence from inside the facility was withheld during discovery.

    Then came the dashcam in Spencer’s case. A dual-facing camera in Fosler’s truck — the one piece of technology that could have recorded everything — was removed without documentation, its SD card pulled and viewed on a personal laptop, the camera stored in an office drawer for a year, and the card lost entirely. Judge Wilson found bad faith and wrote that the conduct was “so egregious” that dismissal was the only option.

    Despite this track record, Staley was elected president of the Arkansas Sheriffs Association executive board. The detective was fired. The prosecutor lost his motion. The AG’s office could appeal — but their own forensics unit is implicated in the evidence chain.

    An outside legal analyst maps the pattern, identifies who’s trying to avoid exposure, and breaks down what accountability mechanisms actually exist.

    Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePod

    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #LonokeCoverUp #AaronSpencer #HunterBrittain #EvidenceDestroyed #Accountability #ArkansasJustice #TrueCrime #InstitutionalRot #SheriffStaley #HiddenKillers

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    24 分
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