『Law Enforcement Talk: True Crime and Trauma Stories』のカバーアート

Law Enforcement Talk: True Crime and Trauma Stories

Law Enforcement Talk: True Crime and Trauma Stories

著者: John "Jay" Wiley Bleav
無料で聴く

True Crime with a twist. By and from those that have been there. Crime stories from those that investigated crimes and caught criminals. Also victims of crimes tell about their experience. Plus trauma stories, by those that have been through it. Often crime based, but not always, people talk about the trauma, how it impacted them and how they built their lives after. Law Enforcement Talk: True Crime and Trauma Stories Radio Show and It is a True Crime Show, a Law Enforcement Officer Show and a Human Interest show all in one. Get a glimpse of life behind the badge, investigations of true crimes, violence they encounter and experience. Law enforcement officers, first responders, military veterans, victims of crime and their families tell their stories of the trauma they experienced mostly regarding True Crime incidents. They also talk about how they built their new lives they wanted afterwards. While many people think the show is about Law Enforcement Training, or Law Enforcement specific topis, it is not, think of True Crime Podcasts with a twist. The Law Enforcement Talk Show goes to radio first. Therefore it is required that I use a clock for the length of segments. You've probably seen on television news interviews that they have a hard break. It's the same with radio. The stations have to be able to program in their commercials, news, weather, traffic reports etc. These are called avails, they are NOT Optional. Every guest knows about and is informed of the length of the segments and that I will interrupt them if needed to go to the break. The interviews are recorded and the guests know that the segments must be in a certain length and it is required and they get to tell their stories to millions of people for free. The bi-weekly podcast version of the syndicated Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show, with numerous affiliate US Radio Stations, broadcasting once a week to millions of people. The show host, John "Jay" Wiley, is a radio DJ and Retired Baltimore Police Sergeant. The show started as a podcast, before being recruited by terrestrial AM-FM radio stations and has been in continuous operation since March of 2017. You can reach him at jay@letradio.com. Background song Hurricane used by permission from the band Dark Horse Flyer, get more information about them and their music on their website. You can follow us and connect on social media, if you are in the Clubhouse Drop In Audio App make sure you follow our club LET Radio and Podcast. You can also find and follow the host of the show John J Wiley on the Clubhouse Drop In Audio Chat program. Be sure to check out our website. Like and follow our facebook page. Our Twitter account. Also on Instagram.2025 John Jay Wiley 個人的成功 政治・政府 社会科学 自己啓発
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  • On Being a Rural Police Officer
    2026/07/01
    On Being a Rural Police Officer: Trauma Still Exists Despite the Quiet Small-Town Life. Special Episode. Death and Injury, the Things Police See, and Why Rural Officers Carry Invisible Scars. The Podcast is available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, iHeartradio and most major podcast platforms. #LawEnforcementTalk #Free #Podcast #Radio When most people picture a rural police officer, they often imagine something straight out of a Norman Rockwell painting. Neighbors know each other's names. Kids ride bicycles through quiet neighborhoods. The local police officer waves to residents while walking Main Street. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast social media like their Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , Medium and other social media platforms. It seems like the perfect example of community policing. But behind that peaceful image lies a reality few people ever see. Death. Serious injury. Family tragedies. Suicides. Fatal crashes. Child abuse. Domestic violence. The things police officers see don't disappear simply because the town is small. On Being a Rural Police Officer: Trauma Still Exists Despite the Quiet Small-Town Life. Supporting articles about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium , Blogspot and Linkedin. Those memories follow them home. Community Policing Doesn't Eliminate Trauma Police Sergeant Steven Gould serves with a smaller New England police agency where community policing remains a daily priority. Officers know many of the people they serve personally. They coach youth sports, attend local events, and often respond to calls involving neighbors they've known for years. That close connection makes the rewards of policing even greater. It also makes the tragedies far more personal. "When something terrible happens," Gould explains, "it's often someone you know." Unlike officers in large metropolitan departments who may never encounter the same victims again, rural officers frequently continue seeing grieving families, injured victims, and traumatized children long after the emergency has ended. The episode is available across major platforms including their website, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, with highlights shared across their Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn profiles. The emotional weight doesn't simply disappear when the shift ends. The Myth That Rural Police Have It Easy Many assume officers working in smaller communities experience less stress because they respond to fewer violent crimes than officers in major cities. On Being a Rural Police Officer: Trauma Still Exists Despite the Quiet Small-Town Life. The reality is very different. Even if calls come less frequently, the emotional impact can be just as devastating. One horrific crash. One murdered victim. One child death. One suicide. Those incidents become part of an officer's memory forever. Trauma does not measure population size. It measures human experience. Leaving Police Work... Then Coming Back Steven Gould understands the profession from another perspective as well. After years working as both a natural resource officer and municipal police officer, he and his family decided to make a dramatic change. In 2016 they packed everything they owned into an RV, rented out their home, and drove across America toward California. After arriving in Los Angeles, Gould accepted a civilian position as a background investigator with the Los Angeles Police Department. Available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and most major Podcast networks. It was supposed to be a new chapter. Instead, it reminded him why policing had become part of who he was. The Conversations That Changed Everything While working for the LAPD, Gould spent countless lunch breaks listening to veteran officers tell unbelievable stories. Some were hilarious. Others were heartbreaking. Many were terrifying. The conversations revealed something the public rarely gets to hear. Police officers witness extraordinary events every single day that never make the evening news. The emotional burden stays with them long after the headlines disappear. Those conversations inspired Gould to create a platform where officers could tell their stories honestly and without censorship. On Being a Rural Police Officer: Trauma Still Exists Despite the Quiet Small-Town Life. The Podcast is available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, iHeartradio and most major podcast platforms. "I wanted people outside of law enforcement to hear what police officers actually deal with every day," Gould says. "If they heard these real stories, they'd better understand and appreciate what these men and women do." The Things Police See Stay Forever Whether serving in Los Angeles or a quiet New England town, ...
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    38 分
  • A Deputy Was Shot and Killed
    2026/06/28
    A Deputy Was Shot and Killed During a Car Stop. He talks about this and the Mental Health Crisis in Law Enforcement. The Hidden Cost of Losing One of Your Own and the Mental Health Crisis in Law Enforcement. A Deputy was Shot and Killed during A Car Stop. Those words instantly capture attention, but they rarely tell the entire story. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast social media like their Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , Medium and other social media platforms. The headlines focus on the fallen deputy. The criminal investigation follows. Eventually, the suspect is caught, prosecuted, and sentenced. The Podcast is available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, iHeartradio and most major podcast platforms. #LawEnforcementTalk #Free #Podcast #Radio Then the news cameras leave. What often goes untold is what happens to the officers, supervisors, families, and entire law enforcement agency left behind. Supporting articles about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium , Blogspot and Linkedin. For retired Bernalillo County Sheriff's Lieutenant Van Eldridge, that painful reality became part of his life forever when one of his deputies, Deputy Sheriff James McGrane, was murdered during what appeared to be a routine traffic stop. Years later, Eldridge shares not only what happened that tragic night but also how the experience shaped his understanding of trauma, resilience, and the urgent need to improve mental health resources for first responders. His emotional conversation is featured on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast, available on their website, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, iHeartradio, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X, and most major podcast platforms worldwide. A Deputy Was Shot and Killed During a Car Stop. He talks about this and the Mental Health Crisis in Law Enforcement. The episode is available across major platforms including their website, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, with highlights shared across their Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn profiles. When Routine Turns Deadly Every deputy begins a shift understanding that danger can appear without warning. Most traffic stops end with a warning, a citation, or an arrest. Occasionally, however, they become something far more devastating. Shortly after midnight on March 22, 2006, Deputy Sheriff James McGrane stopped a white pickup truck on Highway 337 in New Mexico. At approximately 12:46 a.m., he calmly radioed dispatch with the details of the stop. Nothing in his voice suggested anything unusual. Nothing indicated that within moments he would lose his life. Unknown to Deputy McGrane, the driver had allegedly been involved in an unsolved 2005 murder and was determined not to return to prison. As Deputy McGrane approached the driver's window, the suspect opened fire. The deputy was struck twice. He never had the opportunity to defend himself. Within minutes, nearby witnesses dialed 911 after hearing two gunshots echo through the quiet night and watching a white pickup speed away from the scene. A Deputy Was Shot and Killed During a Car Stop. He talks about this and the Mental Health Crisis in Law Enforcement. Available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and most major Podcast networks. Emergency responders rushed to help. There was nothing they could do. Deputy James McGrane died where he had stopped the vehicle. The Supervisor's Nightmare For Sergeant Van Eldridge, the phone call changed everything. One of his deputies had been murdered. Every law enforcement supervisor knows the possibility exists. No one is ever prepared for it to become reality. A supervisor's responsibility instantly shifts from overseeing patrol operations to managing unimaginable grief. There are deputies in shock. Family members who need answers. Investigators arriving. Media gathering. Community members searching for information. Officers struggling to process what has happened. Yet the supervisor is expected to remain calm, make sound decisions, and lead everyone through one of the darkest days in the agency's history. The Podcast is available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, iHeartradio and most major podcast platforms. Those moments become permanently etched into memory. Van explains that while people often remember the fallen officer, they seldom recognize the emotional burden carried by the partners and supervisors who must continue serving while grieving themselves. A Deputy Was Shot and Killed During a Car Stop. He talks about this and the Mental Health Crisis in Law Enforcement. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast continues bringing listeners real conversations from the front lines of crime, policing, trauma, survival, and healing. ...
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    40 分
  • 911 Dispatchers Suffer Too: Trauma on the Phone
    2026/06/24
    911 Dispatchers Suffer Too: Trauma on the Phone. Behind Every Emergency Call Is Someone Carrying the Weight of Another Person's Worst Day. When most people think of first responders, they picture police officers racing toward danger, firefighters battling flames, or paramedics fighting to save lives. The episode is available to listen to Free. The Podcast is available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, iHeartradio and most major podcast platforms. #LawEnforcementTalk #Free #Podcast #Radio But there is another group of heroes who experience unimaginable tragedy every day without ever leaving their chairs. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast social media like their Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , Medium and other social media platforms. 911 Dispatchers Suffer Too. Their battlefield isn't on the streets. Supporting articles about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium , Blogspot and Linkedin. It's Trauma on The Phone. Every scream... Every desperate plea... Every child crying... Every gunshot... Every final breath... It all comes through a headset. 911 Dispatchers Suffer Too: Trauma on the Phone. On the latest episode of the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast, host John Jay Wiley welcomes Alex LeFever, a veteran 911 dispatcher who shares what many dispatchers have silently carried for years. The episode is available across major platforms including their website, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, with highlights shared across their Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn profiles. His story reminds listeners that emotional scars don't require physical danger. Sometimes the deepest wounds are heard, not seen. The Calls That Never Leave Alex worked as a 911 dispatcher in both Arkansas and Pennsylvania. Like many emergency telecommunicators, thousands of calls blended together over time. But a few never disappeared. One involved a three-week-old baby. Another involved a woman trapped in a violent domestic abuse situation, who shot her attacker. Alex listened helplessly as the assault unfolded over the phone. Those voices never truly left him. "There are calls you never forget," Alex explains. "They stay with you long after your shift ends." Unlike police officers or firefighters who eventually arrive at a scene and begin resolving the crisis, dispatchers often experience something mental health experts call truncated trauma. 911 Dispatchers Suffer Too: Trauma on the Phone. Available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and most major Podcast networks. They hear the terror. They imagine the scene. Then the phone disconnects. Most never learn how the story ended. Their minds are left to fill in the blanks. 911 Dispatchers Are Often the First First Responders Whether dispatchers are officially recognized as first responders depends largely on where they work. Many states, including California, Washington, and Delaware, have passed laws officially recognizing emergency dispatchers as first responders. Federal classifications have historically categorized them as administrative employees rather than protective service professionals. 911 Dispatchers Suffer Too: Trauma on the Phone. The Podcast is available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, iHeartradio and most major podcast platforms. That distinction has sparked ongoing bipartisan efforts in Congress to update federal classifications through legislation such as the 9-1-1 SAVES Act and the Enhancing First Response Act. Regardless of job titles, dispatchers perform life-saving work every day. They calm panicked callers. Guide CPR. Provide emergency childbirth instructions. Coordinate police, fire, and EMS responses. Gather critical intelligence. Save lives. Long before emergency vehicles arrive, dispatchers are already working to keep victims alive. "They're often the first voice people hear during the worst moment of their lives." Trauma on The Phone Is Real Mental health professionals increasingly recognize that dispatchers experience extraordinarily high rates of Secondary Traumatic Stress (STS) and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast continues bringing listeners real conversations from the front lines of crime, policing, trauma, survival, and healing. Unlike field responders, dispatchers experience trauma through sound alone. The human brain reacts as if it is physically present. Adrenaline surges. Heart rate increases. Stress hormones flood the body. Yet dispatchers must remain calm. Professional. Focused. They cannot panic. They cannot cry. They simply answer the next call. Hour after hour. Day after day. Over time, that emotional weight accumulates. Symptoms may include: • Reliving disturbing calls • ...
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    40 分
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