『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

概要

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
エピソード
  • How You Can Help Us Grow
    2026/05/17
    How You Can Help Us Grow for Free. Special Episode. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast continues to expand its national and worldwide reach, delivering compelling stories from the front lines of crime, law enforcement, survival, and justice. Through powerful interviews, engaging features, and authentic conversations with police officers, federal agents, survivors, military veterans, crime victims and public safety professionals, the show has become a trusted voice across Podcast, Radio, and Social Media platforms. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast social media like their Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , Medium and other social media platforms. Now syndicated on 148 AM and FM Radio stations across the United States, with a combined reach exceeding 48 million people, the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show has established itself as a major presence in national broadcasting. Yet despite this remarkable success, one of the most powerful tools for continued growth remains completely free: the support of its listeners. 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. #Free #Podcast #Radio For those who enjoy the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, LinkedIn, or through IMDB and other major platforms, there are several easy ways to help the show grow without spending a single dollar. Supporting articles about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium , Blogspot and Linkedin. The first and most personal way to help is through direct recommendations. Word-of-mouth remains one of the strongest promotional tools available. When listeners tell friends, family members, colleagues, or fellow supporters about the Podcast or syndicated Radio Show, they introduce new audiences to a program they may never have otherwise discovered. Whether it’s one person or several, every recommendation matters. Because following, subscribing, and listening are free, these referrals can rapidly increase exposure. How You Can Help Us Grow for Free. Special Episode. The show is inspiring audiences through the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Apple, Spotify, iHeartradio and and many Podcast platforms. The second key growth strategy is Social Media engagement. Sharing the show’s website, episode links, or favorite Special Episode content on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube, to name a few, allows listeners to amplify the program’s message to their own networks. Supporters are encouraged not only to post links but also to explain why they value the show, whether it’s the raw authenticity of its guests, its focus on real crime stories, its survivor narratives, or its unique law enforcement perspective. Social Media algorithms reward shares, comments, and engagement, meaning every post can potentially introduce the show to thousands of new listeners. The third major opportunity lies in expanding the show’s Radio presence. Supporters can contact their local AM or FM Radio stations by email or social messaging and encourage them to carry the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show. By informing station managers that this nationally syndicated, free program offers unique law enforcement and true crime content, listeners can help local broadcasters discover programming that may enhance their own audience growth while simultaneously expanding the show’s reach. The episode is available across major platforms including their website, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, with highlights shared across their Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn profiles. In addition to these three primary strategies, leaving honest ratings and reviews on Podcast platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and iHeartRadio provides another major boost. Positive reviews improve visibility within search rankings and platform recommendations, helping the show appear before larger audiences seeking high-quality Podcast and Radio content. How You Can Help Us Grow for Free. Special Episode. The success of the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast is built not only on its content but also on the dedication of its audience. Every share, recommendation, review, and station referral contributes to broader awareness and continued expansion. Available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and most major Podcast networks. For fans who believe in the mission of highlighting real stories from the law enforcement world, promoting survivor voices, and delivering meaningful crime-related programming, helping the show grow is simple, impactful, and entirely free. By taking just a few minutes to spread the word through Podcast platforms, Radio advocacy, and Social Media ...
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    5 分
  • Career In The Police And Military Stressed Their Marriage
    2026/05/13
    Career In The Police And Military Stressed Their Marriage: A Special Episode About Survival, Trauma, and Healing. For many families, the pressures of military service or law enforcement alone can place enormous stress on a marriage. This powerful Special Episode tells the deeply personal story of how a US military career followed by a police career almost ended their marriage and how they fought to save it. 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. #Free #Podcast #Radio For Tina Ruediger and her husband Chris, the combined demands of both careers created a level of emotional strain that nearly destroyed their relationship. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast social media like their Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , Medium and other social media platforms. Tina Ruediger joins the show to share the rarely heard perspective of a wife living through the realities of both military and law enforcement life. Her husband, Chris, dedicated 20 years of service to the United States Navy, working in Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD), one of the military’s most dangerous and mentally taxing professions. His role required repeated combat deployments, placing him in some of the world’s most dangerous situations while exposing him to unimaginable levels of trauma, stress, and violence. Supporting articles about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium , Blogspot and Linkedin. For Tina, each deployment carried its own burden. While Chris faced physical dangers overseas, Tina carried the emotional weight at home, managing family responsibilities, uncertainty, fear, and the constant anxiety that every phone call could bring devastating news. The long separations, emotional disconnection, and cumulative effects of trauma became increasingly difficult to manage. Career In The Police And Military Stressed Their Marriage: A Special Episode About Survival, Trauma, and Healing. After Chris retired from the military, the challenges did not disappear. Her story is inspiring audiences through the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Apple, Spotify, iHeartradio and and many Podcast platforms. Instead of transitioning into a low-stress civilian role, Chris became a police officer, entering another profession marked by violence, danger, and chronic stress. The trauma he experienced during his military service was compounded by the daily pressures of policing. For Tina, the shift from military wife to police wife brought new challenges but familiar pain. “People often don’t realize that when service members come home, the battle isn’t always over,” Tina shares. “The stress, trauma, and emotional wounds often follow them into the next chapter.” This Special Episode explores how years of military deployments, police work, and unresolved trauma placed immense strain on their marriage. Tina openly discusses the struggles they faced. Their story reflects the reality many military and law enforcement families experience but often feel unable to discuss publicly. Career In The Police And Military Stressed Their Marriage: A Special Episode About Survival, Trauma, and Healing. The episode is available across major platforms including their website, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, with highlights shared across their Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn profiles. Social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify have increasingly become spaces where these conversations are finally being shared, helping reduce stigma for first responder and military families. What makes Tina and Chris’s story especially impactful is not just how close they came to losing everything, but how they rebuilt. Through intentional effort, counseling, communication strategies, and a renewed commitment to one another, they developed tools to strengthen their relationship. Their experiences eventually inspired them to create the Sheepdog Marriage Podcast, where they now help other couples facing similar struggles. Their mission is to support wives, husbands, and families navigating the unique pressures of careers in the military, police, and first responder communities. Available for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, also on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and most major Podcast networks. This episode is more than a story, it is a resource for countless families who may feel overwhelmed by the hidden costs of service. Tina’s voice offers a crucial reminder that spouses also serve in profound ways. While they may not wear uniforms, they often carry the emotional and relational burdens that come with these high-risk professions. For those in the military, law enforcement, or married to someone who serves, this Special Episode provides ...
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    40 分
  • The Dangers of Police Work and What
    2026/05/10
    The Dangers of Police Work and What Most Don’t Understand: his Powerful Journey Through Undercover Policing, Drugs, and Survival. Special Episode. Where many only see police work through headlines, television dramas, Facebook clips, Instagram reels, YouTube videos, or Spotify and Apple Podcasts, the true dangers of law enforcement often remain misunderstood. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast social media like their Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , Medium and other social media platforms. For retired law enforcement officer, police chief, and author Keith Grounsell, the realities of policing were far more dangerous, psychologically draining, and life-altering than most people will ever fully comprehend. His remarkable journey through narcotics enforcement and deep undercover operations reveals the hidden costs of protecting society from some of its darkest criminal threats. 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. #Free #Podcast #Radio “Undercover police work is one of the most dangerous and psychologically demanding assignments in all of law enforcement,” Grounsell’s story makes clear. “It is a profession where officers live double lives, often surrounded by violent criminals, drug traffickers, gang members, and murderers, while constantly balancing the razor-thin line between maintaining their cover and staying alive.” The Dangers of Police Work and What Most Don’t Understand: his Powerful Journey Through Undercover Policing, Drugs, and Survival. Supporting articles about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium , Blogspot and Linkedin. Keith Grounsell’s law enforcement career spanned more than 20 years, with over 26 years in the broader law enforcement and security field. His service included local policing, county narcotics operations, federal investigations with the DEA, and global security leadership. He served as Chief of Police in South Carolina, worked as a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent, advised international police organizations in Liberia, Nigeria, and Haiti, and consulted with more than 30 national police forces worldwide. Yet, despite his prestigious career, it was his six years deep undercover that would become the defining, and most dangerous chapter of his life. As a young officer, Grounsell was unexpectedly thrust into undercover narcotics work with little formal preparation. “He had to quickly learn how to infiltrate dangerous drug circles, purchase narcotics, build criminal trust, and avoid exposure, all through trial and error.” This perilous learning process placed him in life-threatening situations early in his career, but he adapted rapidly, successfully removing more than 130 drug dealers within his first year alone. His story is inspiring audiences through the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Apple, Spotify, iHeartradio and and many Podcast platforms. His journey quickly escalated from city-level narcotics to county vice operations and eventually to federal DEA assignments, where the stakes became far deadlier. Grounsell infiltrated violent gangs, dealt directly with international drug cartels, purchased large quantities of narcotics, investigated murder-for-hire schemes, and confronted human trafficking networks, political corruption, and organized violence. “In this dark world, every interaction carried the possibility of death.” Guns were pointed at him, drugs were pushed on him to test his cover, and violent criminals constantly sought to expose or eliminate threats. “The pressure was relentless,” his experiences reveal. “Any mistake in behavior, speech, or judgment could have exposed his identity instantly.” This level of risk was not just physical, it was emotional and psychological. The Dangers of Police Work and What Most Don’t Understand: his Powerful Journey. The episode is available across major platforms including their website, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, with highlights shared across their Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn profiles. While many associate police work primarily with physical danger, Grounsell’s journey exposes another side most people fail to recognize: the devastating toll on mental health, family relationships, and personal well-being. “The chronic stress, fear, and secrecy deeply impacted his health, strained his marriage, and affected his family life.” Long-term undercover officers often live in a state of constant paranoia, unable to fully share their experiences even with loved ones. The trauma can silently erode families while officers continue operating in silence. Grounsell chronicled these extraordinary experiences in his acclaimed four-volume memoir series, A Narc’s Tale. Through these books, readers receive an ...
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    39 分
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