
The interview comes after writer Kelly Oxford tweeted a Facebook post, apparently from Wilds, in which he stated he was willing to participate in one interview. Getting them in trouble for anything that they knew or that I had told them - I couldn’t have that.” People had lives and were trying to get into college and stuff like that. No - until they told me they weren’t trying to prosecute me for selling weed, or trying to get any of my friends in trouble.

“They had to chase me around before they could corner me to talk to me, and there came a point where I was just sick of talking to them,” he said. The Hunt for the Long Island Serial Killer: New clues in. He also spoke about why he cooperated with the police after initially refusing to, saying that he was worried about criminal consequences for selling marijuana, and that he was concerned because Baltimore was notorious as a place where people who informed could be subject to retribution. In the Name of Hate: A brilliant Ivy League student is murdered after he went to a California. I was also around a bunch of people earlier the day, and I didn’t want them to get fucked up with homicide.” “I was also running operations from my grandmother’s house. “At the time I was convinced that I would be going to jail for a long time if he turned me in for drug dealing, especially to high school kids,” he said.
#Jay serial podcast last name series
In the interview – the first of a multi-part series – Wilds talks about the first time he met Syed, and why he agreed to help him bury Lee’s body. I remember the highway traffic to my right, and I remember standing there on the curb. I know it didn’t happen anywhere other than my grandmother’s house. But he hasn't been able to explain who, then, made the call. Adnan says he was not with his phone at that time, because Jay had it.

A call from his cell phone to her house was made at 3:32 p.m.

Adnan began calling her after they met New Year's Eve, 1998. “I believe I told them it was in front of ‘Cathy’s house, but it was in front of my grandmother’s house. High school student in Silver Spring, Md. “I didn’t tell the cops it was in front of my house because I didn’t want to involve my grandmother,” he said. But when asked about it by The Intercept, he said he first saw it in front of his grandmother’s house. On taped interviews with police used in the podcast he stated that he first saw the body in the car park of a Best Buy. Wilds, who was the prosecution’s main witness, has changed elements of his story – including where he first saw Lee’s body.
