• Redemption Story: Sean Luttrell
    Feb 22 2026

    Sean Luttrell’s first arrest came in 2023.

    By his own words, he wasn’t confused about how he got there. He was living an evil life — one bad decision stacked on top of another until the weight finally caught up with him. The arrest didn’t surprise him. In a way, it confirmed what he already knew: the path he was on only led one direction.

    While incarcerated for aggravated assault, something shifted.

    Sean didn’t start with grand promises or dramatic declarations. He hit his knees. He opened his Bible. And he began reading it every day — not for comfort, not to pass time, but because he knew he needed real change. Slowly, he says, he could feel something happening inside him. Not all at once. Not overnight. But enough to know this wasn’t just another jailhouse phase.

    After serving one year, Sean expected to be released.

    Instead, he stayed another year.

    At the time, it felt like a setback. Looking back, Sean believes it wasn’t punishment — it was preparation. “God had other plans,” he says. Plans that required more time, more discipline, and fewer distractions.

    During that additional year, Sean completed the Men of Valor program while still inside the jail. He chose growth over bitterness. Structure over excuses. Accountability over shortcuts. It wasn’t easy — but it was necessary.

    Redemption, Sean learned, doesn’t always mean getting out sooner.

    Sometimes it means staying longer… so you don’t come out the same.

    Today, Sean carries that lesson with him. He doesn’t deny his past or minimize his mistakes. He understands the harm his choices caused. But he also understands that change is possible — when someone finally stops running and starts surrendering.

    Sean’s story isn’t loud. It isn’t flashy. It’s quiet, deliberate, and honest.

    And sometimes, those are the ones that last.

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    7 Min.
  • Sean describes the moment he knew he had to change.
    Feb 20 2026

    On February 23, 2026 you can hear the complete story of Sean Luttrell.

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    Weniger als 1 Minute
  • When Ink Becomes Evidence: How Tattoo Studios Can Help Fight Human Trafficking
    Feb 19 2026

    Human trafficking often hides in plain sight.

    In this narrated journalism episode of The Redemption Project, Brandon Burley examines a new Tennessee law that requires licensed tattoo artists to complete human trafficking awareness training—and why that policy matters.

    Drawing from reporting, survivor advocacy, and law enforcement experience, this episode explores how traffickers have historically used tattoos as tools of control, why tattoo professionals are uniquely positioned to notice warning signs, and how community-based awareness can become a bridge between vulnerable individuals and help.

    This is not an argument that tattoos equal trafficking. It’s a discussion about training, pattern recognition, and the quiet role everyday professionals can play in disrupting exploitation.

    This episode is based on Brandon Burley’s recent opinion column published in The Knoxville News Sentinel and is part of Season 4: Narrated Journalism, where reporting, policy, and practice intersect.

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    5 Min.
  • Redemption, Research, and What Actually Works in Prison Reform A Conversation with Dr. Robin LaBarbera
    Feb 15 2026

    What actually changes lives inside prison—and what only sounds good on paper?

    In this extended conversation, Brandon Burley sits down with Dr. Robin LaBarbera, a leading researcher on prison-based theological education, reentry, and well-being inside correctional systems.

    Drawing from years of firsthand research inside prisons and jails, Dr. LaBarbera explains why transformation cannot be measured by recidivism alone, how faith-based education reshapes prison culture, and why community, accountability, and purpose matter more than policy slogans.

    This episode explores:

    • Why well-being is a stronger indicator of successful reentry than raw recidivism rates

    • What prison-based theological education gets right—and why it changes entire housing units

    • The gap between academic research and real-world practice

    • How redemption stories inside prison challenge public assumptions about crime and punishment

    • Why human dignity must come before policy outcomes

    This is not a debate episode. It’s a working conversation between research and lived reality—grounded in evidence, humility, and firsthand experience.

    Whether you’re a practitioner, educator, policymaker, or simply someone asking how people truly change, this conversation offers clarity few discussions ever reach.

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    1 Std. und 27 Min.
  • Addiction Is Distributed Evenly. Help Is Not. | Commentary on Recovery Gaps in East Tennessee
    Feb 12 2026

    In this narrated commentary, Brandon Burley reflects on his recent opinion piece examining why addiction impacts every community—but recovery resources often do not.

    Drawing from reporting in East Tennessee, the episode explores how smaller cities like Oak Ridge experience the same pressures as larger urban centers—substance misuse, fractured families, and relapse—without the same concentration of treatment, visibility, or long-term recovery infrastructure.

    The discussion highlights First Recovery in Oak Ridge as an example of sustained, community-based support that goes beyond short-term intervention, connecting people and families to accountability, structure, and practical help. The episode also addresses broader regional data on addiction, homelessness, and overdose deaths, and why recovery efforts cannot remain centralized if communities want meaningful public safety outcomes.

    This episode is part of Season 4: Narrated Journalism, where published reporting is paired with context, reflection, and practitioner insight for educators, justice professionals, and community members.

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    6 Min.
  • Redemption Story: Michael King
    Feb 8 2026

    From Maximum Security to Redemption.


    Michael Charles King was convicted of murder in 1992 and sentenced to life with the possibility of parole. He spent years in maximum security, planned an escape for over a year—and was caught the same day.But that’s not where his story ends.In this full conversation, Michael talks honestly about what prison couldn’t fix, what finally changed him, and how love, accountability, and structure reshaped his life after release.Paroled in 2023. Nearly lost everything again. Didn’t quit.

    Today, he works with Men of Valor Knoxville and mentors other men rebuilding their lives from the inside out.This isn’t a story about excusing the past.It’s about what real redemption looks like when it’s lived daily.

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    7 Min.
  • What a Tennessee Pardon Really Means — and What It Doesn’t
    Feb 5 2026

    In this episode, Brandon Burley breaks down one of the most misunderstood parts of criminal justice: pardons.

    Following Tennessee Governor Bill Lee’s recent decision to grant clemency to 33 individuals—including a high-profile recipient—public conversation quickly blurred the line between forgiveness, expungement, and erasure of a criminal record. This episode explains, in plain terms, what a pardon actually does under Tennessee law—and just as importantly, what it does not do.

    Brandon walks through how pardons affect employment, housing, professional licensing, travel, and public records, why pardons are not shortcuts through the legal system, and how they fit into the much longer and often misunderstood process of expungement. He also explains why pardons remain rare, discretionary, and the result of extensive review—not public pressure or celebrity status.

    To ground the discussion, Brandon references a firsthand interview with Clark Shepherd, one of the individuals granted clemency, and outlines the years-long process behind that decision.

    This episode is part of The Redemption Project’s narrated journalism series—focused on clarity, context, and facts beyond headlines

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    3 Min.
  • “I Was Looking at 28 Years”: Matt Holder on Addiction, Prison, and the Long Road Back
    Feb 1 2026

    Matt Holder’s story isn’t about a single bad decision — it’s about how addiction slowly dismantles a life, one rationalization at a time.

    Growing up in East Tennessee, Matt came from a stable family, earned a degree in criminal justice, and built a career. But prescription opioids changed everything. What started as pain management turned into years of addiction, felony charges, repeated incarceration, probation violations, and the constant weight of consequences he couldn’t outrun.

    At his lowest point, Matt was facing a potential 28-year sentence and believed there was no way out. What followed was not a miracle moment — it was structure, accountability, brutal honesty, and people willing to walk with him without excusing his behavior.

    In this conversation, Matt walks through:

    • How addiction escalates quietly and relentlessly

    • Why “white-knuckling” recovery fails

    • The role jail, probation, and treatment really played in his transformation

    • What accountability looks like when grace doesn’t erase consequences

    • How redemption is built over years, not moments

    Today, Matt works in recovery and ministry, advocates for people reentering society, and lives a life that looks nothing like the one that nearly ended him.

    This is a long-form conversation for anyone who wants to understand what real change actually takes, both inside the justice system and beyond it.

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    1 Std. und 13 Min.