Martin Conmey re-visits his conviction for the manslaughter of Una Lynskey in 1971 and his subsequent fight to clear his name.
Gail O’Rorke re-tells how she was charged with the assisted suicide of her best friend Bernadette Ford in 2016.
Peter Mulryan recounts his upbringing in the Tuam mother and baby home and his subsequent quest to find his mother which led him to Galway’s Magdalene laundry.
George Stagg remembers the bizarre events surrounding the government’s hijacking of his brother Frank Stagg’s body in 1976, after his death on hunger strike.
Ann McCabe brings us back to the events surrounding the murder of her husband Jerry McCabe in Adare in 1996, and her subsequent efforts to bring his killers to justice.
Louise Hannon relives her experience of transitioning from male to female and her efforts to take a case against her employers in 2011 on discrimination grounds.
The story of the Wood Quay controversy as told through the eyes of archaeologist Pat Wallace. When Dublin Corporation proposed to build a new headquarters on the site of an old Viking settlement, concerned citizens took to the streets and stopped the bulldozers. It was a race against time for Wallace to ensure that this site of huge heritage importance was successfully excavated in time before the bulldozers were moved in.
Osgur Breatnach re-visits his nightmarish conviction for the robbery of the mail train at Sallins, and his subsequent efforts to quash the conviction.