Justice Is A Process - In Memoriam Steven M. Askin 1948-2024
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Due Process. Presumption of Innocence. Constitutional Accountability.

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HI v. Gerhardt Konig
BREAKING
April 8, 2026

The Jury Found What Neither Attorney Asked For

Gerhardt Konig found guilty of Attempted Manslaughter with EMED. Probation to 20 years.

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Continuing the legacy of Steven M. Askin, a West Virginia criminal defense attorney who was twice prosecuted by the system for protecting constitutional rights and teaching people the law.

1948 — 2024
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FL v. Demorris Hunter ACTIVE TRIAL
FL v. Demorris Hunter

Serial Killer Cold Case Murder Trial

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TX v. Tanner Lynn Horner ACTIVE TRIAL
TX v. Tanner Lynn Horner

Athena Strand Kidnapping and Murder Trial

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UT v. Kouri Richins VERDICT
UT v. Kouri Richins

The Poisoned Husband Murder Trial

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GA v. Colin Gray VERDICT
GA v. Colin Gray

Apalachee High School Shooting

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FL v. Cole Goldberg BENCH TRIAL
FL v. Cole Goldberg

Boca Bash Attempted Murder Trial

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UT v. Meggan Sundwall ACTIVE TRIAL
UT v. Meggan Sundwall

Nurse Charged With Killing Friend With Insulin

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GA v. Suzanne Mericle VERDICT
GA v. Suzanne Mericle

Deadly Dentist Murder Trial

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MA v. Judy Church VERDICT
MA v. Judy Church

The Powerade Poisoning Murder Trial

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HI v. Gerhardt Konig VERDICT
HI v. Gerhardt Konig

Hawaii Doctor Attempted Murder Trial

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MA v. Kelsey Fitzsimmons ACTIVE TRIAL
MA v. Kelsey Fitzsimmons

Officer Shot in Her Own Home

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MI v. Dale Warner ACTIVE TRIAL
MI v. Dale Warner

Wife Dumped in Tank Murder Trial

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TX v. Adrian Gonzales
TX v. Adrian Gonzales

Uvalde School Shooting Response

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VA v. Brendan Banfield VERDICT
VA v. Brendan Banfield

The Au Pair Murder Trial

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NJ v. Paul Caneiro ACTIVE TRIAL
NJ v. Paul Caneiro

The Family Murders Trial

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MA v. Brian Walshe VERDICT
MA v. Brian Walshe

The Ana Walshe Murder

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GA v. Trinity Poague
GA v. Trinity Poague

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NR
Nick Reiner Case

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TX v. Uriah Urick
TX v. Uriah Urick

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MI v. Jalen & Charla Pendergrass PRE-TRIAL
MI v. Jalen & Charla Pendergrass

The London Thomas Murder

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GA v. Edrick Faust VERDICT
GA v. Edrick Faust

The Tara Baker Murder Trial

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DAVE: One Decision Changes Everything by Steven Askin
AVAILABLE NOW
The Novel

DAVE

One Decision Changes Everything

A CPA's life is destroyed after a tragic accident. But was the process that convicted him actually just?

Dave Schrader had everything. A successful practice. A family who loved him. Then came the party, the dark country road, and the split-second choice that would cost a sixteen-year-old boy his life. What follows isn't just a story about guilt or punishment. It's a story about what happens when a man enters a system designed to produce outcomes, not fairness.

Justice isn't an outcome. Justice is a process.

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Steven M. Askin II - Justice Is A Process

Steven M. Askin II

I'm not a lawyer. I'm trained differently.

At age 12, I watched my father get indicted. I sat in the courtroom audience. I reviewed his files. I got an education no law school provides. I became a criminal defendant's family member facing the possibility of losing everything.

My father, Steven M. Askin, was a renowned West Virginia criminal defense attorney for 23 years. He was prosecuted twice by the system he challenged. First for protecting attorney-client privilege. Later for teaching people their constitutional rights from a coffee shop.

"The system only works if we force it to work. If we watch. If we question. If we refuse to let them operate in darkness."

Justice Is A Process continues his legacy. We cover trials not to entertain, but to educate. To teach people how the system really works. To be the watchdog the justice system needs.

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In Memoriam
Steven M. Askin (1948-2024)

Steven M. Askin

1948 — 2024

Steven M. Askin was a West Virginia criminal defense attorney for 23 years. He wasn't just a lawyer. He was a fighter who believed that constitutional rights belong to everyone, not just those who can afford them.

In 1994, the federal government came for him. He refused to violate attorney-client privilege, even when a judge ordered him to testify. He went to prison for seven months. The West Virginia Supreme Court disbarred him in 1998.

But he didn't stop. He rebuilt. He became a street lawyer, working from coffee shops in Martinsburg, helping people the system abandoned. People who couldn't afford lawyers. People fighting Pro Se against a machine designed to crush them. He taught them the law. He showed them how to stand up for their rights. He did it for free, or for whatever they could afford.

In 2009, on the morning he was supposed to get his law license back, he was indicted on 11 counts of unauthorized practice of law. For helping people from a coffee shop. For teaching them their constitutional rights. The prosecutor said she feared he would "disrupt the legal system."

She was right to be afraid. His mission lives on.

"The system only works if we force it to work. If we watch. If we question. If we refuse to let them operate in darkness."

Follow his story in the documentary podcast series

Watch Episode 1: The Story Begins

New episodes on the Justice Is A Process YouTube channel