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It’s James Jordan’s name and son Michael Jordan’s fame that will bring audiences to imdb.com’s “Moment of Truth,” but the docuseries has little to do with them.
The five-part documentary, which began streaming Friday on the Amazon-owned website best known as a resource for TV and movie credits, is really about justice, incompetence, inconsistencies and allegations of corruption.
The elder Jordan, a murder victim not long after his sonâs third NBA title with the Chicago Bulls in 1993, is soon enough an afterthought.
So, too, is Jordan after a retelling of his well-worn basketball origin story, reminders of how close he and his dad were and a clip of the superstar telling Oprah Winfrey in â93 that he didnât want to know the killersâ rationale.
New-yorkUnited-statesRobeson-countyNorth-carolinaPrudential-buildingIllinoisSouth-carolinaChicagoRaleighMichael-jordanOprah-winfreyJames-jordanWho really killed Michael Jordan’s father? New documentary claims man jailed for 1993 murder may be innocent Alice Hutton © Provided by The Independent
A man jailed for nearly 30 years for the brutal murder of the father of basketball legend Michael Jordan could be innocent, a new true-crime documentary has claimed.
On July 23, 1993, James Jordan, 56, was shot in Lumberton, North Carolina, while sleeping in a Lexus car that was a gift from his world-famous son, who later described his father as his “rock”.
The crime appeared to have been a botched robbery.
Jordan’s body was found dumped in a swamp in South Carolina 11 days later and he was accidentally cremated on August 7 as an unidentified “John Doe”. His family, who reported him missing 21 days after his murder, had not been contacted.
Robeson-countyNorth-carolinaUnited-statesLumbertonSouth-carolinaChicagoIllinoisWhite-houseDistrict-of-columbiaMichael-jordanJames-jordanChristine-mummaA judge is allowing forensic testing of evidence that might result in proving someone else is responsible for murdering NBA star Chris Paulâs grandfather, Nathaniel Jones, in 2002.
Judge Allen Baddour is the chair of a panel of three Superior Court judges charged with determining whether four men convicted in Jonesâ death should be exonerated. The N.C. Innocence Inquiry Commission held a five-day hearing last year and members voted 5-3 that there was sufficient evidence that the four men might be innocent in Jonesâ death. The three-judge panel was scheduled to hold an evidentiary hearing in April but that hearing has now been continued. A new hearing date has not yet been set.
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