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Aaron Spencer: Hero Dad on Trial

Aaron Spencer: Hero Dad on Trial

Di: Hidden Killers Podcast
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A proposito di questo titolo

Aaron Spencer’s 14-year-old daughter was abducted by the same man who had already been arrested for sexually abusing her. That man—67-year-old Michael Fosler—was facing 43 felony charges, including rape, grooming, and possession of child pornography. But instead of being held behind bars, Fosler was released on a $5,000 bond.

When Spencer discovered his daughter missing, he did what any parent would do: he went after her. Within minutes, he found her in the predator’s truck. When Fosler refused to stop and then allegedly lunged at him, Spencer opened fire. He saved his daughter’s life.

And now, the state of Arkansas is charging him with murder.

Hero on Trial is a deep-dive true crime series exposing the legal and moral failure behind one of the most infuriating prosecutions in America. Why is a father being treated like a criminal for protecting his child? Why was a known predator allowed to walk free? And why did the court try to silence the public with an illegal gag order?

This podcast unpacks every disturbing detail—from the courtroom maneuvers to the political power plays—raising urgent questions about who our justice system really serves. It’s a story about parental instinct, systemic failure, and a community fighting back against a legal system that got everything backwards.

If saving your child makes you a criminal, what’s left of justice?

Real Story Media
Crimini reali Politica e governo
  • Aaron Spencer Found His Daughter In Michael Fosler's Truck At 1 AM — Defense Attorney Explains The Legal Path To Acquittal
    Jan 21 2026

    Everything changed just after 1 AM. Aaron Spencer's 13-year-old daughter — the same girl Michael Fosler was facing 43 felony charges for allegedly victimizing — was missing from her bed. Spencer found her in Fosler's truck, heading toward Fosler's house. Three months earlier, Fosler had posted $50,000 bond and gotten a no-contact order. That order was allegedly violated with the victim physically in his vehicle.

    Spencer rammed the truck into a ditch. Fired 16 shots. Fifteen hit Fosler. Then Spencer called 911 and said Fosler was dead on the side of the road for trying to kidnap his daughter. Now Spencer faces second-degree murder charges. His trial begins in one week.

    Defense attorney Bob Motta breaks down why Arkansas law may be on Spencer's side. Under state statute, justification for defense of another person is an element the prosecution must disprove beyond a reasonable doubt. The defense doesn't need jury nullification — they have a legitimate legal path to acquittal.

    But prosecutors aren't backing down. They just won a ruling to introduce body cam footage from July 2024, three months before the shooting, where Spencer allegedly sought out Fosler's address and made statements about handling things himself. The state says this wasn't protection — it was premeditation.

    There's also missing evidence. The dashcam from Fosler's truck sat in a detective's office for over a year and never made it into evidence. The defense is arguing spoliation. That footage could have shown exactly what happened in the moments before Spencer pulled the trigger. Over 361,000 people have signed petitions supporting Spencer. He's now running for sheriff while awaiting trial.

    #AaronSpencer #MichaelFosler #AaronSpencerTrial #BobMotta #DefenseOfOthers #ArkansasLaw #ChildProtection #JustificationDefense #Spoliation #TrueCrime

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

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    24 min
  • Father vs. Predator: The Aaron Spencer Case & the Murder Charge Shaking Arkansas | 2025 True Crime
    Jan 4 2026
    What would YOU do if a man already accused of dozens of crimes against your child came back and took her again? That’s the impossible question at the heart of the Aaron Spencer case — a story that exposes not only a horrific personal nightmare, but a justice system many say failed at every step.

    In this emotional and legally complex episode of Hidden Killers, Tony Brueski and defense attorney Bob Motta walk through the events leading up to the fatal confrontation. According to reports, 67-year-old Michael Foster — already facing multiple charges involving Spencer’s 14-year-old daughter — was released on a shockingly low bond. Not long after, Foster allegedly abducted her again. Aaron Spencer did what desperate parents imagine in their darkest moments: he got in his truck, tracked them down, and confronted the man he believed was repeatedly harming his child.

    What unfolded next resulted in Foster’s death — and Spencer now charged with murder.

    Tony and Bob break down what prosecutors must prove, how self-defense applies, whether “defense of another” could factor in, and why some cases blur the line between vigilantism and survival instinct. But the deeper conversation is about failure: a bond decision that baffled the community, a vulnerable child allegedly left unprotected, and a father now facing prison for acting when institutions didn’t.

    In the second half, Tony and Bob explore the uncomfortable questions circulating publicly: Is this prosecution a straightforward application of the law, or the system trying to protect itself from liability? Does the case reflect a larger pattern of institutional breakdown? And why does public outrage feel so justified?

    This isn’t just a true crime case.
    It’s a national debate about parental instinct, justice, and where the system’s responsibility ends.

    #AaronSpencer #MichaelFoster #HiddenKillers #TonyBrueski #BobMotta #TrueCrimePodcast #JusticeSystemFailure #SelfDefenseCase #ArkansasCrime #ParentalInstinct


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    36 min
  • Two Family Tragedies Aaron Spencer & Rob Reiner | Defense Attorney Bob Motta Breaks Them Down-WEEK IN REVIEW
    Dec 20 2025
    Two cases this week that expose exactly how broken the American legal system is — in completely opposite directions.

    In Arkansas, Aaron Spencer is heading to trial for stopping Michael Fosler, a 67-year-old man with 43 felony charges who was out on bond and actively taking Spencer's 13-year-old daughter in the middle of the night. Fosler had already assaulted her once. A no-contact order was in place. The system knew he was dangerous and let him walk anyway. When Spencer's daughter ended up in Fosler's truck heading toward Fosler's house, Spencer did what the system refused to do — he protected his child. Now prosecutors want to use body cam footage from three months earlier to argue premeditation. They want a jury to believe a father in shock, processing his daughter's disclosure, was actually planning something. The defense says this was a kidnapping in progress and Arkansas law justified every action Spencer took.

    In California, Rob Reiner's son Nick is accused of taking both of his parents' lives after years of addiction and mental illness that the family publicly tried to address. They had money. They had access. They had every resource available. But California law doesn't let you force an adult into treatment — no matter how sick they are, no matter how many times they've been hospitalized, no matter how obvious the trajectory is. You just wait. The Reiners waited. And now they're gone.

    One father acted because the system let a predator walk. One father couldn't act because the system tied his hands. Both families deserved better. This episode breaks down the legal fights in both cases and what they reveal about a system that fails victims at every turn.

    #AaronSpencer #RobReiner #SystemFailed #TrueCrime #FathersRights #MentalHealthLaw #ChildProtection #JusticeSystem #DefenseOfOthers #HiddenKillers


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    57 min
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