The usual fayre, promoted by do-gooders, who have probably never experienced trauma such as the White House murders first hand, hoodwinked by a master conman, who has had nothing else to do for forty years save to get his kicks by hoodwinking the gullible, including the late Eric Allison, attracted and duped by the false glamour of the case. The podcast is cleverly arranged by introducing two genuine miscarriages of justice, incredibly rare events, then before one knows it the Bamber case is slid into the reckoning, some mistakes by Essex Police interspersed with false innuendo about chair scrapings and a David Boutflour interview, whilst making light of the pain felt by those badgered by journalist tactics and who are left behind.
Simon Hatterstone was given a very easy time. He seems impressed by Bamber not having displayed any previous homicidal behaviour - but has nothing to say in that regard about Sheila. Also Bamber continuing to protest his innocence does a lot of heavy lifting for him. The two hosts did little to provide any balance - one was left with the impression they didn't know much about the case.
Hatterstone seems a decent type but it's clear he's gone far down the rabbit hole.