>> doug evans: because i knew he was guilty. and the families knew he was guilty.deserve justice. >> alfonsi: but what about now that those witnesses have changed their stories? >> evans: i don't think-- know, that any of them have changed their stories. >> alfonsi: well, clemmie, odell. >> evans: but that's not in court, under oath. >> alfonsi: do you think that curtis could get a fair trial when the jury is predominately white? >> evans: yes. race has nothing to do with our part of what we do. a lot of times, race gets thrown in as an excuse, if there is no defense. >> alfonsi: justice brett kavanaugh wrote there seemed to be a "relentless, determined effort to rid the jury of black individuals." that's from the supreme court. >> evans: and i can't understand that. basically, what he is doing is accusing me, like he was accused, before he was put on the supreme court. >> alfonsi: evans says he never listened to the podcast, but is nvince"in the dark" set out to discredit his case. the way this is being presented now was that it was a weak case, that there were no