We speak with author Jaime Gehring about her experience growing up in remote Montana woods next to Ted Kaczynski, who killed three people and injured 23 others between 1978 and 1995.
In 2020, Shirley Ann Soosay, a member of the Cree Nation, was one of the first Indigenous people to be identified using investigative genealogy. Prior to that, Soosay, who was murdered in California in July 1980, was referred to as Jane Doe Kern County.
After a brutal killing spree during the 1980s and 90s, Gary Ridgway pleaded guilty to 49 murders in 2003. We look into who actually survived encounters with the serial killer.
A&E True Crime investigates the 2014 quadruple homicide of the Chen family of upstate New York and how the devastation caused by the murders continues to impact the Albany community today.
In 2018, the New York con man and co-founder of Fyre Festival was found guilty of fraud and sentenced to six-years in prison. What's his life like at the Milan Federal Correctional Institution?
Investigator Gary Stansill speaks with A&E True Crime about a community's persistent hunt for answers about the disappearance, and presumed murders, of Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible in 1999.
From the 1984 Victims of Crime Act to Marsy's Law, A&E True Crime explores the rights victims of violent crimes have within the United States, and how these laws can vary by location.
On July 31, 1970, 4-year-old Heidi Jones found the body of her mother, 23-year-old Loretta Jones. Heidi Jones-Asay recounts the 46 years leading up to Thomas Egley's long-awaited guilty plea.
After spending nearly two decades in prison for a crime he didn't commit, the Wisconsin man was exonerated and released. But soon after, he was charged and convicted of the murder of Teresa Halbach.
'Phrogging' is the crime of individuals secretly living in someone's home—a reference to how frogs leap from place to place. We investigate the many different forms of this crime and the danger it presents to victims.