Linda Fairstein talks to us about her most memorable unsolved case, what concerns her about how sexual assaults are handled on college campuses and how she is often inspired by real-life events in her books.
Women have been murdering their children since the beginning of time. But what would drive someone to end a life they brought into the world?
With O.J. Simpson having recently been granted parole after serving almost nine years for armed robbery, we're reminded of some other famous folks who have gotten in trouble for supposedly sticky fingers.
Join Brooke Gittings from the hit podcast, Convicted, as she takes a deeper dive into the Cold Case Files episode, "A Family Secret," in the latest installment of Cold Case Files: The Podcast.
Many people think the concept of a citizen's arrest is a joke or a myth. Can a citizen who isn't a law-enforcement official really arrest someone at their will? We asked Live PD analyst Tom Morris Jr. about this mysterious practice.
While one of the biggest drug kingpins in Washington, D.C. remains in a federal penitentiary, his namesake son, Tony Lewis Jr. is helping children with a parent in prison. He talks to us about his struggle getting people to understand that when a person goes to prison, their family goes with them.
Isabel Martinez recently shocked the world by allegedly stabbing to death her husband and four of her five children (she's been charged with multiple accounts of murder and aggregated assault). Although she has yet to be convicted of any crime, we are reminded of famous cases of mothers convicted of killing their children.
Join Brooke Gittings from the hit podcast, Convicted, as she takes a deeper dive into the Cold Case Files episode, "Circle of Friends," in the latest installment of Cold Case Files: The Podcast.
Since being approached by an officer can inspire feelings ranging from confusion to panic, we asked Live PD analyst Tom Morris Jr. for some tips on how best to behave—and communicate—during a brush with police.
If you've ever been crammed into a bus without air conditioning in the summer, you're probably familiar with how easily tempers can flare in hot weather. And there's no shortage of experts trying to explain this phenomenon.