‘Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story’ is one of Netflix’s most watched shows right now, but one of the real-life men it is based on criticised it for being “disheartening slander”.
‘How to Create a Sex Scandal’ reveals that the small-town paedophilia case that sent seven people to prison was, in fact, an elaborate scam.
For all you true crime fans out there, this is an ideal way to spend those cold stormy nights when the power goes out.
The South Carolina ex-lawyer stands accused of murder and elaborate cover-up schemes to protect his alleged financial fraud and prescription painkiller addiction.
The game itself is harmless but there’s a sinister story linked to its history that’s now under the spotlight.
Jeffrey Dahmer kept a few horrendous souvenirs from his multiple killings, which included a series of infamous, and truly disturbing Polaroid photos that he kept next to his bed.
It turns out ‘DAHMER – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story’ has been stirring a rather large, and incredibly disturbing pot on social media and the internet at large.
Not everybody thinks that there needed to be yet another show about a serial killer, paedophile, necrophiliac, and cannibal who murdered and dismembered 17 people over the span of 13 years.
The true-crime genre is often a way to gawk at the misfortune of others. Sometimes, though, a series or podcast can lift the lid and lead to actual change.
The series focuses on the true story of Anthony Templet, a teenager in Louisiana who shot and killed his father in June 2019.
John Wayne Gacy murdered at least 30 young boys and men and earned the nickname ‘the Killer Clown’.
The Orlando Pirates goalkeeper, who also captained Bafana Bafana on a number of occasions, was gunned down in front of six eyewitnesses. It’s the sort of murder that has long been whispered about.
Out of the hundreds of true-crime series to watch these days, NBC’s satire ‘The Thing About Pam’ has a number of factors that make it stick out.
Olivia Colman and David Thewlis are a seemingly ordinary British couple who get caught up in an extraordinary murder investigation.
You’ve watched ‘Making a Murderer’ and those other high-profile true-crime series, but maybe these have flown under your radar.
This limited Netflix docuseries tries to answer some of the questions that were left unanswered after a grisly crime resulted in the death of 11 people all from the same family.
This four-part documentary series covers the story of an accused serial rapist in the 1970s who claimed that multiple personalities controlled his behaviour.
Dennis Nilsen might not be a name you’re familiar with, but his five-year London killing spree is the stuff of nightmares.
‘Heist’, a true-crime series that hits Netflix tomorrow (July 14), chronicles three of the biggest heists in modern American history, as explained by the people who pulled them off.
The crimes committed by members of the murderous occult known as the Krugersdorp Killers are the focus of a four-part docuseries coming out later this month.
The shocking murder of French documentary producer Sophie Toscan du Plantier in a rural Irish town is the focus of a new Netflix true-crime series.
The series uses a story about the mythical beast as a starting point for a closer look at a potential triple murder that is the stuff of legend in the Northern Californian mountains.
Forged documents about magic and salamanders, pipe bombs, and murder come together in what looks to be an excellent true-crime series.
The Cecil Hotel is often called Los Angeles’ deadliest hotel, with a dark and at times twisted history. The 2013 disappearance and death of Elisa Lam has only added further flames to the fire.
The long-running show, which first aired in 1987, has helped crack an estimated 260 cases. It’s hoped the Netflix reboot can add to that tally.
In 2018, Shanann Watts and her two children went missing in Colorado, with her husband Chris appealing for America’s help.
The docuseries will cover the stories of five of the world’s most infamous criminals, from the crimes they committed through to how they’ve evaded capture for so long.
In July 2013, a four-year-old boy in Williamson county, a suburb outside of Austin, Texas, told his parents that he had been sexually assaulted by a high schooler he called Greg.
Earlier this week, Joseph James DeAngelo Jr, better known as the Golden State Killer, admitted to 13 murders in court, saying an ‘inner voice’ made him carry out the killings.
The ’80s classic ‘Unsolved Mysteries’ has been rebooted, but it still hopes its viewers will help to solve the unsolvable.