Psychologist and professor Fathali Moghaddam spoke with A&E True Crime to unpack the motivations behind people who kidnap and abduct.
The Philadelphia-based forensic scientist discusses her experience being one of the few Black women in the field and the work her nonprofit, Association of Women in Forensic Science, does to bring STEM to kids.
The 1980s McMartin Preschool case was, and currently remains, the longest and most expensive criminal trial in American history. Seven teachers at the school were accused of abusing hundreds of students, sometimes as part of Satanic rituals.
Expert FBI profiler John Douglas shares how he turned the sophisticated and cruel tactics of murderer Larry Gene Bell against him.
In 2012, the Supreme Court's Miller v. Alabama verdict found that almost all juvenile offenders deserve a chance at release and must be resentenced.
A Philadelphia woman's parents have fought for 11 years to change their daughter's cause of death from suicide to homicide.
In 2017, the investigation of a missing 20-year-old Indigenous woman from the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Montana stalled, which resulted in it remaining unsolved today.
Was a dead woman found in Norway in 1970 a spy, a member of an international criminal organization or did she suffer from a mental illness?
Forensic psychologist, Dr. Katherine Ramsland, tells A&E True Crime about her over a decade-long correspondence with BTK and how she got into the mind of the prolific serial killer.
A&E True Crime investigates attempts made by death-row inmates to donate their organs posthumously.