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- Documentary series focusing on history's largest financial crimes ranging from Ponzi schemes, murder, card counting, generating fake currency and goods, extortion, online dating, identity theft, drug distribution, and insider trading.
- Cold Case Files shows how timing, persistence and high-tech police work combine to catch people who have slipped through the cracks for decades.
- The true story of an 11 year old girl kidnapped and the abuse she survived. Her desire to survive and reunite with her family over 18 plus years is amazing and how she eventually escaped.
- Anchored by Bill Kurtis, Investigative Reports is one of the most controversial, news-driven documentaries on television today. This award-winning series is the longest-running show of its kind and dives head-first into murky contemporary issues without apology or compromise.
- When night falls and the human kids from Freemont Elementary have all gone home,wacky monsters creep out for their own slapstick adventures. Together, vampire,goblin, zombie, Frankenstein and mischievous ghost share a common bond.
- When a man is wrongly convicted of murder and rape, his wife devotes her life to proving his innocence. Conviction is not only a gripping story of justice gone wrong, it's also a meditation on the role of luck in the criminal justice system. In order for Clarence Elkins to prove his innocence, all of the stars had to align. It's a story that would be unbelievable if it weren't true.
- Documentary depicting day to day life in Angola Prison mostly from an inmate's perspective. Interviews are with several inmates including one with a life sentence who is about to die.
- Escaped features individuals who have been held captive, kidnapped, or battled extreme elements and lived to detail their incredible escapes. Each story of Escaped is told through the eyes of the person who lived through the nightmare.
- White-collar crime can destroy companies, cost investors billions, devastate families and wipe out a person's entire life savings. CNBC's new series "American Greed: The Fugitives" goes inside the world of active white-collar crime cases, telling never-before-heard stories. Each episode features interviews with law enforcement, prosecutors, and investor-victims, all sharing the goal of bringing these fugitives to face justice. Investment schemes are more sophisticated than ever before and the accused con-artists who orchestrate these scams use every tool at their disposal to dupe investors and evade capture. "American Greed: The Fugitives" takes viewers on the hunt to catch the most wanted white-collar fugitives.
- Deadly Rich takes viewers inside the lives and deaths of the one percent, exposing the dirty little secrets of how big money drives people to the ultimate sin.
- Easy Scores. Outragous Paydays. Picture Perfect Crimes. "Crime Inc." takes you inside the billion-dollar big business behind global criminal enterprise.
- Go behind-the-scenes at the crown jewel of horse racing, the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs, for an inside look at the multi-billion dollar industry. You'll see the sport's greatest successes, biggest misses and the resulting challenges... and how even in this tough economy, Thoroughbreds are big business. Hosted by CNBC's Melissa Francis.
- The segments aired under "American Greed: Biggest Cons" are previously-shown "American Greed" segments that were grouped together under this title. Examples that are shown under this name are the "American Greed" segments on Eric Conn and his massive Social Security fraud; The Billionaire Boys Bust with con man John Bravata; Bernie Madoff Behind Bars; and The Real Wolf of Wall Street, Jordan Belfort. Indeed, these men all pulled off massive cons.
- Legend has it that Genghis Khan, the greatest warrior who ever lived, is buried in a hidden location with his plundered treasure: gold and silver from the lands of Islam, the Caliph of Baghdad's private vaults, and art and textiles from the great cities of the Middle Ages. Join a team of explorers across the steppes of Mongolia on their adventurous quest to unearth one of the world's greatest mysteries.
- How real is the 'science' in Star Trek?
- A report on the U.S. Government's battle to break up a mob drug operation through a mammoth FBI investigation leading to Sicily, Zurich, the Midwest and New York City pizzerias. Included: interviews with FBI agents, attorneys, drug-enforcement agents and Italian government officials.
- 1991–201144mTV-PGTV EpisodeOne of the founders of Earth Day, Ira Einhorn was a leading light of counter-culture in the '60s. But his arrest in 1977 for the murder of his girlfriend transformed the hippie activist into a fugitive from justice. After powerful allies including current Senator Arlen Spector secured his release from prison before his trial Einhorn fled the country. For twenty years he eluded the authorities. Finally, in 1997, he was arrested but not jailed in France. Despite extradition arrangements between France and the U.S. and the fact that he was convicted of the crime in absentia, he remained a free man. It is a story that fascinates as it enrages, an undeniable and monstrous miscarriage of justice accomplished only through the direct help of those in power. It is a case that asks if justice is truly possible in the world we live in.
- Experts use the latest in forensic techniques to test various theories relating to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
- 1999– 44mTV-PG7.3 (14)TV EpisodeA woman calls police to say that her fiancée killed a California woman in 1993; the 1988 murder of actress Myra Davis.
- The story of the hunt for one of the most notorious serial killers in recent American history--the BTK killer, who terrorized the Wichita, Kansas, area for years. After committing at least seven brutal murders, BTK (for Bind, Torture, Kill) vanished for over 25 years before sending clues of his crimes to the media in 2004. He continued to avoid capture until a forensic computer expert traced a computer disc that led investigators to a surprising suspect--a church president.
- Investigative Reports explores the Watergate incident offering interviews with law-enforcement officials and theories on the involvement of John Dean.
- Follows journalists from New York City who investigate criminal cases, including "New York Post" crime beat reporter Mark Stamey and WABC Television chief investigative reporter Sarah Wallace. Each case unfolds as the reporters track informants, interview witnesses and try to uncover the truth behind the crime committed. Stamey's story follows the police slaying of Bronx resident Malcolm Ferguson, sorting out the conflicting accounts of a brutal police conspiracy and the consequences of the life of a repeat petty criminal. Wallace's investigation reveals the details of the case that led to wrongful imprisonment for murder of Anthony Faison and Charles Shepherd, due to false testimony incited by poverty and drug addiction.
- 1999– 43mTV-147.4 (16)TV EpisodeA heartless mother and an innocent girl are the focus of this episode. Their only connecting threat is that both cases take 10 years to solve.
- 1999– 45mTV-148.0 (26)TV EpisodeTwo different crimes with two different solutions in ending Cold Case files. One involves help from a person the other relies on science and footwork to get the case solved.
- The saying goes "Loose lips sink ships" Well that especially applies in this situation. No matter how hard some try their past seems to always catch up with them. You can't get rid of evidence but you can't get rid of your past.
- 1999– TV-147.6 (14)TV EpisodeIn this episode we travel to very different places where horrific crimes were committed. One takes place in a small town in Texas, the other takes place in an English Countryside. All three crimes run cold but later are solved due to hard work, science and loose lips.
- 1999– 45mTV-147.7 (15)TV EpisodeThe conviction of a man found guilty of sexually assaulting and stabbing an Ohio woman to death is overturned because his Miranda rights were violated when he was arrested. And police spend 13 years looking for the killer of a Houston security guard who was shot 11 times when he tried to stop a car theft.
- Police suspect a gay man murdered a woman because she became too friendly with his boy friend. And a man goes on a monstrous crime spree, abducting five women over 15 years and forcing each to spend months and even years as his sex slave.
- Valarie Jensen explains that she and her ex-husband adopted baby Francine from their friends, the Meegans. Months later, a mother decides she wants her baby back, and if not that, then more money. When the Jensens refuse to hand over more cash, Lillian Meegan demands her child returned. Valerie Jensen unwillingly hands over the baby. It is the last time she will see the child. It is not however the last time she will hear her. James Meegan calls Valerie frustrated that he could not console the baby. Valerie hears the child crying in the background. It is the last time she ever hears the baby. Police then confront the Meegans. Valerie Meegan claims Francine was stolen out of their car and has been missing for years. James Meegan is tight-lipped about the entire affair. Las Vegas police decide to release the couple, but not without a watchful eye. In the middle of the night police catch the couple trying to skip town. Police have enough to hold James Meegan, but not nearly enough to support a conviction. Cold case detectives then decide to reach out the public. There they find friends of the Meegans pointing fingers at James Meegan. One such friend is a man named Marcell Peet. Peet claims James Meegan confessed shaking his baby to death in a moment of frustration. The Meegans are charged with murder and abuse. An Arizona resident reads about Meegan case and connects it to Yavapai's Baby Jane Doe.
- Forensic evidence solves the 1978 murder of a beauty queen; Fingerprints and a killer's addictive habit solves a decades-old double-homicide case.
- 1999– 42mTV-147.8 (15)TV EpisodeLooks at how law enforcers stick with cases for many years, after they've gone cold, using fresh evidence to win convictions or to free prisoners who were wrongfully jailed.
- 1999– 43mTV-146.9 (15)TV EpisodeDNA evidence is the key to solving 2 cold cases: a NY serial rapist of girls and young women, as well as a CA 9-year-old girl who was grabbed at her front door, mutilated and murdered.
- A phone-sting operation produces a big surprise and helps police nab the killers of a San Diego, David Stevens, man several years after the case went cold. And a California district attorney uses an unprecedented legal strategy--a "John Doe" warrant--in the 6-year-old hunt for a rapist.
- Nineteen-year-old college student Regina Marie Reynolds is a student at Morrisville State College in New York. Around 5 PM, she is driving with her boyfriend Robert MacDonald and asks to be dropped off on Route 20, in front of the Arizona Diner parking lot. She plans to hitchhike the 5 miles west back to campus to have dinner with friends, while MacDonald plans to continue on to his home. When Regina misses classes on Friday, then the following Monday, her friends become concerned. She is a conscientious student and unlikely to skip out on school. Her roommate, Catherine Dixon, goes to campus security to report her friend missing. Campus security, in turn, files a missing persons report with the New York State Police. (Regina's mother, Barbara Smith, also happens to work for the New York State Police.) As soon as the missing persons case is opened, friends and colleagues of Regina Reynolds' are questioned. Detective Eugene Rifenberg of the New York State Police helps work the missing persons case. Some people say they saw a girl who looks like Regina get into a blue and white Volkswagen van the night of her disappearance. Some witnesses describe three white men who were possibly talking to someone who looked like Regina. Missing person fliers are posted all over the community. We have copies of the missing persons flier.
- A 14-year-old boy is charged with the murder of his sister, but his public defender believes the police coerced the boy's confession and that the real killer is still on the loose. And two deteriorated medical examiner's slides, made in a murder investigation 16 years earlier, give police the evidence they need to reopen the cold case and bring the lead suspect to trial.
- A Miami undercover operation nabs the man who beat four black prostitutes, doused their bodies with gasoline, and set them aflame. Vida Hicks was the first victim. And DNA helps solve the cold case of a man who posed as a fisherman to get a 6-year-old girl's attention, then raped and killed her.