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- Unprecedented access to Blanchard, a victim of Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy who suffered horrific abuse and made national headlines for her role in her mother's violent murder.
- Criminal cases can be won or lost in the interrogation room. Interrogation Raw is a true crime series that explores fascinating interrogations. Each episode captures the make-or-break moments that occurs within those four walls.
- Examines cold cases that are solved through advancements in DNA, along with help from victims' families, law enforcement and the public.
- "First Blood" examines some of America's most notorious serial killers through the prism of their first known kills to reveal what drove them to the moment when violent fantasy and curiosity became a devastating reality.
- In order to make maximum profits, husband and wife team, Krystal and Dedric Polite use their 50/50 Flip Strategy to renovate a home with less than $50K in under 50 days. These real estate investors have flipped the flipping business in Burlington, North Carolina as they transform homes in the area Krystal and her family grew up in and currently reside. To them it's about creating affordable housing for everyone and not allowing a big developer to come in and out-price their hometown. Family is everything and by investing back in the community they also want to create generational wealth that they can build and leave to their two young boys and their kids' kids.
- Cold Case Files: The Rifkin Murders" documents the real-time New York State Police cold case investigation into the two unidentified victims of serial killer Joel Rifkin, the most prolific serial killer in New York State history.
- Hosted by President Bill Clinton, the series explores the history of the American presidency and the struggle for a more perfect union across six themed episodes: race, extremism, the struggle for rights, presidential vision, global power.
- Extraordinary stories of resilience and healing from the children who was impacted on 9/11.
- Featuring sit-down interviews with experts and historians, follows the story of the Japanese American soldiers of WWII who fought for the ideals of American democracy.
- Presents a intimate group of philanthropic women honored by Lifetime and Variety as some of the most powerful women working in media and entertainment.
- TV SeriesRelates the tale of resolute families that started their own inquiries into the unsolved homicides of their cherished ones.
- 2022– 47m7.3 (9)TV EpisodeRacism has been a persistent issue in America since its founding. When racial tensions erupt, some presidents have advanced the nation toward a more perfect union, while others have thwarted its progress. How can Presidential action help us achieve a more perfect union?
- 2022–7.7 (7)TV EpisodeThe presidents who have made the most impact have imagined what we could be, not just what we are. Through their rhetoric, their leadership, or their sheer force of personality, these presidents have issued a call to action, daring us to join them in their vision for a better future. How have their visionary goals shaped our country, and the world?
- 2022–8.0 (6)TV EpisodeThis hour will explore how some U.S. Presidents have exerted power over the economy through various measures - taxation, imports and exports, law making - and the effects those actions had on the lives of American citizens. How can Presidential action create greater opportunity for the people?
- A small Ohio town is shaken in 2010 when 4 people mysteriously vanish. Investigators find the family's home covered in blood but very few clues.
- In 2013 when a beloved Yakima, Washington art teacher, Desiree Sunford, is murdered in her own home, her husband Scott Sunford and a growing list of suspects such as Paige Blades and Marty Grismer face tough questions in the interrogation room.
- A small Texas town is rocked when a bride-to-be is found brutally murdered just a week before her wedding. Three men, including her fiance, are brought into the interrogation room. Will they provide the answers needed to bring justice for the victim?
- After a woman is killed by her foster daughter, detectives discover new evidence and then confront the victim's husband with difficult questions in an effort to establish whether the foster daughter acted alone in the killing.
- A man with a dark past is brought into the interrogation room after a woman is murdered and a young girl vanishes. Detectives hope they can keep the man talking long enough so they can obtain clues to help them rescue the girl, in the hopes that she is still alive.
- A young mother mysteriously vanishes. As Pensacola, Florida investigators untangle a complicated web of friendships and finances, the woman she was last seen with is brought into the interrogation room.
- The United States was born in the flames of violence and rebellion. Extremism has always been a part of who we are as a nation. In this hour, we focus on multiple flashpoints in our nation's history, and the ways in which our president's have reacted to extinguish - and sometimes, to fan - the flames of extremism. What can we learn about extremism from our past - and how to avoid it in the future.
- America's Constitution starts with the words "We the People"; every U.S. president has faced the question of who, exactly, is included in this soaring phrase; this hour examines presidential decision-making for many disenfranchised citizens.
- 2022–8.4 (5)TV EpisodeExploring the history of the American presidency with a comprehensive look at a wide variety of presidential action that moved our country forward. This hour traces the rise of America's place on the world stage; becoming a superpower has altered not just America's fate but that of the world as well; with great power comes great responsibility.
- In 1989, Richard Mallory is found shot dead in the brush off the side of a Florida highway, just the first of seven murdered men found in a similar setting. Their predator is Aileen Wuornos, a woman fleeing a troubled past and yearning for a connection. Instead of finding of love, Wuornos develops a simmering rage in her heart, that finally explodes when she picks up her first victim.
- Daniel Rolling, known as The Gainesville Ripper, who murdered five students in Gainesville, Florida, over four days in late August 1990. But his first murders were in his hometown of Shreveport, Louisiana.
- Between 1971 and 1983, Robert Hansen abducted, raped and murdered at least seventeen women in and around Anchorage, Alaska. He was arrested and convicted in 1983, and was sentenced to 461 years without the possibility of parole. He died in 2014 of natural causes due to lingering health conditions at age 75.
- One of the most well-known serial killers, Richard Ramirez terrorized Southern California in the mid-1980s, where anyone could be a target of the sadistic murderer.
- Two stories: 1. Pensacola, Florida: A married Navy police officer, Zachary Littleton, is interrogated by investigators after the woman he was having an affair with, Samira "Sammy" Watkins, goes missing on October 31, 2009. Her body was found on November 3, 2009. Littleton went on trial and was found guilty. 2. Newton Falls, Ohio: Major Karl Hoering, age 43, goes missing on March 15, 2007. His wife of a few months, Claudia Hoering, flees to her native country Brazil. Karl's family members work tirelessly with Brazil and they are finally able to get Claudia extradited to the United States in January 2018, almost 11 years after the murder. She goes to trial in January 2019 and is found guilty.
- After a U.S. postal employee is shot dead in his truck, detectives push their prime suspect to admit it wasn't just a tragic accident.
- Anthony Sowell found the control he was so desperate for when he overpowered his first vulnerable victim -- a woman only hoping to connect with a friendly face.
- The articulate and boastful killer is remembered for terrifying the coastal town of Santa Cruz, where he picked up and dismembered hitchhiking college students in the early 1970s.
- A former nursing assistant, Reta Mays, age 46, confessed to using insulin to murder seven elderly patients at a VA hospital and will spend the rest of her life in prison. U.S. District Judge Thomas Kleeh called Reta Mays a monster of the "worst kind.... you are the monster no one sees coming." He delivered a life sentence for each murder victim, plus 20 years for an eighth victim she tried to kill. Mays is not eligible for probation for the seven life sentences, Kleeh said. She was ordered to pay restitution to the victims' families. The victims ranged in age from 81 to 96 and served in the Army, Navy and Air Force during World War II and wars in Korea and Vietnam. They died at the hands of the same person, at the same place, in the same way.
- In Epping, New Hampshire, everyone knows Sheila LaBarre as an eccentric widow who loves her rabbits. In truth, her turbulent childhood in Alabama and a coma-induced vision all send Sheila on a warped mission to kill.
- Someone is killing young African American women in Charlotte, North Carolina, and the police seem unable to stop it. What they don't realize is that the cases all have a commonality, which is a connection with Henry Louis Wallace.
- A man becomes the prime suspect in a murder investigation after finding his partner brutally murdered.
- Serial killer Arthur Shawcross might have been known for killing women around Rochester, New York but his first murder was years earlier and the culmination of years of dark fantasies.
- Growing up gay and effeminate in the hyper masculine Bayou was tough on Ronald Dominique. An inability to connect and a jail sexual assault would cement his decision to ultimately kill his first victim, following years of senseless murder.
- After a 20-year-old man is crushed by a truck that fell off its jack, the victim's father is brought in to face questions over whether it was really an accident...or murder.
- Detectives are left stunned by the peculiar behavior of a suspect brought into the interrogation room after a young woman's body parts are discovered in his plumbing and freezer.
- A man is gunned down outside a local shop and authorities interrogate two of his acquaintances to find out which one of them pulled the trigger. Plus, the shocking interrogation of a woman accused of mowing down two children with her car.
- A man's body is found in a wooded area and the victim's neighbor is brought into the interrogation room, where evidence mounts even as he's being interviewed.
- Chester, New York, December 18, 2019: A young father, Michael Gregory Partridge, age 28, is brutally beaten and bound with an electrical cord and is left to die on the side of an icy, dark road. After about 20 minutes, a passerby in a vehicle calls 911 and emergency vehicle arrive, but Michael Partridge sadly dies upon arriving at the hospital from blunt force trauma and internal bleeding. Due to discovering revealing text messages, investigators are able to zero in on four suspects: Courtney Clemenza, Seth Pelsang, Timothy Smith and Robert "Bobby" Haskell. The suspects are interrogated separately and the finger-pointing begins. It will be up to the homicide detectives to unravel the truth behind their stories and apprehend the individual or individuals who are responsible for the crime. In the end, all four suspects were arrested due to their various parts in the murder. They were sentenced at different times during 2020 and 2021. Courtney Clemenza, age 33, pleaded guilty to 2nd degree manslaughter and was sentenced to 2 to 6 years in state prison. Seth Pelsang, age 31, pleaded guilty to 1st degree manslaughter and was sentenced to 9 years in state prison. Timothy Smith, age 37, pleaded guilty to 2nd degree manslaughter and was sentenced to 1 to 4 years in state prison. Bobby Haskell, age 55, the man who inflicted the actual beating with a metal baseball bat, pleaded guilty to 1st degree manslaughter and was sentenced to 12 years in state prison.
- STORY 1: The first segment details the October 2016 murder of Patricia Ann "Patty" Dresser, age 52, in Greenfield, Indiana. The perpetrator, Spencer Spielman, now age 20, was convicted of her murder in 2017 and was sentenced to 55 years in prison. The motive had been robbery. STORY 2: The second segment details the October 1989 murder of Flora Rundle, age 71, in South Salt Lake/Salt Lake City, Utah. The case went cold for over 20 years before it was reopened by a cold case detective team. DNA was found under her fingernails that tied Gary Dean Hilfiker to her murder. He was located in prison, already serving a separate life sentence for the 1992 murder of his girlfriend, Marsha Haverty, age 38. His parole date for Haverty's murder was fast approaching. In 2014, now at age 56, Gary Hilfiker was sentenced to life in prison for Flora's murder. The motive had been robbery.
- February 3, 2007, Waseca County, Minnesota, 3:23 AM: An intruder breaks into the house of husband Tracy Kruger, age 40, wife Hilary Kruger, age 41, and sons Alec Dean Kruger, age 13 and Zac Kruger, age 10. The intruder shoots and kills Tracy Kruger and Alec Kruger and critically wounds Hilary Kruger, who survives the horrific invasion after eight months in two different hospitals. Zac Kruger was not sleeping at home that night, he was staying at a friend's house. Before his death, young Alec Kruger phoned 911 to report the home invasion. Evidence left at the scene prompts detectives to contact Michael Stanley Zabawa, age 24 of Matawan, Byron Township, MN. He is arrested and his trial begins in early 2009. Michael Zabawa is found guilty of the murders of Tracy Kruger and Alec Kruger, and the attempted murder of Hilary Kruger. He is sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Law enforcement officials report that he did not show any remorse for his actions. This is also evident in his interrogations seen on this show. In addition to the homicide detectives, both Hilary Kruger and Zac Kruger participated in this installment.
- Story 1. Authorities question a woman, Mary Rice, who traveled with a serial killer, Billy Boyette, about whether she was a victim or an accomplice. In 2017, in Florida and surrounding states, Billy Boyette was responsible for the murders of Jacqueline Moore, Alicia Greer, Peggy Broz and Kayla Crocker. Billy committed suicide when he and Mary Rice were apprehended. During her filmed interrogation, Mary lied to the investigator, telling him that she was forced to participate in the crimes. When confronted with the fact that she was caught on multiple surveillance cameras, and that the police knew she was lying, she gradually changed her story. Mary was arrested, convicted of being an accomplice to murder and sentenced to prison. Story 2. Oklahoma, December 2012: This interrogation features Jerrold Murray, who killed Generro Sanchez, age 18, in cold blood. In just a few minutes, Murray boldly admits to killing the college student. Murray was charged with first-degree murder and was found "not guilty by reason of insanity". This injustice lead to a change in Oklahoma law. Under the new Oklahoma law, people who commit crimes associated with mental defects that include an anti-social personality disorder such as sociopath or psychopath, could be found guilty and sentenced to prison.
- A prolific serial killer's confession in the murder of a young woman turns out to be a hoax, but decades later, a more likely suspect is ready to talk -- under one condition.
- When 14-year-old Nacole Smith is brutally murdered in 1995 on a wooded path in Atlanta, the police and community rally around her mother as she seeks justice; it will take decades and a second brutal assault to finally reveal Nacole's killer.
- When jewelry seller Minerva Cantu, 26, is found lifeless in her home, police suspect robbery as the motive. But who killed this mother as her infant slept in the next room is a mystery that would haunt one detective for 20 years.
- When Mary Scott, 23, is found murdered in her San Diego home in 1969, a case with few leads quickly loses steam. Years later, Mary's daughters grow determined to find answers.