It seems impossible. Young people, with the briefest experience of life, prepared to kill and, in some cases, kill their own parents. But it has happened, in many countries, and in many different ways. Are these teens inherently evil?
As the debate over the policing of America continues to be a part of the daily conversation across the nation, A&E will offer viewers unfettered and unfiltered live access inside the country's busiest police forces and the communities they patrol in the new documentary series Live PD: Rap Sheet.
The series follows Nargiz, a 33–35-year-old woman released from prison after serving time for murder. Before her imprisonment, she had a husband and an eight-year-old daughter, and throughout her sentence her husband stayed in close contact—until he suddenly disappeared just months before her release. Determined to uncover the truth, Nargiz begins searching for him with the help of her former cellmate, Gulara, a once-successful businesswoman whose life was ruined by a mysterious man known as “Doctor.” Bound by similar fates, the two women join forces to confront their pasts and uncover long-buried secrets.
Officers tackle the thieves terrorising supermarkets and shops, with organised international crime groups stealing eye-watering amounts in increasingly industrial, brazen and sophisticated ways.
Chanon, a medical intern driven by a three‑year vendetta, infiltrates the world of Leo Thanakorn, heir to a powerful mafia family, drawing him in with a meticulously planned seduction. The closer he gets, the more dangerous things become. He pushes the game to its limits, even taking a knife meant for Leo and gaining Leo’s possessive protection. He uses Leo’s trust to hunt down every enemy, counting down to the final target and to all illusions shattering.
A three-part docuseries, revealing the true story of Jordan Belfort and his boiler room brokers at Stratton Oakmont, which is even darker and more debauched than previously known.
The dead never lie. World-renowned forensic pathologist Dr Richard Shepherd shows how bodies reveal the truth, helping murder victims' families get justice for their loved ones.