The case of Nicholas Lee Ingram, the British-born killer executed in Georgia’s electric chair. Check out “I Like To Torture Men While Their Women Watch” for the full story
The McStays seemed to have simply vanished from their successful, idyllic life. Family and police were nonplussed and years would pass before their whereabouts were discovered…
He claimed he drank their blood before turning his victims into sludge. Seventy years after the execution of John George Haigh, MD looks back at the case that shocked 40s Britain
Two unrelated killers called Mancini feature in this edition of MD. While justice quickly caught up with both, only one was ever made to pay for his crime…
Starting a relationship with a troubled younger woman proved a fatal mistake for retired Michael McNew. For the full story read: “Why Jenni Blew Away Her Sugar Daddy”
The shocking crimes of sadistic Canadian landscape gardener Bruce McArthur, plus, the full-length account of the life and crimes of John Donald Merrett
He’d raped and murdered his victim in 1992 and evaded justice ever since – but in 2016 his luck finally ran out…Read how a sister’s DNA nailed a killer DJ
A sleepover seemed like a fun idea to Payton Lautner, 12. Trouble was, her two pals were intent on becoming violent proxies for a digital myth called The Slenderman…
“I wasn’t worried about losing my property or never seeing my girlfriend again. It was just in my mind to go down to Port Arthur and kill a lot of people.”
A crime of passion in Essex, mind-boggling savagery in Yorkshire, one of London’s most enduring prostitute murder mysteries, an extraordinary abduction-jailbreak…
When wannabe Wiltshire serial killer Christopher Halliwell was arrested in 2011 for killing a woman he actually admitted two murders, but he was only prosecuted for one because of a police error over the second. Intrigued?
Yorkshire lass Linda Cook’s strangled body was found in a local lovers’ lane in September 1963. The case baffled the police and is still unsolved today. So someone out there knows more about the murder than they are saying.
Journalist Junita Nielsen bristled with anger when she heard that the authorities planned to pull down a street of Victorian houses in the middle of Sydney, Australia
The handyman at the Woodbine Inn had gone missing and when Harry’s crushed body was found the questions began – where did he die, why had the date of his birth been altered and who stood to benefit from his demise?
Despite the best efforts of the Metropolitan Police, assisted by American military police, Charles Connelly was allowed to slip through the proverbial net
Two family killings, separated by four decades and thousands of miles, punctuate this month’s issue. In each case, a mother and her young children seem to have died at the hands of a previously loving husband and father
No one can say with any certainty if Richard Brinkley killed more than two people. But one thing is sure – as soon as he got to know a woman she did not have long to live, read this great story from Croydon, Surrey.
We have a pretty impressive archive of back issues, which we use all the time for research. But somewhere along the line we lost our only copy of our very first issue.