"I knew I’d catch my daughter’s killer. Two mothers’ brave fight for justice. The Thames towpath murders. Did Joann plan murder before the wedding? Dovie’s date with the electric chair.
She was physically and psychologically terrified of him. He was a body-builder, a policeman and a bully – and she was sure that he had killed his first wife.
It seemed a routine case back in 1973 when red-headed Michael O’Shea reported a buglary at his home in a fishing village just south of Dublin. But the inquiry took a surprise twist after the police lifted fingerprints from the furniture…
This month’s issue contains stories about three murder machines – deadly devices rigged up by men intent on killing. Strangley, two of their victims survived.
It’s not just the stories in True Detective that make it a great read but the different way they are told. No other magazine gets close’" a reader recently wrote, putting simles on the face of our brilliant editorial team.
A woman witchcraft expert told Detective Inspector Fabian in 1945, "Remember, February was always the sacrificial month. Charles Walton’s murder was just a Druidical sacrifice."
This month sees the start of a new series of murder cases from Ireland, and in part 1 we take you back to August 1976 when two Englishmen arrived in Dublin with their tents and sleeping-bags just like thousands of back-packers every year.
This month it is 40 years since Gwynne Owen Evans and Peter Anthony Allen were hanged for the murder of bachelor Alan West in his King’s Avenue, Workington, home.
Sex on tap for Pam the husband-killer. Wicked Theresa burned her daughter alive. "Catch me before I kill more." Jersey horror of the body in the fridge.
The obsessions of a perverted ghoul. He had a lifelong yearning to strangle, rape and kill women, culminating in his ultimate fantasy – the murder of teacher Jane Longhurst.
The story of a mother compelled to investigate her daughter’s death. 18 were executed – the story of the American servicemen executed at Shepton Mallet during World War II.
From Durham the evil auntie who plotted the country lane murder. From the US Part 1 of a new series on the FBI – J. Edgar Hoover introduces the early days.
The Shakespearean line, "Something is rotten in the state of Denmark," prompted American police to call their investigation into a child pornography ring,
"No daddy! No" Wife hears the sound of revenge "Mindy killed her father…but it wasn’t murder" The oldest killer in town. The opera singer’s fatal finale