Investigative journalist Fred Rosen interviews a woman who was close to one of the Strangler’s earliest victims: Oliver LeBanks.
True crime author Fred Rosen recounts how a hatchet-wielding maniac nearly got away with murder.
True crime author Fred Rosen remembers a case so gruesome even he hesitated to take it on.
While true crime writer Fred Rosen was investigating the murder of performer Grady Stiles, he received a video that would change the course of the trial.
He stalked the remote hiking trails of the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake ...
He stalked the remote hiking trails of the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake ...
He stalked the remote hiking trails of the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake...
One woman's escape led police to a literal house of horrors.
In 1973 Detroit, artist Ray Gray was convicted to life in prison based on a fixed lineup and no evidence – and he still maintains his innocence today.
In the 1970s, Fred and Tom were two ambitious film students catching an advance screening of Star Wars. But their high times were about to come crashing down...
In 1964, three civil rights workers were murdered in cold blood ... and the mastermind behind it all walked away a free man.
The community knew the clergyman as a loving husband and father, but underneath his vestment was a sex-crazed, sociopathic killer.
From Truman Capote's In Cold Blood to the memoir that inspired Goodfellas, the shocking facts of these true crime books were destined for the silver screen.
While true crime author Fred Rosen was investigating the murder of 18-year-old Jennifer Robinson, he couldn't believe the gruesome details he discovered.
True crime writer Fred Rosen describes what it felt like to come face-to-face with serial killer survivor Nita Neary.