Shu'aib Abdur-Raheem was one of the four gunmen whose botched robbery of a Brooklyn gun store in 1973 triggered a 47-hour siege that is examined by the new documentary, "Hold Your Fire."
As shown in the new documentary "Hold Your Fire," Shu’aib Raheem, Dawud A. Rahman, Yusef Abdallah Almussadig and Salih Ali Abdullah tried to steal guns from a Brooklyn sporting goods store in January 1973 but became wrapped up in a days-long hostage situation with police.
Harvey Schlossberg, the police psychologist see in the new documentary "Hold Your Fire," helped shift the way that hostage situations are handled by the NYPD.
Ashley Stayner is a fan of the genre despite being intimately connected to two major true crime tales: the kidnapping of her father Steven and the conviction of her uncle Cary Stayner of multiple murders.
A terrified caller identifying herself as 15-year-old Sarah Jessop Barlow said she was being sexually abused her much older husband, launching a massive raid on The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints' ranch in Texas, but she didn't actually exist.
Investigators discovered more than 700 pieces of evidence during a 2008 raid on the polygamist property, including marriage records, a daily account of leader Warren Jeffs' activities and a disturbing audio tape prosecutors said captured the sexual assault of a 12-year-old child bride.
Naomie Jeffs, who was ultimately exiled from the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) community, says she has “no hard feelings” toward her ex-husband and polygamist leader Warren Jeffs.