The intertwining stories of real-life figures Charles Sobhraj, aka “The Serpent,” Dutch diplomat Herman Knippenberg, and his then-wife Angela Kane inspired the new Netflix series — but what are they doing now?
Journalist Maury Terry was convinced that convicted serial killer David Berkowitz was part of a Satanic cabal that together carried out the infamous murders in NYC attributed to a singular "Son of Sam."
Dr. Autumn Klein and her researcher husband, Robert Ferrante, appeared to have an idyllic marriage, but her sudden death in 2013 revealed a deeply fractured relationship.
Jeffrey Rignall was lured into John Wayne Gacy's car, chloroformed and then brutally raped and beaten. When police downplayed the attack, he decided to conduct his own search for his attacker.
Charles Sobhraj, whose 1970s killing spree largely targeting tourists in Asia is depicted in "The Serpent," escaped prison at least four times, but he's currently safely behind bars in Nepal.
When Elliot Stabler returned to the hit franchise this week, he revealed he’d been working for the NYPD abroad, in a program that has existed in reality since the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.
"Tina," a new documentary on HBO Max, details how the music icon's toxic and abusive relationship with her former husband Ike overshadowed her successes for decades, and how she overcame it all.