Police are seeking the public's assistance after identifying Marvin Francell Williams as the suspect in the shooting of Nadia Campbell and Ajani Patridge on a Hollywood street. Cops are calling the murders an act of domestic violence.
The whereabouts of Frank Morris and brothers John and Clarence Anglin, who escaped the offshore prison of Alcatraz in 1962 after months of planning, remains one of America's greatest mysteries — and one which the government still wants to solve.
In a new episode of "Dateline: The Last Day," the show looks into Kelsie Schelling, who went missing after leaving work in Denver. Investigators revisit the events of Feb. 4, 2013 — just after she learned she was expecting a child.
Prosecutors said Michael Horvath idolized the show "Dexter" and had a desire to become a serial killer when he kidnapped Holly Grim, killed her and hid her remains for three years.
Robert Cotter received a life sentence after pleading no contest to the murders of his father, Patrick Cotter, and younger brother, Brian Cotter. He tried to stage their deaths as a murder-suicide committed by his sibling.
Alan Wade was sentenced to death after he and three others were convicting of kidnapping a vulnerable couple and burying them alive in 2005. He was granted a re-sentencing trial by the Florida Supreme Court and will now spend life in prison instead.
Baltimore Police are searching for the person or persons responsible for setting two fires that resulted in four homes being "engulfed in flames" and caused three injuries. The arsons were reportedly committed at homes decorated with LGBTQ+ flags and decorations.
Jade Babcock will spend 15 to 30 years in state prison after confessing to beating his girlfriend, Brenda Jacobs, to death in 2003. Her body wasn't found until Babcock's more recent girlfriend came forward to say she watched him dismember the body to move it in 2018.
Nicholas Bahri was convicted in April for the murders of Tukoyo Moore, Moore's fiancée, Isis Rimson, and his 6-year-old son, Tai’Raz Moore. Bahri confronted the victims' family at a sentencing hearing, which had been halted.
In a legal brief intended to secure Ghislaine Maxwell a lighter sentence, her attorneys claim that a female inmate has said someone paid her to strangle Maxwell in her sleep.