Jeffrey MacDonald was convicted iof brutally murdering his pregnant wife Colette and their two young daughters in their Fort Bragg home in 1970 — later claiming the family had been killed by drug-crazed hippies.
Prince Beasley repeatedly claimed one of his drug informants had confessed to the Jeffrey MacDonald family murders—but some have questioned his motivations.
The man convicted of slaughtering his family in 1970 in a case that inspired FX's "Wilderness of Error" docuseries, maintains his innocence to this day.
Kathryn MacDonald believes her husband was wrongly convicted of killing his family and has called him "the most honorable person" she has ever known as she continues to fight for his release.
Jeffrey MacDonald's pregnant wife and two young daughter were savagely killed in the family's Fort Bragg home more than 50 years ago, but the case continues to captivate the public.
Helena Stoeckley repeatedly confessed--and then recanted--being in the home of Jeffrey MacDonald the night his pregnant wife and two young daughters were brutally killed.
“Who else is going to fight this thing if not me?” Freddy Kassab said of his years-long quest to put his son-in-law Jeffrey MacDonald behind bars for killing his stepdaughter and two young granddaughters.
The Manson Family's slaying of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and her friends in August 1969 shocked the nation, but just six months later there was another family murder with eerie similarities.
Errol Morris, an award-winning filmmaker and author, set out to reach a definitive conclusion about whether doctor Jeffrey MacDonald had slaughtered his pregnant wife and two children in 1970, but found out that the truth can be a "tangled mess."