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The Investigator: A British Crime Story is a British television crime documentary series, created and produced by Simon Cowell, [1] and presented by Mark Williams-Thomas.The series, broadcast on ITV, is often described as "Britain's answer to Making a Murderer", [2] and was inspired by Cowell's viewing of the documentary series The Jinx.
The cold case team featured in the series is made up of three well known and documented cold-case investigators with experience of similar cases to those featured. Donal MacIntyre – a self-proclaimed criminologist and investigative journalist, known for his undercover work with the Daily Mail
24 Hours in Police Custody is a British television documentary series shown on Channel 4. It primarily follows Bedfordshire Police as they investigate cases in Luton. [1] The programme is made by The Garden; the same production company that makes 24 Hours in A&E. The first series of seven episodes aired in late 2014. [2]
Other times, the effects of a documentary on a criminal case are more direct. Read below for 11 occasions when true crime series affected the cases they were based on. Unsolved Mysteries: Abducted ...
Cold Case Files first aired as a sub-series of another A&E crime documentary program, Investigative Reports, also hosted by Bill Kurtis, which ran from 1991 to 2011. Reruns of the original 1997 series currently air on broadcast syndication in the United States, usually in lower-profile time slots, and on many RTV stations.
Cold Justice is an unscripted true crime series originally broadcast on TNT and currently on Oxygen. The series, produced by Dick Wolf, follows former prosecutor Kelly Siegler and a team of investigators as they re-open unsolved murder cases with the consent of local law enforcement. As of January 2015, the team has helped local agencies secure ...
The series features career-defining cases of police officers and FBI agents, with a heavy emphasis on forensic evidence. In each episode, a mysterious homicide case unfolds through first person accounts from America's elite law enforcement officers. [3] Topics covered include forensic document examination, forensic linguistics, and computer ...
Tutill's parents, Dennis and Hilary, notified Surrey Police when he failed to arrive home that evening. The police took a missing person's report, but did not begin investigating until the following day. [6] The body of the schoolboy was found by a policeman three days later outside the gates of Cherkley Court, in Mickleham.