Maybrick

Sun, Jul 26, 2020
Sasha and Jeremy examine an infamous Victorian murder case, where a young American woman was charged with poisoning her husband in Liverpool in 1889.
8.2 /10
Bainbridge

Mon, Jul 27, 2020
The Barristers examine the case of a young off-duty soldier who was convicted of murdering a family friend in Bishop Auckland, County Durham on New Year's Eve in 1934.
0 /10
FG Browne

Tue, Jul 28, 2020
Sasha and Jeremy reassess the case of a petty criminal who was sentenced to death for murdering a policeman in an Essex country lane in 1927.
0 /10
Lowson

Wed, Jul 29, 2020
Jeremy and Sasha re-examine a case from 1884 in which three men stood trial for the murder of a policeman, but only one received a death sentence.
0 /10
Dumbleton

Thu, Jul 30, 2020
The barristers re-examine the case against a young farm labourer who was hanged for the brutal murder of a travelling watch repairman in 1880.
0 /10
Staunton

Sun, Aug 02, 2020
Jeremy and Sasha re-examine the complex case against a Victorian auctioneer accused, along with his brother and two others, of murdering his wife in 1877.
0 /10
Read

Mon, Aug 03, 2020
The barristers examine their oldest case yet - the murder of a military veteran by his estranged wife nearly 200 years ago. Ex-soldier James Read was reported missing by his wife Hannah, who became the prime suspect for his murder.
0 /10
Dainton

Tue, Aug 04, 2020
Sasha and Jeremy re-examine the drowning of a wife and mother in Victorian Bath in 1891, re-evaluating the chain of evidence that led to the conviction of her husband for her murder.
0 /10
Brown

Wed, Aug 05, 2020
The Barristers examine an infamous case of a Dorset housewife accused of murdering her young husband. They are keen to separate fact from fiction, as the story famously inspired Thomas Hardy's classic novel Tess of the D'Urbervilles.
0 /10
Shaw

Thu, Aug 06, 2020
Sasha and Jeremy investigate their first Scottish case, the murder of a reclusive pensioner in 1952, for which two men stood trial but only one was executed.
0 /10
Seddon

Sun, Aug 09, 2020
The barristers return to their examination of the case of Frederick Seddon from S.3 Ep.9. 1 year on they learn what Seddon's relative's research has uncovered, the theory of a crime writer and new information discovered by a biographer.
0 /10
Thomas

Mon, Aug 10, 2020
The barristers revisit their investigation (from S.3 Ep.1) of the 1839 drowning of a female passenger aboard a narrowboat in Staffordshire. They learn how some high profile supporters have been enlisted in the campaign for a Royal Pardon.
0 /10
Brown

Tue, Aug 11, 2020
Sasha and Jeremy revisit their investigation into the mysterious murder of a Yorkshire farm owner in 1933, from the second episode of series 3. Can a local who met Ernest Brown and the theory of a crime writer shed new light upon the case?
0 /10
Thorne

Wed, Aug 12, 2020
The barristers return to the case of a Sussex poultry farmer who buried the body of his fiancee under a chicken run in 1924 but claimed to be innocent of her murder. The barristers learn how Arthur Conan Doyle became connected to the case.
0 /10
Hewitt

Thu, Aug 13, 2020
The barristers revisit their examination (from S.2 Ep.1) of the savage murder of a pub landlady in a sleepy Oxfordshire hamlet in 1922, which led to the unlikely conviction of a 15-year-old local boy.
0 /10
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