guilty
Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time; a look into all aspects of a guilty verdict from the burden of proof to conviction to the judge’s sentence and more.
The Pedophile Killer Who Felt "Justified" in Shooting Two-Time Convict. Content Warning.
James Fairbanks shot and killed a two-time convicted sex offender, but never thought for a second that a jury would find him guilty. Fairbanks, a former school teacher and father of a 12-year-old, believed his actions were justified.
By Criminal Matters4 months ago in Criminal
Breaking Down the Charlie Kirk Shooting: DNA Evidence, Digital Trails, and Unanswered Questions
The story of Charlie Kirk’s shooting in Utah has moved fast — sometimes too fast for the public to keep up. In just a matter of days, what began as chaos at Utah Valley University has shifted into a case with DNA links, alleged digital confessions, and a suspect whose politics and personal life are under the microscope.
By Lawrence Lease4 months ago in Criminal
The Silent Dealer
M Mehran The city of Islamabad gleamed under the cold winter moon, its streets quiet except for the occasional rickshaw rattling down narrow lanes. But in the shadows, a different rhythm existed—a rhythm dictated by someone the police barely believed existed: Rafiq, known in the underworld as The Silent Dealer.
By Muhammad Mehran4 months ago in Criminal
Bloodlines of Betrayal
M Mehran The streets of Karachi never slept, but some nights were darker than others. Tonight was one of them. The neon lights flickered against rain-soaked pavement, casting distorted reflections of the city’s hidden underworld. And somewhere in the shadows, Adeel Javed, known in whispers as The Fox, prepared for a night that could change everything.
By Muhammad Mehran4 months ago in Criminal
The Heist of Silence
M Mehran The city of Lahore slept uneasily under the glare of neon lights, unaware that the night belonged to a man known only as Faizan—or the Whisper, as the underworld called him. Unlike other criminals who thrived on chaos, Faizan’s specialty was subtlety. His crimes were precise, clean, almost invisible, leaving no trace except a lingering sense of violation.
By Muhammad Mehran4 months ago in Criminal
Murder on Public Transit
Around 28 million people in the U.S. are 'transit dependent,' meaning they use a bus, train, or other public transit system to travel from one destination to another without another source of reliable transportation readily available to them. In 2023, U.S. public transit agencies provided those individuals 6.9 billion trips, traveling over 35 billion miles.
By Criminal Matters4 months ago in Criminal









