jury
The right to trial by an impartial jury is a defendant's constitutional right; explore this pivotal duty to assess the evidence, deliberate and deliver a verdict.
The Shadow on Bramble Street
M Mehran The night Mrs. Ellery disappeared, Bramble Street held its breath. Detective Rowan Pierce arrived at the scene just past 11 p.m., greeted by the glow of porch lights and neighbors gathered like moths. The Ellery house—small, yellow, immaculate—looked painfully ordinary for the horrors whispered about it.
By Muhammad Mehranabout a month ago in Criminal
The Last Witness
M Mehran Rain fell in needles the night Detective Mara Vance realized she was being followed. She’d left the precinct after midnight, the kind of exhausted where the world felt underwater. The Rosen Case—a convenience-store robbery gone brutal—had dragged the department for weeks. A clerk dead, a missing witness, and a blurry security tape that showed a man with a serpent tattoo along his wrist. That was it. No face. No prints. No breaks.
By Muhammad Mehranabout a month ago in Criminal
The Man Who Locked Himself In: The Impossible Murder of Room 1046
There are murders that frighten you because they are violent. And then there are murders that frighten you because they make no sense at all. The case of Room 1046 sits firmly in the second category — a story built of contradictions, shadows, unanswered questions, and a victim whose own identity was a mystery.
By The Insight Ledger about a month ago in Criminal
The Silent Twins: A Bond So Deep It Terrified Everyone Who Tried to Break It
There are mysteries made of missing people, strange footprints, or odd camera footage. Then there are mysteries like that of June and Jennifer Gibbons — two girls who never disappeared, never hid, never ran… yet remained unreadable, unreachable, and ultimately unexplainable. Their story feels less like true crime and more like a psychological ghost story written in real time.
By The Insight Ledger about a month ago in Criminal
The Case That Crumbled: Why Bryan Kohberger’s Guilty Plea Feels Like Justice Denied
Three years ago, Bryan Kohberger left the Poconos to study at Washington State University. He's wasn't your average graduate student, he had been accepted into their prestigious PhD program in criminal justice. On paper, it was the perfect start to a future career in law enforcement. Instead, it was the start of a freefall into darkness.
By Lawrence Leaseabout a month ago in Criminal
The Girl in the Green Hoodie
M Mehran The storm hit Silverbridge just after midnight—sheets of rain hammering pavement, lightning flashing over the empty streets like camera shutters capturing crimes no one had yet committed. Detective Jalen Cross preferred nights like this. Bad weather made criminals sloppy.
By Muhammad Mehranabout a month ago in Criminal
The Last Confession
M Mehran Detective Mara Vance had learned two unshakable truths in her twenty years with the Harbor City Police Department: people lie, and guilt never sleeps. Tonight, both truths pressed heavily on her shoulders as she stepped into Cell 12 of the precinct’s lower wing.
By Muhammad Mehranabout a month ago in Criminal
👻 The Digital Ghost of Tokyo: Tracking the $50 Billion Bitcoin Heist That Vanished Without a Trace
1. The Day Bitcoin Died (The Setting ) It was the Wild West of the early 2010s, and Bitcoin was the shiny, new gold rush. If you wanted a piece of the action, you went to one place: Mt. Gox.
By The Insight Ledger about a month ago in Criminal











