Two women are found dead on Valentine's Day in a burning massage parlour. The ashen remains uncover not only the killer but a murder spree spanning 10 years.
Terrorism rocked Melbourne in 1986 when a car bomb exploded below the Turkish Consulate. Did the human remains found at the crime scene belong to the bomber? Did they act alone?
Armed bandits walk away with $150,000 after a brazen ATM robbery. But it all comes undone thanks to some unusual forensic evidence in the form of green floral contact paper and orange rope.
A man survives a gun shot to his head on board a boat with his long-time girlfriend. She claims he was attacked by pirates but is she telling the truth?
A man disappears without a trace. When parts of his beloved bike begin appearing in local tips and dams, suspicions of foul play prove right.
A man is kidnapped in broad daylight by three men who demand a $400,000 ransom. The victims eventual murder would prompt one of the largest Homicide investigations ever undertaken by Victorian Police.
Australian Federal Police thwarted a dramatic attempt to smuggle $160 million worth of heroin into Australian waters. But they could only find three persons of interest, one was still missing.
In April 2001, a young police officer pulled over a car for a simple traffic infringement; he never imagined it would turn into a high speed chase with two brazen armed robbers.
In October 1996, the bodies of a mother and her two children were found stuffed in suitcases and dumped in bushland. Who was responsible and what was their motive?
Two prostitutes are murdered within months of each other. Was there a serial killer stalking Brisbane's street workers? Or were there two vicious murderers on the loose?
A semi-naked body of a woman was discovered in August 2002 beside a police station in the Brisbane suburb of Hendra. She'd suffered multiple stab wounds to much of her body. Within hours investigators knew the victim's identity. Her name was Jasmin Crathern, a local prostitute who'd spent many years working the streets of Brisbane's notorious red light district in Fortitude Valley.
Although they knew the victim, discovering the identity of her killer would prove far more difficult. The only clues left at the scene were some dusty shoe and tyre prints, and initially investigators had no luck tracing this forensic evidence to a suspect.