Police seek the public’s help in locating Anthony Urena (shown below) who they say vanished without a trace a week ago after leaving a NYC nightclub intoxicated.
Levity arises amid a massive #BrusselsLockdown and high alert, as brave Belgians “shelter in place” with their equally courageous kitties…
PHOTO: Officials in Brussels seeking to apprehend the holdout Paris bomber should be looking for him in hashish houses or gay bars, apparently.
Pennsylvania police have charged Jason French below for tortuously strangling to death his adopted dog ‘Apollo’ because the black Labrador “wouldn’t stop barking.”
PHOTOS: A hunter has found missing woman Lilia Aucapina hanging in woods behind her Long Island home, over a month after her ex husband was arrested for violating a restraining order.
Saboteurs have turned the lights out on Crimea this weekend…
The photo below shows Baby Lyndon Albers months before her brutal predawn abduction from her Massachusetts home this weekend…
Seven-year-old Gabbi Doolin was at a pewee football game with her family last Saturday night when she mysteriously got separated from them…
The Kentucky girl was found less than a half-hour later in a nearby creek, raped and asphyxiated.
A womb raider assaulted and strangled a young pregnant woman to death on Friday in NYC, then surgically removed her fetus.
ISIS defectors are warning Americans, Brits, Frenchmen, etc., that Islamic State recruiters are “tricking them to join up” so they can rob, gang rape, castrate and even kill them as “infidels.”
On the night of November 29, 1988, near the impoverished Marlborough neighborhood in south Kansas City, an explosion at a construction site killed six of the city’s firefighters. It was a clear case of arson, and five people from Marlborough were duly convicted of the crime. But for veteran crime writer and crusading editor J. Patrick O’Connor, the facts—or a lack of them—didn’t add up. Justice on Fire is OConnor’s detailed account of the terrible explosion that led to the firefighters’ deaths and the terrible injustice that followed. Also available from Amazon
With the purpose of writing about true crime in an authoritative, fact-based manner, veteran journalists J. J. Maloney and J. Patrick O’Connor launched Crime Magazine in November of 1998. Their goal was to cover all aspects of true crime: Read More
Contents Copyright © 1998-2020 by Crime Magazine | J. Patrick O'Connor Editor | E-mail CrimeMagazine.com
Designed by Orman. Drupal theme by ThemeSnap.com
