
Watch S27, EP13: I'll Raise My Voice Right Back! with Fubo for $0 Today
Undercover drug buys; a drunken man cannot stop talking; a domestic abuse suspect admits to hitting her mooching husband.
Undercover drug buys; a drunken man cannot stop talking; a domestic abuse suspect admits to hitting her mooching husband.
How to watch
More episodes
Cops
S27, EP11 "Taser Proof"Officers learn that a taser cannot take some suspects down; a couple undressing in a pickup truck; arresting a polite suspect.
Cops
S27, EP12 "You'll Shoot Your Eye Out"A suspect runs through a hotel fence; two brothers involved in a knife fight; a man fires his BB gun at a neighbor's child.
Cops
S27, EP13 "I'll Raise My Voice Right Back!"Undercover drug buys; a drunken man cannot stop talking; a domestic abuse suspect admits to hitting her mooching husband.
Cops
S27, EP14 "We Know Who You Are"Officers are forced to tase a suicidal man; chasing a familiar face through a grass field; a lying suspect seeks refuge in a condemned house.
Cops
S37, EP36 "Up, Up and Away"A stolen motorcycle leads deputies up a mountain; deputies chase a stolen car driven by a 13-year-old; Kern County's Air Support Unit observes a fleeing suspect ditch his minibike.
Cops
S37, EP35 "Photo Finish"A man steals his girlfriend's truck when she refuses to take him to get methadone; a nervous driver flees when he shows a cop a picture of a gun; a Jeep gets spiked; deputies PIT a freshly stolen car.
Cops
S37, EP34 "Stuck On You"Stop Sticks are used to end the pursuit of a known criminal. A stuck throttle is blamed for a motorcycle chase. A suspect with a screwdriver bolts. StarChase is used to track a fleeing Mercedes-Benz.
Cops
S37, EP28 "USB Honest"Occupants of a car involved in a pursuit give conflicting stories; a woman claims she crashed a Tesla, but a USB drive reveals the truth; a woman argues the validity of a restraining order.
More crime shows
See all48 Hours
This newsmagazine investigates intriguing crime and justice cases that touch on all aspects of the human experience. Over its long run, the show has helped exonerate wrongly convicted people, driven the reopening -- and resolution -- of cold cases, and changed numerous lives. CBS News correspondents offer an in-depth look into each story, with the emphasis on solving the mystery at its heart. The program and its team have earned critical acclaim, including multiple Emmy, Peabody and Edward R. Murrow Awards.
Forensic Files
Eagle-eyed technical experts prove there is no such thing as a perfect crime as they assemble the pieces every criminal leaves behind. Dramatic crime re-creations and, sometimes, part of the investigations are a staple of the series. Some of the re-creations include alternate versions of the crimes, which are disproved by science. The show's episodes follow each case from the initial investigation until it reaches its legal resolution.
Cops
Featuring police officers, constables and sheriff's deputies patrolling streets for car thieves, drug pushers, sex-trade workers, violent thugs and anyone else who dares step onto the wrong side of the law. No music, no scripted dialogue, no narration; just gritty videos of cops in action during patrols and other police activities.
Murder, She Wrote
Mystery writer and amateur detective Jessica Fletcher - a down-to-earth, middle-aged widow - ferrets out the criminals in idyllic Cabot Cove, Maine, which apparently is the murder capital of the United States for the show's 12-season run. Though while traveling, she uncovers a fair number of killers as well.