Watch Judgment With Ashleigh Banfield with Fubo for $0 Today
This new weekly signature newsmagazine series will bring viewers storytelling at its best from the archives of the Court TV library, incorporating the most popular cases in the vault past and present that have captured national attention.
S1, EP3 "Florida v. Sievers"
Mark Sievers thought he had arranged the perfect murder when he hired a childhood friend and another man to murder his wife, Dr. Teresa Sievers; his best laid plan started falling apart when someone he trusted the most turned on him.
S1, EP4 "Nevada v. Simpson"
Years after being found not guilty of the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, OJ Simpson was back in a courtroom and again facing felony charges.
S1, EP5 "Texas v. Mowbray"
Ten years after being found guilty of the murder of her husband, Susie Mowbray's conviction was overturned, and she would once again face a jury of her peers.
S1, EP6 "Texas v. Mallard"
While driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol, Chante Mallard allegedly struck pedestrian Gregory Biggs, impaling him in the windshield; what she did and didn't do next, is what turned a terrible accident into a shocking case of murder.
S1, EP126 "Judgment Of Charles Manson With Ashleigh Banfield"
When Charlie Manson and members of his family were given the death penalty for the Helter Skelter murders, people thought their reign of terror was over; then California overturned the death penalty, making parole an option.
S1, EP24 "California v. Powell"
For the four LAPD cops who beat Rodney King with batons, it may have been business as usual; but then the world learned that it had been captured on video, and those 81 seconds changed everything.
S1, EP2 "Arizona v. Arias"
The discovery of Travis Alexander's body, stabbed, slit and shot in the neck, shocked his friends and family; Arizona police charge his girlfriend Jodi Arias with his murder.
S1, EP1 "Florida v. Anthony"
The mystery surrounding the death of Caylee Anthony grips the nation; the only thing more shocking than the testimony is the verdict itself.