Adam Janos is a New York City-based writer and reporter. In addition to his work for A&E's Real Crime blog, he has reported for The Wall Street Journal and The Budapest Times, amongst others.
Some people aiming to make DIY guns have found resources on the Internet, including Cody Wilson's Defense Distributed, stirring up a hornet's nest of legal and ethical challenges.
Want to get people to open up? Talk less, says a top Los Angeles Sheriff's Department crisis negotiator.
Captain Roger Sankerdial, who works out of the 114th precinct in Astoria, Queens, shares the experience of being deployed on September 11, a mere ten weeks after beginning his police training.
MS-13 is not only terrorizing Long Island's village of Patchogue, but has Latinos who live and work there fearful that the gang's presence will contribute to widespread anti-Latino hostility.
How sound is the reasoning that a refusal to take a polygraph test is a sign of guilt? We speak to former polygrapher and current anti-polygraph activist, Douglas Williams, about what he sees as the test's fundamental problems.
Retired Detective Sergeant Joseph Giacalone had the pleasure of working with compassionate cops who truly loved the job and "cowboys" who were unworthy of the badge. Here are some of his stories.