After Jessie Morrison is beaten to death, police zero in on Vonda Smith; the team explores whether Vonda may have been wrongfully convicted, based on a shoddy investigation and circumstantial evidence.
Investigators explore the mysteries surrounding the cases of Vonda Smith and Jesse Morrison; the inquiry reveals that Vonda may have been wrongfully convicted, and more details come to light about Jesse's brutal murder.
When Andy Katrinak comes home to find his wife and infant son gone, he summons the police and tells them he believes they have been abducted, and he suspects his ex-girlfriend Patty Rorrer might be involved.
Kenneth Clair, a homeless black man, is convicted and sentenced to death for the brutal murder of a babysitter in 1984, but a child eyewitness tells police he saw a white man kill her.
16-year-old Evaristo Junior Salas is sent to prison for three decades for a crime he says he did not commit; a team comes together to investigate whether Salas was brought to justice or railroaded by the system.
Investigators Ira Todd and Joe Kennedy meet with the lead detective on the Salas case; the detective claims an informant implicated Evaristo, but when the informant comes forward, the team is shocked by what it learns.
On July 16, 1996, Bertha Tardy and three of her employees were murdered; Curtis Flowers was arrested and went on to be tried six times over 21 years; he faces a possible seventh trial, while maintaining his innocence.
Curtis Flowers is convicted of a quadruple murder; after 21 years of prosecutions, six trials, and questionable tactics by the State of Mississippi, one wonders if it possible to determine Flowers' guilt or innocence.
"Wrong Man's" team of experts and an Idaho investigator examine Christopher Tapp's claim that he was coerced into falsely confessing to the brutal murder of Angie Dodge on June 13, 1996, in Idaho Falls, Idaho.
The investigative team looks for a killer on the loose, hoping to exonerate Christopher Tapp who is serving time; then, after two decades, a surprise offer by the prosecution comes Tapp's way.