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- Godzilla's fiftieth Anniversary project, in which Godzilla travels around the world to fight his old foes and his allies plus a new, mysterious monster named Monster X.
- Crazy true stories, crimes, disasters, mysteries from around the world told in dramatized Japanese TV show.
- Bored Texas housewife Candy Montgomery started having an affair with family friend and married software engineer, Alan Gore in 1978. When Alan was away on business in 1980, something happened between Candy and Alan's wife, Betty, in the Gore home, that ended up with Betty murdered, struck by a bloody ax 41 times. What ensued was an unusual and controversial trial and verdict, one which brought up a childhood traumatic event in Candy's life that purported to explain her post traumatic stress and violent actions during a fight with the victim.
- On November 22, 2000, in Vista, California, Christopher Butler, Robert Ortiz and Christopher Huggins broke into the house of Michelle Ramskill-Estey, age 35, a Bank of America Manager. The three men's intention was to force her to open the bank and bring them what ended up being $360,000 in cash. To ensure that she did what they wanted, they strapped dynamite to Renee's 7 yr old daughter and an adult roommate, Kimbra Oliver. The robbers got away and no one was injured (the dynamite turned out to be fake). Police searched for the robbers and one was even profiled on the television show, America's Most Wanted.
- In February 1997, Charles "Crazy Charlie" Rodriguez and his brother, Joseph, are listed on "America's Most Wanted" for shooting at a police officer. While hiding from the law, they resort to robbing banks, but the robberies become more and more violent. So the FBI plan a sting to catch the brothers using an armored truck. They just have to get Jose to convince Charlie and Joseph to rob it.
- May 2005 - Punjab is a friendly 1,500 lb camel, owned by a man who collects exotic and ex-circus animals in Bethlehem, WV. When a woman comes to paint the fence, Punjab tries to cozy up to her, and accidentally steps on her foot while lying down, forcing her to the ground. Trapped by the weight of the animal, she calls 911. Paramedics Mark Hartman and Brent Hicks now have a dilemma. How to get the tame but massive animal upright without accidentally crushing the woman.
- Episode dealing with American Psychic Pam Coronado, who started using her psychic visions to help people in 1996. She has helped police departments locate missing people (living or dead) or find clues regarding unsolved crimes. Most famously, she accurately predicted many details of the Washington DC Beltway sniper case in 2002 before they were caught.
- 2000–TV Episode
- Linda Brown was found dead and her 14 year-old daughter, Cinnamon, confesses to the murder. Three years later, the truth comes out in a twisted love triangle.
- Man works hard to become successful in food service; unfortunately, his criminal past catches up with him to the dismay of his supervisors.
- A kindly Priest is falsely accused of a series of robberies. At his trial, one victim/witness after another identifies him as the perpetrator. Finally, out of shame that an innocent man is about to be convicted, the true perpetrator, who has been following the trial, comes forward to confess.
- A mentally unbalanced man, Paul Michael Stephani, attacks and kills a series of young women in the Minneapolis area between 1980 and 1982. After each attack, he has fits of anguish, remembering his childhood church attendance. He confesses "his sins", anonymously to a priest, as well as, making wild "weepy-voiced" phone calls to the police, incoherently advising them of the crimes committed. Ironically, the numerous calls to the police did not help them catch Stephani, who was apprehended because one of his victims fought back and survived, and Stephani was nabbed when he sought medical help for his own injuries. 20 years after his incarceration on another murder conviction, he formally confessed to the first killings.
- The story of Andrew Cunanan and his killing spree that included the murder of Gianni Versace, the world famous fashion designer, and ended with him taking his own life on a boat in Florida.
- On October 15, 1996, the New River Health District was informed that a large number of patients were being admitted with pneumonia. Six days later, Legionnaire's Disease was confirmed in 23 patients, two of whom died. The team of investigators must find out where the bacteria is coming from.
- The parents of a little Michigan girl notice extreme rashes and bleeding sores when she comes in contact with certain items and foods. Doctors just dismiss the symptoms as simple eczema. After attending a party where the theme was Blue, and everything, the decorations, the cake, the food were all blue, the girl went into shock and had to be rushed to the hospital. It was then that her parents realized that she was allergic to blue dyes, but the doctors didn't believe them initially, since at the time they had never heard of a blue dye allergy before.
- March 22, 2005 - A Las Vegas resident, Anna Ayala, while visiting San Jose, California, claimed she found a severed human finger in her bowl of chili, purchased at Wendy's - a national fast food chain. Though her intent was to sue the company, the intense public interest and scrutiny by police soon turned the spotlight back on Ayala. Ayala was later suspected of planting the finger and arrested by Las Vegas Police. Wendy's restaurant chain lost an estimated $2.5 Million in revenue from the bad publicity of the hoax, an amount which Ayala may be liable for.
- 2000–TV Episode"The miracle liver transplant" Michelle Shmitt: A 3 year old girl in desperate need of a liver transplant is unable to get to the airport due to terrible weather conditions. 17 inches of snow trap the family while the local radio station reaches out for any kind of help the community can offer. In response, a woman gathers a small group of people to shovel snow from a church parking lot to create a heliport. The group of six expands to over 200 while courageous pilots offer helicopter and plane assistance to fly the girl to Omaha. "Triangular Murder Case" Two individuals in love with the same women are murdered within a span of 3 months back in winter of 1975 in Yakima, Washington. The intricate case, eventually becoming a novel written by Ann Rule (Fever in the Heart) unravels itself in a tragic way. "Tuffy" Pleasant murders Morris Blackenbaker as a favor for his former wrestling coach, "Gabby" Moore. Gabby, who was in love with Morris's wife, finds himself as a chief suspect in the shooting of Morris. In order to clear things up and "win" Morris's wife over, he asks Tuffy to shoot him in the upper shoulder. The shot ricochets off of his fourth rib into his lung and heart. Gabby was unintentionally killed by Tuffy, and Tuffy is eventually sentenced for first degree murder and manslaughter.