Trailer: Blumhouse’s New Satanic Panic Docuseries FALL RIVER
Blumhouse Television has teamed with Epix on a new docuseries Fall River which will premiere on May 16th at 10 p.m. Check out the trailer! By Mike Sprague
Helter Skelter: An American Myth) on a new docuseries
Fall River. It will premiere on Epix on May 16th at 10 p.m.
Check out the teaser below.
The four-episode docuseries follows this synopsis. Fall River is home to the notorious Lizzie Borden, three young women were killed in a series of brutal murders. Police alleged a satanic cult was practicing human sacrifice. The cult leader, a man named Carl Drew, was captured and sent to prison for life without parole. Twenty years after the trial, the lead investigator became so haunted by inconsistencies he re-investigates the case after he retired. Evidence surfaced bringing the entire story into question.
The Jinx, A Wilderness of Error) four-part docuseries
Fall River this May, with the first episode premiering May 16. Executive produced by Jason Blum and directed/executive produced by James Buddy Day (
The Lover’s Lane Murders, Manson: The Women, The Disappearance of Susan Cox Powell),
Fall River is the latest true-crime docuseries that resolves to dig deeper into a long-forgotten case: that of the string of brutal murders in Fall River, Massachusetts, which led to police alleging a satanic cult was practicing human sacrifice. But the documentary will follow lead investigator Paul Carey as he re-examines the case and its many inconsistencies 20 years later.
EPIX Will Premiere FALL RIVER Docuseries broadwayworld.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from broadwayworld.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mass immigration trial at the Lucius D. Bunton Federal Courthouse, Pecos, Texas.
Seven men and one woman pleaded guilty to crossing the U.S. Mexico border without permission during a criminal court hearing this week.
Their trial marked the beginning of Operation Streamline in California, a controversial program which fast tracks immigration prosecutions by putting multiple groups of people through a federal criminal court hearing simultaneously and in a short period of time. The group hearings are expected to be held each day in San Diego.
Norma Aguilar, a supervisory attorney with the Federal Defenders of San Diego, Inc., called the program, “the inherently coercive system,” adding that some of the defendants’ attorneys didn’t agree with their clients’ decision to plead guilty.