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.
Samantha Sieber, vice president of Bio-Response Solutions, a company that makes alkaline hydrolysis machines for human disposal, speaks to A&E True Crime about the process of bio cremation and how it's different than the way killers try to get rid of bodies.
To better understand package bombs and the serial bombers who employ them, like Austin serial bomber Mark Conditt, A&E True Crime spoke with Tina Sherrow, a retired bomb technician and certified explosives specialist for the ATF.
A&E True Crime talks to real bloodstain pattern analysts about how the science works and why some people, including those in the BPA field, are skeptical about how it's used in criminal cases.
With the 2017 chloroform-poisoning murder of 3-year-old Mariah Kay Woods, A&E True Crime explores the history of the chemical's use and how it kills.
The execution of a prisoner on death-row usually results in the beginning of a new trauma for the family members they leave behind.
A&E True Crime spoke with Marcus Parks—whose podcast "The Last Podcast on the Left" ran a special on Jonestown—to learn more about the last fateful hours of the men, women and children who died that tragic day.
A&E True Crime spoke about the ethics and legality of robotic policing with Ryan Calo, a law professor at the University of Washington and a leading scholar in emerging technology and the law.
Richard Lopez, a former prison chaplain, spoke to A&E True Crime about how murderers on death row come to embrace a higher power while awaiting execution.