Jacoby
Episode: 5x01 | Airdate: Jun 28, 2021
Barristers Sasha and Jeremy explore a classic whodunnit from 1922 in which a lowly pantry boy was charged with the murder of a titled lady in a London hotel.
Episode: 5x01 | Airdate: Jun 28, 2021
Barristers Sasha and Jeremy explore a classic whodunnit from 1922 in which a lowly pantry boy was charged with the murder of a titled lady in a London hotel.
Episode: 5x02 | Airdate: Jun 29, 2021
Barristers Sasha and Jeremy reinvestigate a lethal shooting from 1937, when a barge captain was allegedly murdered by his best friend.
Episode: 5x03 | Airdate: Jul 1, 2021
The barristers explore the notorious case of ‘The Man They Could Not Hang' - a house servant accused of murdering his upper-class benefactor in Devon in 1884.
Episode: 5x04 | Airdate: Jul 2, 2021
Jeremy and Sasha revisit a complex case from Victorian Britain that featured four suspects, two trials and ultimately just one man hanged for murder.
Episode: 5x05 | Airdate: Jul 4, 2021
Sasha and Jeremy examine a case from 1882, where a wife was accused of murdering her husband with an arsenic-laced rice pudding that contained enough poison to kill fifty people.
Episode: 5x06 | Airdate: Jul 5, 2021
Jeremy and Sasha reinvestigate a notorious case of matricide dating from the 1920s. Did flawed forensic evidence see an innocent man hanged?
Episode: 5x07 | Airdate: Jul 6, 2021
Barristers Sasha and Jeremy investigate an infamous Scottish murder case from 1862, in which a compelling alternative suspect may have been the true killer.
Episode: 5x08 | Airdate: Jul 7, 2021
Sasha and Jeremy explore a case in which the controversial killing of a police officer sparked the round-up of dozens of suspects and ended with three men going to the gallows.
Episode: 5x09 | Airdate: Jul 8, 2021
Sasha and Jeremy explore a grisly Victorian murder case from 1863 in which a missing pocket watch proved to be the vital evidence that saw a man convicted and hanged.
Episode: 5x10 | Airdate: Jul 9, 2021
The barristers investigate the mysterious shooting of a landowning farmer in rural Ireland in 1882. Could dubious eyewitness testimony have sent two innocent men to the gallows?