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10 of the Most Compulsively Watchable True-Crime Documentaries on Netflix Right Now

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Photo: Courtesy Netflix

Almost seven years after the release of the Emmy-winning Making a Murderer, true-crime documentaries are still wildly popular on Netflix. The latest hits to have become part of the canon? The tale of a charismatic con artist which became a word-of-mouth sensation and birthed countless think pieces, and a staggering four-part saga involving a vegan restaurant owner, siphoned funds, a prized pitbull, and promises of immortality.

Below, the 10 best Netflix true-crime documentaries to catch up on now.

The Innocent Man (2018)

Photo: Netflix

Based on John Grisham’s 2006 non-fiction book The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town, director Clay Tweel’s TV adaptation follows the murder cases of Debbie Sue Carter in 1982 and Donna Denice Haraway in 1984, exposing the broken criminal justice system and its gut-wrenching consequences for four men: Ron Williamson, Dennis Fritz, Tommy Ward, and Karl Fontenot—three of whom have been exonerated or released from prison.

Don’t F**K With Cats (2019)

Photo: Netflix

A group of amateur online bandits are on the hunt for Canadian pornographic actor Luka Magnotta, who in 2010 shared graphic videos of himself torturing and killing cats on a Facebook group. The documentary then takes a shocking turn as they uncover more of his heinous crimes, including the murder of student Lin Jun in 2012.

Tiger King (2020)

Photo: Netflix

If there’s one show that epitomizes the madness of 2020, it’s Tiger King—the eight-part series following the life of zookeeper Joe Exotic that was viewed by 64 million households worldwide. We witness Exotic’s activities in the Tiger King Park in Oklahoma and his sentencing to 22 years in prison for his attempt to hire a hitman to kill his rival Carole Baskin, the CEO of Big Cat Rescue in Tampa, Florida.

Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich (2020) 

Photo: Netflix

Survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s notorious “pyramid scheme” come together to uncover his network of rich and powerful confidantes in this four-part documentary based on the 2016 book of the same name by James Patterson. In the post #MeToo world, the series is as harrowing as it is enraging.

Athlete A (2020) 

Photo: Netflix

A team of investigative reporters at The Indianapolis Star uncover the crimes of Larry Nassar, a doctor for the women’s program at USA Gymnastics who, for decades, was sexually assaulting young female gymnasts. Athlete A is Maggie Nichols, who in 2015 reported her assault to her coach. It is revealed that the president of USA Gymnastics, Steve Penny, was working to protect the coaches and was later arrested for his involvement in covering up their countless crimes (reportedly 54 coaches had allegations made against them dating back to 2012).

 Sophie: A Murder In West Cork (2021) 

Photo: Netflix

Thirty-nine-year-old French TV producer Sophie Toscan du Plantier was murdered outside her holiday home in West Cork, Ireland, on the night of December 23, 1996. Ian Bailey, a journalist who was covering the story, was the prime suspect, but did not go to trial due to insufficient evidence. Years later, he was charged with murder and sentenced to 25 years in prison in France—however Ireland’s High Court ruled he could not be extradited. With interviews from du Plantier’s loved ones and Bailey himself, this three-part series delves into the mystery behind du Plantier’s death and her family’s ongoing quest for justice.

Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal (2021) 

Photo: Netflix

Chris Smith’s gripping docudrama, composed of YouTube clips from high school seniors and reenactments of wiretapped conversations, investigates the 2019 college admissions bribery scandal. At its heart is Rick Singer (played by Matthew Modine), an education expert who helped the wealthy, including celebrities Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin, get their children into top U.S. universities by any means necessary.

Monsters Inside: The 24 Faces of Billy Milligan (2021) 

Photo: Netflix

In 1977, 23-year-old Billy Milligan was arrested for kidnapping, robbing, and raping three women on the Ohio State University campus and was the first to be cleared of charges on the grounds that he had no recollection of the crimes. Psychologists diagnosed Milligan with dissociative identity disorder and his lawyers pleaded insanity, claiming that his alternate personalities committed the crimes. Is he a victim or a fraud? Composed of archival footage of interviews with Milligan’s family, psychiatrists, and lawyers, this fascinating series delves into that question with chilling effect.

The Tinder Swindler (2022)

Photo: Netflix

The first documentary to top the streaming giant’s weekly film chart, Felicity Morris’s jaw-dropper centers on three women—Cecilie Fjellhøy, Pernilla Sjoholm, and Ayleen Koeleman—who are conned by Shimon Hayut, a grifter posing as a suave diamond mogul who finds his victims on the titular dating app. Heartbroken and deep in debt, they team up to bring him down, exposing him in the press and, in one instance, selling his designer clothes and pocketing the profit. It’s a compelling study of narcissism, gaslighting, and, ultimately, resilience.

 Bad Vegan: Fame. Fraud. Fugitives. (2022)

Photo: Netflix

Across four increasingly bizarre episodes, Fyre director Chris Smith tells the true story of Sarma Melngailis, a Wharton graduate who became a rising star in the New York culinary scene of the early 2000s. After turning her raw-food restaurant into a celebrity hotspot, she meets the mysterious Anthony Strangis, a Twitter friend of Alec Baldwin’s. They marry and Strangis convinces her to send him large sums of money in return for making her and her beloved dog immortal. When she fails to pay her employees as a result, they go on strike and the pair go on the run, only to be found after Strangis orders Domino’s from a traceable phone. Is Melngailis even partly to blame, or is this a classic case of coercive control? We’re left to make up our own minds.

Originally published in Vogue.com 

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