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Scold, scourge, wreaker of cold justice: apparently, that's what's expected of the public editor.
Investigative journalism programs have done this for years, but "Cold Justice" is more ride-to-the-rescue, less public service.
The line between televised entertainment and real-life criminal justice blurs a bit more this week with the arrival of "Cold Justice" on TNT and "Deadline: Crime With Tamron Hall" on Investigation Discovery.
Neither series premiere is very satisfying, but "Cold Justice" picks up considerably in its second episode and seems as if it might be a worthy addition to the genre.
If the "Cold Justice" cases don't measure up to a good "Law & Order" episode for pacing and story arc, at least the intentions of Ms. Siegler and Ms. McClary are apparent: They want to crack the cases or at least re-energize the investigations.
Friday, June 20 "Cold Justice" 9 p.m. EDT on TNT.
Similar(41)
But farm workers are used to long, hard slogs and pitiless heat and cold, with justice as their distant but inevitable destination.
"That's what we've been struggling with for the last six years," said Janis L. McDonald, a law professor at Syracuse University and a co-director of the law school's Cold Case Justice Initiative.
With the help of the Cold Case Justice Initiative at the Syracuse University College of Law, he went on to file more than 150 articles on the subject, culminating in this one, which he hopes will lead to an arrest.
He has worked with the Syracuse University College of Law's Cold Case Justice Initiative, where students have gone through thousands of F.B.I. documents, even finding files on a missing black hotel porter, Joseph Edwards, that a federal prosecutor had said the bureau did not have.
In 2007 the Law School started the Cold Case Justice Initiative, investigating cold cases from the civil rights era in the South.
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