Daniel Wozniak
Daniel Wozniak is an American man convicted of the 2010 murders of two individuals in California in a scheme motivated by financial gain. He used the victims' identities to attempt to cover up his actions. Wozniak was arrested and later sentenced to death. His case gained attention due to his background as a community theater actor and the calculated nature of the crimes.
Danielle Johnson
Danielle Johnson is a person who committed the crime of gay bashing and baby killing, as per the title of the video in 2024.
Danilo Restivo
Danilo Restivo is an Italian serial killer, subject of various true crime documentaries.
Danny Rolling
Danny Rolling, also known as The Gainesville Ripper, is a convicted serial killer responsible for the murders of five University of Florida students in 1990.
Daron Wint
Daron Wint is an American man convicted of the 2015 murders of a family and their housekeeper in Washington, D.C., in what became known as the "Mansion Murders" case. The crime involved kidnapping, extortion, and multiple killings. Wint was arrested following a multi-state investigation and later convicted. He was sentenced to life imprisonment, with the case gaining widespread attention due to its brutality and the high-profile nature of the victims.
Darrell Brooks
Darrell Brooks is the suspect accused of driving his vehicle into a parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin in 2021.
David Battaglia
David Battaglia was an American man convicted of murdering his two young daughters in Texas in 2001. The crime occurred during a custody dispute and was carried out while he was on the phone with their mother. Battaglia was sentenced to death and executed in 2018. The case drew significant attention due to the circumstances of the killings and the legal debates surrounding his mental competency.

David Camm
David Camm became one of the most controversial figures in American criminal justice after being accused of murdering his wife, Kimberly "Kim" Camm, and their two children, Brad and Jill, in Georgetown, Indiana, on September 28, 2000. A former Indiana State Trooper, Camm returned home from a basketball game to discover his family shot to death inside the garage of the family residence. Investigators quickly focused on him as the primary suspect, leading to a case that would dominate headlines for more than a decade. Although convicted twice and sentenced to prison, both convictions were later overturned. Prosecutors repeatedly argued that Camm had murdered his family, while the defense maintained he was the victim of a flawed investigation that ignored evidence pointing to another offender. After a third trial in 2013, Camm was acquitted of all charges. The case remains one of the most famous wrongful conviction cases in modern American history and continues to generate debate about forensic evidence, tunnel vision in investigations, and prosecutorial misconduct.