Subscribe to Crime X+ today. Andrew Rule is one of Australia's most prolific journalists and authors
With the passing of Geoffrey Edelsten, Andrew Rule remembers the many highlights and lowlights of
The superb Foxtel series Mr Inbetween has Andrew Rule looking at two stories this week that would ha
In the early 1920s a hapless bar owner found himself victim of one of Australia's worst misuses of f
DNA matching has been one of the greatest advances crime fighting has known, but as Andrew Rule expl
The value transfer system called hawala has been used since the time of the silk road to facilitate
It was at the time, Australia's worst mass killing: the arson at Brisbane's Whiskey a Go Go that cla
WARNING: DISTURBING CONTENT. While the late Neville Wran may be lionised as titan of Australian poli
As a 21-year-old, Laurie Larmer found himself piloting bombers over Nazi Germany in the last days
What starts as slimy find at a Dandenong meals manufacturer turns into a tangled web of accusations,
Andrew is joined by Herald Sun reporters Genevieve Alison and Ashley Argoon to outline 'Class Act',
A high-seas crime involving a former Olympian has Andrew Rule recalling Murray Riley, another skille
Abe Saffron presided over a web of crime and corruption that would stretch from Sydney's post-war bl
What should have been a stroke of luck for a Sydney family turned into a heartbreaking ordeal when a
A year after two campers went missing in Victoria's high country, Andrew Rule examines the latest cl
WARNING: DISTURBING CONTENT. When a wave of young girls were abducted and murdered in broad daylight
Before Melbourne encroached upon it, Tynong North was a nondescript bit of bush where some very bad
WARNING: DISTURBING CONTENT. Joe Noonan has been where no police officer wants to: comforting a coll
Allegations surround the breeding program at an elite horse racing stud owned by one of the most in
In the last of our Cuckoo series, Andrew Rule tells the story of the police dragnet that started to
Some call them a cult, many more call them controversial. Andrew Rule explores the intriguing histo