A limited number of stations carry traditional
local newscasts or
breaking news coverage on their True Crime subchannel, pre-empting the network's programming. This includes
Milwaukee's
WISN-TV and
KOAT-TV in
Albuquerque (both owned by
Hearst Television, which both air a weeknight 9 p.m. newscast (both stations are in the
Central and
Mountain time zones, respectively), as WISN-TV has no other compatible subchannels or news share agreements, and KOAT's second subchannel carries the Spanish language network
Estrella TV.
Crime and investigation programming True Crime Network relies on crime and justice-related programming sourced from various production companies. As Justice Network, it aired a selection of programs previously broadcast on
Court TV/
TruTV until 2019, when Court TV was relaunched by the
E. W. Scripps Company. Justice Network's
syndication agreement with
Turner Entertainment was announced with the network on November 10, 2014. The network's decision to focus on crime-focused programming is based on various factors in addition to viewer interest in the genre, as it is intended to help tie into its public service mission, and because the genre is of relatively low cost to acquire and produce compared to other fact-based genres. These PSAs consist of four different 30-second segments: •
"BeSAFE: Most Wanted" – a segment featuring a specific profile of a wanted fugitive accused of a violent or non-violent
felony; •
"BeSAFE: Missing Children" – a report on a missing child (featuring information on when they were last seen before they were
abducted or
ran away and the child's statistics); •
"BeSAFE: Safety Tips" – a segment providing safety tips informing the public on how to prevent themselves from becoming victims of a crime or abduction. The PSAs are mainly tailored to the specific region of the local True Crime Network affiliate, with additional information on the fugitives and missing children profiled available on the network's website. John Walsh, founder of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, serves as the network's on-air spokesperson and announcer of the PSA interstitials. John's son, National Center for Missing and Exploited Children child advocate
Callahan Walsh, appears in the network's NCMEC safety and missing child profile PSAs, while Sgt. Ralph Woolfolk of the
Atlanta Police Department (who, in his prior career as a child actor, was known for his role as Derek "Dee Dee" Parker in the 1990s
Nickelodeon sitcom
My Brother and Me) appears in the network's "BeSAFE" PSA interstitials. ==Affiliates==