Take a look at production and archival images from the films:
Nuremberg trial of Dr. Karl Brandt, Hitler's doctor and director of Nazi experiments on humans. Credit: PD / U.S. Signal Corps
Missing person investigators at a suspected mass grave site in Bugjono, Bosnia-Herzegovina. Credit: Jonathan Silvers
Dr. Clyde Snow (l) with director of Guatemalan Forensic Anthropology Foundation Fredy Peccerelli (r). Credit: Robert Caccamise
Former Nuremberg Tribunal Prosecutor Benjamin Ferencz at home. Credit: Robert Caccamise
Former US Army Photographer Ronald Haeberle chronicled My Lai massacre. Credit: Jonathan Silvers
Former US Justice Dept. war crime prosecutor Allan Ryan with Fernando Vasquez-Prada, survivor of Imperial Japanese Army massacre in Manila, Philippines. Credit: Jonathan Silvers.
Marcel Stourdze, French Resistance Member who survived torture by Gestapo Chief Klaus Barbie, Paris, France. Credit: Robert Caccamise.
Mass grave exhumation in Bugjono, Bosnia-Herzegovina by forensic scientists of International Commission on Missing Persons. Credit: Jonathan Silvers
Remains of genocide victim examined at Guatemalan Forensic Anthropology Foundation. Credit: Robert Caccamise
War crime forensic assessment, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Credit: Jonathan Silvers
Mother of adolescent sexual violence victim testifies at Military Tribunal, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Credit: Jonathan Silvers
Sexual violence ward, Panzi Hospital, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Credit: Jonathan Silvers
Mass murderer Jean "Gasumari" Ngirumpotse in Taba, Rwanda. Credit: Jonathan Silvers
Forensic anthropologist Dr. Clyde Snow identifies bullet fragments in an skull x-ray of a victim abducted and executed by the military in the 1990s. Credit: Eric Stover
Dead Reckoning: War, Crime, and Justice from WW2 to the War on Terror Premieres Tuesday, March 28, 2017 at 8-11 p.m. nationwide on PBS.
