Kentucky Justice


Kentucky Justice was a reality television series which followed the activities and exploits of the Harlan County Sheriff's department, in eastern Kentucky, from 2013 to 2014. The series was produced by the National Geographic Channel and aired for a single season.

Theme

Harlan County, which is one of the poorest counties in America, was selected for the show due to an epidemic wave of crime, mostly involving drug abuse. The series followed the officers of the Harlan County Sheriff's Department as they attempted to battle rural crime. Unlike other police reality series, such as Cops, the series departed from the classic theme of mixing "fast paced" arrests with slower investigations, and instead focused primarily on following a days or weeks long single investigation, mostly involving the Sheriff personally investigating the case. Shows would also focus on the personal lives of the deputies, in particular young and inexperienced police officers, recently graduated from the police academy, as they learned through mistakes and underwent professional growth.
Some programs would intermix multiple investigations, usually short segments of arrests and pursuing suspects, cut in with a single longer segment regarding a more serious investigation. On one show, cameras captured a chaotic shooting during a drug raid where a suspect inside a house fired twelve rounds at deputies with one deputy returning fire. The suspect was unharmed and the deputy cleared of wrongdoing after an investigation.

Episodes

EpisodeTitleOriginal Air Date
1Drug Bust ShootoutDecember 15, 2013
2Arsonists & AlibisDecember 17, 2013
3The Escape ArtistDecember 22, 2013
4FirestarterDecember 29, 2013
5Cocaine KingpinJanuary 5, 2014
6Law Gone BadJanuary 24, 2014
7Arresting the LawJanuary 24, 2014

Cancellation

Kentucky Justice was cancelled after one season due to the arrest and indictment of Sheriff Marvin J. Lipfird on felony charges of embezzlement of county funds. Lipfird was accused, and later plead guilty, to stealing more than ten thousand dollars from a county bank account set up to finance drug related investigations to include the paying of informants as well as providing "buy money" for undercover drug operations. Lipfird's actions were exposed during a state audit and, following his arrest, the series Kentucky Justice was cancelled. The series was then rebooted as Southern Justice.