Based on the true story that shocked the entire nation, ITV’s latest drama follows Ann Ming — a mother who refused to accept silence from the justice system. After her daughter was brutally murdered and the killer walked free due to a legal loophole, Ann launched a relentless 15-year battle against the system: the police, the Crown Prosecution Service, even the government itself.
Sheridan Smith delivers a haunting performance as the mother willing to sacrifice everything to make sure her daughter’s killer is finally held accountable. Familiar faces from Shetland and Death in Paradise round out a cast that brings raw emotion and chilling realism to this unforgettable story. This isn’t just a personal tragedy — it’s an indictment of the very system meant to protect us. A series that doesn’t just break your heart — it ignites your outrage. If you thought Adolescence was brutal, this one will crush you — and make you question whether justice even exists. Because sometimes, the truth is more painful than any fiction ever written.

Just when you thought Adolescence was the most brutal drama TV had to offer this year, ITV has arrived with a series so harrowing, so emotionally devastating, it’s already being called the most powerful true crime drama of the decade. Enter I Fought The Law — the chilling new four-part series starring BAFTA-winner Sheridan Smith in a performance that’s already shaking viewers to their core.
Based on the real-life story that stunned Britain and changed the law forever, I Fought The Law tells the tragic and inspiring story of Ann Ming, a mother from Tyneside whose daughter Julie Hogg was murdered in 1989. When the prime suspect walked free due to a legal technicality, Ann didn’t just grieve — she fought. What followed was a 15-year battle against the criminal justice system, one that would take her from police stations to Parliament, ultimately rewriting British legal history.

“This isn’t just a TV drama. It’s a mother’s war cry.”
The newly released trailer (which you can watch below) gives just a glimpse into what’s to come: tears, fury, courtroom standoffs, and Smith’s voice trembling with quiet rage as she declares, “If they won’t fight for my daughter, I will.” It’s the kind of line that chills you — because you know it really happened.
Sheridan Smith, no stranger to emotionally charged roles (Cilla, The Moorside, Four Lives), delivers one of the most searing performances of her career. As Ann Ming, she’s fierce, fragile, and ferociously determined — a woman who refuses to let her child’s killer walk free, no matter how many doors are slammed in her face.
“More devastating than Death in Paradise, darker than Shetland — and more truthful than fiction.”
The supporting cast includes familiar faces from British crime favourites Shetland and Death in Paradise, but don’t expect comforting detective routines or seaside mystery escapism. This is real. This is raw. And this is a systemic failure laid bare.
Each episode peels back another layer of heartbreak — not just the horror of the crime itself, but the callous bureaucracy and legal loopholes that left a grieving mother with no justice, no answers, and no peace. Until she made sure the law changed.
“If you thought Adolescence was brutal, I Fought The Law will crush you.”
While Netflix’s Adolescence left viewers reeling with its portrait of betrayal and youth spiraling out of control, I Fought The Law taps into something even deeper — a parent’s primal grief and unbreakable will. Where Adolescence played with emotional fiction, this series reminds us that reality is often far more painful.
Already hailed as “extraordinary” by early critics, the series doesn’t shy away from the horror — but it also doesn’t wallow in it. Instead, it honours Ann Ming’s bravery, her refusal to be silenced, and her ultimate victory in changing the Double Jeopardy Law, ensuring no murderer could ever walk free under the same loophole again.

When and where to watch I Fought The Law
The four-part series is set to premiere this August on ITV1 and ITVX. Whether you’re a true crime obsessive, a fan of Sheridan Smith, or someone who believes in the fight for justice, this is the series you cannot miss.
And when the credits roll? Don’t be surprised if you’re left in tears — or furiously Googling Ann Ming’s real-life campaign that changed the UK forever.
