Overview
Internal links: Jcs Criminal Psychology, True Crime, Forensic Psychology, YouTube Creators, Interrogation Analysis, Courtroom Footage. Source links: YouTube .
JCS - Criminal Psychology is listed in the True Crime Gods creator graph as a YouTube creator in forensic psychology, true crime, and social science. According to refreshed YouTube channel metadata, the channel had 5.6 million subscribers, 25 videos, and was last checked on July 5, 2026.
Why the channel matters
JCS sits at the intersection of true crime storytelling and behavioral analysis. The supplied channel record describes its focus as “Forensic Psychology / True Crime / Social Science,” and its catalog supports that positioning through long-form videos centered on police interviews, courtroom material, and cases where behavior under pressure becomes the main subject.
A compact catalog with unusually high reach
The channel’s public video count is relatively small for a creator with millions of subscribers, with YouTube metadata listing 25 videos. That limited catalog has still produced several high-view full-length videos, including “What pretending to be crazy looks like”, which is listed at 66.9 million views, and “Jennifer's Solution”, listed at 47.2 million views.
Representative full-length videos
For readers new to the channel, the representative watchlist includes “What pretending to be crazy looks like”, “Jennifer's Solution”, “Wrath of Jodi”, “There's Something About Casey...”, and “Sarah literally thinks she's going home later...”. These selections show the channel’s emphasis on full-length case analysis rather than short clips.
Recent long-form uploads
The more recent full-length uploads in the supplied record include “How To Interrogate a Narcissist”, published December 17, 2025, “Amber's Afternoon”, published June 4, 2025, and “Husband tries to act”, published April 3, 2025. Each is listed as a full-length YouTube video and has view counts in the millions.
Collaborations and credited sources
Several video descriptions in the supplied data credit recurring collaborators or source channels. Descriptions mention TRUE CRIME Loser for analysis, kizzume for voice over, and, in the case of “Sarah literally thinks she's going home later...”, special thanks to Law&Crime for documents. “Amber's Afternoon” also notes courtroom footage sourced from Law&Crime.
Popularity across older uploads
Some of the channel’s most viewed videos come from 2019 through 2021. “The Curious Case of Dalia Dippolito”, published in 2019, is listed at 21.7 million views. 2020 uploads such as “There's Something About Casey...”, “Jennifer's Solution”, and “Wrath of Jodi” remain among the channel’s best-known long-form entries based on the supplied view counts.
Editorial note
This creator feature is based on supplied YouTube metadata and video records and should receive editorial review before publication. The biography text in the source record was seeded from YouTube channel metadata, so any broader claims about the creator’s identity, production process, or professional credentials should be verified separately before being added.