Sherri Papini now claims her 2016 kidnapping was real, done by ex-boyfriend James Reyes. She previously admitted faking it to hide an affair. She served nearly a year of an 18-month sentence... Read allSherri Papini now claims her 2016 kidnapping was real, done by ex-boyfriend James Reyes. She previously admitted faking it to hide an affair. She served nearly a year of an 18-month sentence for the false confession.Sherri Papini now claims her 2016 kidnapping was real, done by ex-boyfriend James Reyes. She previously admitted faking it to hide an affair. She served nearly a year of an 18-month sentence for the false confession.
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
I wish that you had focused on confirming or negating the allegations. But instead, this was just her blaming everyone and everything on others. You gave her a huge platform to put out her scenario and to explain away all of the lies. Even when you pressed her and caught her in lies, she was allowed to explain it all away. I have a friend who is a pathological liar. Does it come from abuse, absolutely. But it doesn't make it ok. There were many things you could have done to confirm James story, but you chose to instead let her blame him. You should have told both sides, even if he chose not to participate. This was just a whitewash of her lies.
This documentary is classic case study of how to spot a liar. Sherri's own words and mannerisms during this interview make it pretty obvious when she is telling the truth and when she is not. Often she will start embellishing an answer that should be straight forward. Also everyone is to blame but herself. She plays the pity card well which sucks in a lot of people. I do not know where the psychiatrist featured in this film got his degree but he seems extremely gullible. This doc does a good job of challenging her on many aspects of the case. Every time she is challenged the answers just do not add up. Anyway, its up to each person to make their own assessment but from my perspective this documentary made her look even more guilty and even more of a liar.
I realized something from watching this crap that I didn't understand before. I knew she was a pathological liar. I did not know that she is evil. I was actually shocked by how purely evil and destructive she is. If she had just kept her mouth shut - only her ex-husband, Keith, would have known that part. Now the world knows.
I could write a book on how everything she says in this documentary is either a lie or insane. But just take this for example: Crazy Sherri takes the extreme step of secretly taping her and Keith's interaction. In part 2 she plays the most egregious one of those exchanges. All it demonstrated was that Keith, calm but firm, fully has her number and job one for him is to protect their children from HER.
And Sherri has this crazy attorney who was gang raped and talks about her need to "escape", understandably, from that event. She draws a parallel between her trauma and her need to escape from it and Sherri's trauma and Sherri's need to escape from it. The attorney ironically, and stupidly, doesn't realize that Sherri caused ALL of the trauma that she went through, and is responsible for ALL of the trauma that her family experienced, and therefore is the "rapist" in this scenario.
At the end, she asks the off-camera documentarian: "Do you think this will do more harm than good to me?" Hmm...she's starting to catch on.
I'm don't care to spend another minute on this review. But someone should go into the questionable ethics of the makers of this disaster movie using an unstable sociopath who is incapable of saying no to the project, and also incapable of doing anything but revealing, through her own words, how destructive and dangerous she is.
I could write a book on how everything she says in this documentary is either a lie or insane. But just take this for example: Crazy Sherri takes the extreme step of secretly taping her and Keith's interaction. In part 2 she plays the most egregious one of those exchanges. All it demonstrated was that Keith, calm but firm, fully has her number and job one for him is to protect their children from HER.
And Sherri has this crazy attorney who was gang raped and talks about her need to "escape", understandably, from that event. She draws a parallel between her trauma and her need to escape from it and Sherri's trauma and Sherri's need to escape from it. The attorney ironically, and stupidly, doesn't realize that Sherri caused ALL of the trauma that she went through, and is responsible for ALL of the trauma that her family experienced, and therefore is the "rapist" in this scenario.
At the end, she asks the off-camera documentarian: "Do you think this will do more harm than good to me?" Hmm...she's starting to catch on.
I'm don't care to spend another minute on this review. But someone should go into the questionable ethics of the makers of this disaster movie using an unstable sociopath who is incapable of saying no to the project, and also incapable of doing anything but revealing, through her own words, how destructive and dangerous she is.
What I saw from Sherri Papini is an attention seeker who showed zero remorse for her actions and what she put so many people through. Seems as tho Sherri has her therapist fooled and her own mother even said on camera that it was NOT a kidnapping, that she was seeking a connection outside her marriage. There are so many lies that you can see her in real time trying to figure her way out of them - it's not even clear to her and so the facts are still not revealed to this day. Instead of full disclosure and accountability, she's throwing her 2 ex's under the bus. If she was so concerned about her children, why did she have this 'affair' in the first place? Seems like Keiths' 'control' stems from the logical mistrust as Sherri proved from the beginning she has the tendency to stray and embellish. Shame Sheri Shame. Keith did what he had to do ( post nup) so the children at least have one parent they can count on for the proper love and support and parenting they deserve. She has proven to be unstable unreliable and untruthful. I commend Keith for his strength at having to deal with this nightmare that Sherri caused the entire family due to her selfishness. Sherri Papini needs to stop playing the victim oh and stop the lying. She may have fooled her therapist but she has not fooled us all.
While the documentary is well-produced and covers the timeline thoroughly, I found myself walking away with more doubts than answers, not about the facts of the case, but about the narrative some of her supporters continue to push. The legal outcome was clear: she pleaded guilty and was sentenced to prison. However, where the documentary stumbles are in its attempt to give a platform to voices who still, for some reason, see her as a victim. Several friends, acquaintances, and even character witnesses speak on her behalf, painting a picture of a woman who was misunderstood, troubled, or perhaps manipulated by forces we don't fully see. But for the viewer, these testimonies don't carry much weight. They feel more like emotional rationalizations than evidence-based defenses. There's a notable lack of hard proof from those defending her. Much of it comes across as speculative or anecdotal "she wasn't like that" "she wouldn't do something like this". Maybe there is, but the show doesn't offer any compelling reason to believe so. It leans heavily on emotion and personality-based arguments rather than providing a meaningful counter-narrative supported by facts. Even after watching the entire documentary, I didn't walk away believing Sherri was a victim. If anything, her actions had very real consequences. It still does, with her finger pointing to her parents, ex boyfriend and ex husband. It doesn't clear her name. In the end, Sherri Papini: Caught in the Lie is worth watching for anyone interested in modern true crime. Just don't expect every voice in the documentary to make sense or sway your judgment. For me, the story remains what it always seemed: a calculated deception, wrapped in confusion, and followed by a trail of people still trying to justify the unjustifiable.
Did you know
- TriviaThis limited docuseries is being premiered in two 2-hour (including commercial time) episodes on May 26, 2025 and May 27, 2025. Multiple 1-hour "reruns" are also scheduled, all with different episode titles.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Sherri Papini - hazugságon kapva
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content