I voted this 7/10 because I like made for TV true crime movies, but it has its flaws.
It's about the murder of Maria Marshall (Joanna Kerns) in 1984 at a rest stop along the Garden State Parkway in New Jersey where her husband, Rob Marshall (Robert Urich), has stopped to examine a tire that he thinks is going flat. He is hit in the head by an assailant. She is shot in the back. The motive appears to be robbery though nothing was taken.
I just rewatched "Echoes In the Darkness", and that true crime film was by far the better made and more suspenseful film with much smarter villains. I don't really blame the production that much as the widowed husband is beyond goofy and stupid. You can only do so much with a true crime film if you have an uninspiring villain. After his wife is murdered, all Rob Marshall can talk about is Felice Richmond (Robin Strasser) with whom he was having an affair and was planning to marry after he left his wife. He seems to openly pine away for Felice MUCH more than he is mourning his wife, which makes him unlikeable to his friends and alienates his grown sons. Then there is the 1.5 million dollars in life insurance he just recently took out on his wife and his own mounting money problems. 1.5 million dollars would be about five million dollars in 2025. Complications and suspicions ensue.
The movie tries to drag out the proceedings longer than needed. There is an entire scene about the Marshall's 20th wedding anniversary, two years before the murder, that makes the family and the marriage seem quite happy. Was this the true state of things, or was this just a mirage? It's never clearly stated.
Then there is just the overall rather weird tone of the film. The first half of the film takes on an oddly spiritual tone while overdoing the deifying of the victim.
There's lots of acting talent on the screen, including an early performance by Johnny Galecki of Roseanne and Big Bang Theory fame. Dennis Farina takes on an unusual straight-arrow role as the prosecutor.
If you like true crime I think you'll like this, but you may have the same small complaints about the production that I had.