FLINT, MI -- The story of a Vienna Township woman who is serving life in prison for the murder of her husband will be profiled by a true-crime television series on the cable network Investigation Discovery.

Sharee Miller's story will be the focus of an episode in the series "I'd Kill For You," which series Executive Producer Liz Massie said focuses stories involving individuals who get another person to commit a crime for them.

Miller was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in 2001 after authorities claimed she conspired with her Internet lover, Jerry Cassaday, to kill her husband, Bruce Miller, in 1999.

Flint attorney David Nickola, who represented Miller in state court, was interviewed for the show. Nickola said the case was one of the first murders to be linked to the Internet and it contained multiple themes, such as sex and intrigue, which lends itself to TV storytelling.

"It's one of those cases that are titillating," Nickola said.

Prosecutors alleged that Sharee Miller and Cassady had an ongoing love affair and that Cassaday fatally shot Bruce Miller at his Vienna Township auto salvage business after Sharee Miller convinced him that her husband was involved in organized crime, he assaulted her and caused her to miscarry. Cassaday, a former police officer, later killed himself and prosecutors used his suicide note to implicate Sharee Miller.

Nickola said allowing the note in the trial was unfair because it allowed Cassaday to point blame onto Miller without giving Nickola the opportunity to challenge him in court.

"The guy just said 'I did it feel sorry for me,'" Nickola said.

Nickola added that Cassaday did not leave behind any other evidence, including a murder weapon. He maintains that Miller is innocent.

"She testified she didn't have anything to do with it," Nickola said.

Her case is pending in the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.

This isn't the first time the case has been featured in the media. The case was the basis for a Lifetime Television movie, a book and has been referenced multiple times in true-crime television shows.

"I'd Kill For You" is scheduled to air at 10 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 30, on Investigation Discovery.