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Nancy Grace leaving her HLN show after 12-year run

Nancy Grace attends the CNN Worldwide All-Star 2014 Winter TCA Party at Langham Hotel on January 10, 2014 in Pasadena, California. Angela Weiss/Getty Images

Some are celebrating and others are ruing the news that former prosecutor Nancy Grace is leaving her prime-time show on HLN in October. The acerbic host had accumulated quite the audience over 12 years on the air, but there were always detractors, and they certainly weren’t shy on Twitter.

The CNN sister station said Grace told her staff on Thursday that her show would be ending. Grace, 56, said in a statement that she’ll be leaving “with a full heart and endless gratitude.”

She hasn’t announced any specific new plans, and HLN wasn’t saying what type of show would replace her.

READ MORE: Stunned father told on live TV by Nancy Grace his missing son was found alive

Grace, who turned to law after her fiancee was murdered in college, worked in an Atlanta-area district attorney’s office and became a go-to television personality commenting on trials in the post-O.J. Simpson era. Her HLN show focused on missing children and crime victims. When Grace formed an opinion on a case, she pursued it with a barracuda-like intensity.

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Arguably her biggest moment was when she “found” a missing child in a basement in June 2014.

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Her popularity boomed when missing children cases like Caylee Anthony, Natalee Holloway and Elizabeth Smart dominated mainstream news. But fewer of those cases have broken through to wide attention in recent years. In the age demographic that television executives seek, her audience dropped to a third or quarter what it was in its peak years.

READ MORE: Shania Twain asked to help in search for missing New York woman

“She gave a voice to the voiceless and we are extremely grateful for her contributions to the network,” said Ken Jautz, HLN’s chief executive.

Grace said the show “created an unparalleled platform that gave crime victims a voice and succeeded in helping to find missing people and solve unsolved homicides.”

“I will continue my fight for justice across a variety of traditional and new media, where victims’ voices can reach an entirely engaged audience,” she said.

HLN didn’t provide a reason for the show’s cancellation.

With files from David Bauder and The Associated Press

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