INTRODUCING: CounterClock Season 8
5/28/20265 min
In February 2008**,** six women were held hostage in a women’s clothing store in Tinley Park, Illinois.. Rhoda McFarland, Carrie Hudek Chiuso, Connie Woolfolk, Sarah Szafranski, and Jennifer Bishop were executed and the killer escaped leaving only one survivor. In Season 8 of CounterClock, host and investigative journalist Delia D’Ambra covers the Lane Bryant Murders and goes further into the case than any journalist has before. Through firsthand accounts and thousands of documents, Delia reconstructs what happened inside the store, why it may have happened, and who may have been responsible. For nearly twenty years, their families have lived without answers. This season, the search continues.
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Transcript preview
First 90 secondsDelia D'Ambra· Host0:00
[suspenseful music] Hi, park enthusiasts. It's Delia. Some of you might also know me from my other show, CounterClock, where I spend a lot of time digging into cases that don't have clear answers. If you've been here with me on Park Predators, you know how often we come back to the same question: What was missed? That's exactly what happened here. When Ashley Flowers, host of Crime Junkie, first brought this case to me, it was meant to be a single episode of Crime Junkie, just one story, but then more tips started coming in, more questions, more loose ends, and it became pretty clear, at least to me, that it didn't stop there, so I kept going. This season on CounterClock, I'm investigating the Lane Bryant murders. In 2008, five women were killed inside a store at 10:00 AM. There was potential DNA evidence, a detailed composite sketch, even the suspect's voice was captured during a 911 call, and still no one has been identified. So you start to ask, "How does a case with that much information go unsolved? Was something overlooked? Misinterpreted? Is there someone out there who knows more than they've ever said?" I've spent the last year going back through evidence, timelines, witness accounts, talking with people directly connected to the case and others who have never spoken publicly before. Because at a certain point, it stops feeling like an unsolved case. It starts to feel like we're missing something