29 episodes

Sam Little, the FBI’s most prolific serial killer roamed free for five decades, murdering women at will. But in 2012 he came to the attention of Detective Mitzi Roberts and everything changed. This opportunistic killer had long stayed below law enforcement’s radar because of the victims he chose: Women from the fringe — drug users and sex workers paid little attention to by society. Murder Book Season 2: The Women Who Stopped Sam Little follows this Los Angeles Police Department cold case investigator's relentless hunt for Little across the country to capture and convict him with the help of a group of equally fierce women that included a prosecutor, a writer and several women who survived brutal attacks from Little.

Murder Book Michael Connelly

    • True Crime
    • 4.7 • 238 Ratings

Sam Little, the FBI’s most prolific serial killer roamed free for five decades, murdering women at will. But in 2012 he came to the attention of Detective Mitzi Roberts and everything changed. This opportunistic killer had long stayed below law enforcement’s radar because of the victims he chose: Women from the fringe — drug users and sex workers paid little attention to by society. Murder Book Season 2: The Women Who Stopped Sam Little follows this Los Angeles Police Department cold case investigator's relentless hunt for Little across the country to capture and convict him with the help of a group of equally fierce women that included a prosecutor, a writer and several women who survived brutal attacks from Little.

    Q&A - Part 2

    Q&A - Part 2

    Mitzi Roberts and others answer questions from listeners to the podcast. (Part 2)

    • 39 min
    Q&A - Part 1

    Q&A - Part 1

    Mitzi Roberts and others answer questions from listeners to the podcast. (Part 1)

    • 43 min
    The Road Goes On Forever

    The Road Goes On Forever

    Chapter 10 - Final thoughts and reporting on the Sam Little case. The LAPD went on two ride alongs with Sam Little in an effort to clear the 17 additional murders he said he committed in the area. To date only one has been solidly identified. It leaves one investigator to question whether Little’s numbers are exaggerated. Meanwhile, all three of the partners Detective Mitzi Roberts worked with on the case have retired and Roberts has been promoted to head of the cold case unit where 6,000 unsolved cases await her attention.

    • 35 min
    The Writer

    The Writer

    Chapter 9 - Jillian Lauren contacts Detective Roberts about the Black Dahlia case but picks up on Sam Little. An obsession begins, a relationship between a writer and killer begins.
    Sam Little talks to Jillian and starts confessing. She starts driving around the killing fields of South L.A. – attempting to connect Little’s confessions with locations and victims, confirming murders he has confessed to.

    • 37 min
    True Confessions

    True Confessions

    Chapter 8 - A Texas Ranger befriends Sam Little and the man who claimed innocence now starts confessing to murder after murder. Sam starts drawing detailed sketches of his victims. Ranger Jim Holland becomes the gatekeeper to Sam Little. The work of the women who caught and prosecuted him is all but forgotten. Sam Little becomes a celebrity. He gets hundreds of letters, several marriage proposals. He’s a star – to some.

    • 39 min
    The Trial

    The Trial

    Chapter 7 - A third LA murder case is added and the trial begins, presented to the jury by prosecutor Beth Silverman. Three survivors testify.
    The verdict is guilty. At his sentencing Little protests his innocence, calls the proceedings a lynching. Detective Roberts waves goodbye; Sam Little waves right back. But it was not the end of the case.

    • 31 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
238 Ratings

238 Ratings

a god of guilt ,

A question

I’m really enjoying the show. I’m on the episode the people vs Pierre Romain. I couldn’t make out the comment by the defence lawyer that is objected to, and the judge admonishes the defence lawyer and tells the jury to disregard. Can anyone tell me what was said?

Bernard Quatermass ,

Frustrated by the sponsored interruptions

I was interested in this show but in listening to the first episode I just couldn’t follow the podcast, with there an interruption every few minutes to plug a sponsor.

I know podcasts need to make money but when you have more adverts than there is content then it doesn’t work. There needs to be a better model. I certainly would not have enjoyed mister Connellys books so much if for every page of story I was then forced to read two pages of advertising blurb to continue.

Snappettysnap ,

Great Content Too Many Ads

Really interesting, well put together, it would be gripping if it wasn’t constantly interrupted by ads. It completely ruins the flow; I’m pretty sure that Michael Connelly, with his success, could afford to sponsor the show himself.
Shame to ruin an interesting story with greed.

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